Halifax woman with cognitive impairment loses $5K in phone scam
CBC
Emma Mann likes her independence. She lives in her Halifax apartment with her cat, Anthony, and gets herself to her part-time job at a local grocery store.
But last week that independence was threatened when scammers drained $5,200 from her bank account.
"I'm angry, sad," Mann said in a recent interview. "Embarrassed that I can't pay my bills."
Mann has Gorlin syndrome, a rare hereditary disorder that comes with a high risk of developing skin and brain cancer. By the age of two, Emma had two tumours removed from her brain and grew up with a cognitive impairment.
"She's used to doing what she wants, right? Getting on the bus and going shopping, doing fun things, and now they've emptied her bank account," said Emma's mother, Tracie Mann.
Tracie Mann said someone pretending to work at her daughter's bank, Scotiabank, called last Monday to report there were fraudulent charges on her account.
Emma Mann spent six hours running around the city spending thousands of dollars on different gift cards because she was told that would fix the problem.
It's an increasingly common scam where fraudsters get their victims to buy a gift card and provide them with the activation code. Soon, the money on the card is gone and the scammers can no longer be reached.
Mann said she was scared when the people claiming to help called her over and over, giving orders.
"They made me feel like they were confident, like they were really Scotiabank," she said.
Scotiabank said later in a statement it has since fully reimbursed Mann of the money she lost due to the scam.
What's known as the bank investigator scam is one of the most lucrative fraud schemes in the country, according to the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre.
This particular scam led to Canadians losing more than $11 million last year alone, a spokesperson said.
"This type of fraud typically starts off as an automated phone call or a robocall advising the target or the victim that there has been a couple of fraudulent transactions on their bank account or credit card or even their Amazon account," said Jeff Horncastle.