Falling in love with a scammer: the dark side of dating apps
Don’t get too trigger-happy when swiping right: learn to read the signs of romance fraud, says Paula Span
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Your support makes all the difference.Ellen Floren was not looking for love. The criminals who lured her into an online fraud last summer approached her not on a dating site, where she might have been wary, but through the neighbourhood hub called Nextdoor. A man who said his name was James Gibson said he’d noticed her profile on the site. He also lived in her Chicago neighbourhood, he told her, specifying a street. Could they have a conversation?
“He was very polite: ‘I hope I’m not out of line. I just found you very attractive’,” recalls Floren, who is 67 and a part-time educational consultant. They chatted on the site for a week or so. “Then it was, ‘Is it OK if we email?’” She agreed. Soon they shifted to phone conversations, often lasting an hour, and to texting several times a day. “It became very seductive,” Floren says. How could she help sympathising when he revealed that his wife and child had been killed in a car crash long ago?
Though they had swapped photos, they hadn’t met in person; he said he was temporarily working in a distant suburb, at a high-level job in communications systems, and staying at a hotel.
But after a few weeks, when he said he was coming to Chicago, they arranged to have dinner. “I thought, ‘This is someone I’m going to enjoy getting to know,’” Floren says. She was disappointed when the supposed Gibson got in too late to see her, then apologetically said he had just landed a big job in Europe and had to leave at once, postponing their date. The elements of deception and manipulation in Floren’s story sound familiar to those knowledgeable about the rise of online romance swindles.
Con artists now find victims on any social media platform – Instagram, Facebook, games such as Words With Friends. But “they quickly want to remove you from the platform,” says Amy Nofziger, director of the AARP Fraud Watch Network. The romancers ask to switch to text, phone or messaging apps that offer more intimacy and less security monitoring. The exchange of personal contact information also makes both parties appear trusting.
The tragic personal story, the quick professions of love combined with distance that prevents the parties ever meeting all fit the pattern, says Monica Vaca, an associate director in the Bureau of Consumer Protection at the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). So do the photographs. “You feel more like you know this person because you’ve seen their picture,” Vaca says. “Invariably, it’s a photo of someone else.”
Weeks or months may pass before the swindlers – generally not individuals, but criminal rings working in shifts (hence their ability to be wooing online all day) – make the key move. They ask for money. Reports collected by the FTC from consumers and local law enforcement show how sharply online romance fraud is increasing. In 2015, the agency received 8,500 such complaints. Last year, the number topped 25,000 – though Vaca cautions that “this crime is dramatically underreported”.
But what really drew regulators’ attention, given that other fraud categories generated more complaints, was the money involved. “It’s the No 1 fraud category if you look at the total dollars people reported losing,” Vaca says. In 2015, people reported losing $33m (£26m) to romance frauds; last year, they lost $201m – more than victims lost to fake lotteries and sweepstakes, impostor frauds or tech support phishing.
Older adults have been particularly hard hit. Anyone – regardless of age, gender or education level – can fall for a romance swindle; in fact, younger adults are more apt to report losing money to these frauds. “But when older people do report losing money, their dollar losses are much higher,” Vaca says. The median loss for romance fraud victims in their twenties was $770. People in their fifties reported losing twice as much. The losses reached $3,000 for victims in their sixties and $6,450 for those in their seventies.
“We’ve heard of people refinancing their homes and cashing out retirement accounts,” Nofziger says. “Scammers go where the money is, and criminals know that older adults have the majority of assets in the United States.” Last year, federal prosecutors brought a number of alarming romance cases. A 76-year-old widow in Rhode Island transferred more than $660,000 to bank accounts she thought belonged to a US army general in Afghanistan. (Posing as a military member is another red flag, along with overseas locations.) In Oklahoma, 10 Nigerian and US citizens were indicted in a fraud ring targeting multiple victims in three states. A grand jury in Georgia indicted a man accused of bilking a Virginia woman, who had a large trust, of $6.5m.
Floren may qualify as one of the luckier victims. As “James Gibson” was leaving for Europe, he suddenly called, saying his Netflix card had expired. “He really wanted to be able to watch movies on the plane,” she recalled. “Would I please go to a Walmart and buy him a $100 Netflix card?” Gift cards, untraceable and available everywhere, have become the currency of choice for con artists, Nofziger says. But they may also ask victims to open a bank account and provide access to it, or to ship iPhones.
Floren bought a gift card, reading her apparent suitor the number. Three days later, he called again, claiming to have left a bag of expensive tools in a cab. “He was hysterical on the phone,” she said. The tools were worth $4,000, but he’d found replacements for just $2,600. Would she send him the money? She took a break, had a cup of coffee, wondered why an international traveller had no credit card or employer willing to help. When the man called back, she announced, “You are scamming me,” tossed in a few expletives, and hung up, blocking him online and on the phone. Total financial loss: $100.
When she posted about the fraud on Nextdoor and Facebook, other women said they’d been similarly defrauded. Often, though, victims feel too humiliated to talk about what happened. A 68-year-old social worker in the Bay Area, for instance, asked not to be identified because she still had not told her family about a grifter she encountered on Our Time, a dating site for singles over 50. He claimed to be an air force pilot, emailed her gushy poetry (probably copied from romance novels, experts say), then persuaded her to wire $1,200 to a location in the Middle East, where he was supposedly serving.
“Can you believe what a sucker I was?” the social worker said. “What was wrong with me?” She regrets getting angry with a friend who questioned the relationship. With hindsight, she blames her vulnerability on the fact that her mother was dying. “With this fraud, especially, there is so much emotional trauma,” Nofziger says of its victims. “They’re embarrassed. Their hearts are broken. They not only lost their money, but this dream they had.”
She advises friends and relatives to treat victims gently. “Lead with kindness and empathy,” she says. “‘How could you be so stupid?’ is the worst thing to say.” She encourages victims to report these crimes to the FTC or the FBI. An AARP helpline supports people in filing complaints.
Bottom line: Anyone who appears to be pursuing romance online, while somehow never being available to meet in person, may be a fiction created by criminals. They’re patient and skilled, and have plausible-sounding reasons for asking for money – but that’s the signal for victims to flee. “Now,” Floren says, “as soon as anyone would ask me for 10 cents, I’d say no.”
© New York Times
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