Stopping Financial Fraud and Abuse



Similar documents
Confusion on the Front Lines: The Response of Law Enforcement and Prosecutors to Cases of Elder Abuse

Policy for the Protection of Elders and Dependent Adults

Elder Financial Exploitation: A Prosecutor s Perspective. Page Ulrey November 18, 2014 Common Ground Meeting Seattle, WA

PROTECTING RESIDENTS FROM FINANCIAL EXPLOITATION:

How To Help A Vulnerable Adult

FINAL REPORT OF THE MAINE ATTORNEY GENERAL S TASK FORCE ON FINANCIAL EXPLOITATION OF THE ELDERLY

What Everyone Needs to Know About Elder Abuse 1 Rebecca C. Morgan Stetson University College of Law

REPORTING REQUIREMENTS

The following are clues for recognizing signs of physical elder abuse. It is not intended to be exhaustive.

Free Webinar For Legal Professionals: Elder Abuse, Neglect and Exploitation and Clients with Dementia

DIVISION N CYBERSECURITY ACT OF 2015

Sexual Assault of People in Aged Care Settings: Towards a Better Understanding and Response

Vulnerable Adult Maltreatment. Jennifer J. Hasbargen Assistant Anoka County Attorney Certified Fraud Examiners November 9, 2011

The Role of Undue Influence in Elder Abuse

St. George Police Department

ELDER JUSTICE INCLUDING AT-RISK ADULTS Protecting those who cannot protect themselves

As Amended by Senate Committee SENATE BILL No. 408

Chapter 3. The Nursing Assistant. Elsevier items and derived items 2014, 2010 by Mosby, an imprint of Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Montana Elder and Persons With Developmental Disabilities Abuse Prevention Act

PROTECT YOUR POCKETBOOK

Elder Abuse & Elderly Protective Services

STATE OF NEVADA COMMISSION on PEACE OFFICERS STANDARDS and TRAINING

Elder Law Attorneys Critical Role in Reducing Elder Abuse: A Growing Poverty and Civil Rights Issue October 16, 2014

Prosecuting Elder Financial Exploitation: A Primer

INFORMATION ABOUT LAWS RELATED TO ELDER ABUSE

Remarks by. Thomas J. Curry. Comptroller of the Currency. Before the National Community Reinvestment Coalition. Washington, D.C.

GOVERNOR S ELDER ABUSE TASK FORCE

RESOURCE GUIDE FOR ELDER ABUSE

NOTICE OF PRIVACY PRACTICE

Protecting Vulnerable Adults from Abuse and Neglect: a U.S. Experience. Page Ulrey January 15, 2015

Elder Abuse in Indiana: A Legal Primer. Kerry Hyatt Blomquist, JD

Domestic Violence: Can the Legal System Help Protect Me?

STATE OF CALIFORNIA - HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES AGENCY. August 12, 1999

January 26, 2015 Presented by Rose Mukhar, Pro Bono Attorney

Debbie Beach, LCSW

Elder and Dependent Adult Abuse. Adult Protective Services Contra Costa County

Protecting Yourself When You're a Victim of Identity Theft, Forgery or Fraud

Elder Abuse & Neglect. Module Two Goal. Module Two Objectives. Module Two: Identifying Elder Abuse & Neglect 7/15/2011

Anti-human trafficking manual for criminal justice practitioners. Module 11

HOUSE DOCKET, NO FILED ON: 2/28/2014. HOUSE... No The Commonwealth of Massachusetts PRESENTED BY: Paul R. Heroux

Criminal Investigation CRJ141. Matthew McCarty

How to Spot Elder Financial Abuse. Training materials from the California Bankers Association

NOTICE OF PRIVACY PRACTICES

Elder Abuse, Neglect & Financial Exploitation

JOB TITLE JOB CODE PAY GRADE EFFECTIVE Medicaid Fraud Intake Officer 26140AG 29 11/15/2015

St. Paul City Attorney s Office

Abuse and Neglect of Vulnerable Adults

How To Answer Those Tough Questions. About Elder Abuse NEGLECT FINANCIAL EXPLOITATION EMOTIONAL ABUSE PHYSICAL ABUSE

How to Answer Those Tough Questions about Elder Abuse

OFFICE OF THE PUBLIC GUARDIAN AND TRUSTEE POWERS OF ATTORNEY AND LIVING WILLS. Questions and Answers

Compensation for Crime Victims

Paying Attention To Elder Abuse: What We Can All Do. Tristan Svare Deputy District Attorney San Bernardino County, CA

IMPORTANT DEFINATIONS FROM THE ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT ON AGING S ELDER ABUSE AND NEGLECT PROGRAM STANDARDS AND PROCEDURES MANUAL

UAB MY HEALTH REWARDS BIOMETRIC SCREENING PROGRAM NOTICE OF HEALTH INFORMATION PRACTICES

GENESEE COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY S OFFICE

DISTRICT ATTORNEY S OFFICE OCTOBER 1 ST, BUDGET

OREGON LAWS 2014 Chap. 104 CHAPTER 104

Abuse and Neglect. Office of Long-Term Living Protective Services Service Coordinator Webinar September 2013

COLLABORATIVE ENGAGEMENT AGREEMENT NEUTRAL DIVORCE COACH

Preventing Financial Exploitation of Adults. How Adult Protective Services and Financial Institutions Can Work Together

How To Report Child Abuse

CYBERCRIME LAWS OF THE UNITED STATES

The Family Counseling Center of Fulton County NOTICE OF PRIVACY PRACTICES

Managing Conflicts of Interest. Michael Malone, Examination Manager, FINRA, Dallas District Office

KCSO IDENTITY THEFT KIT

Massachusetts Major City Chiefs. Best Practices in Eyewitness Identification and the Recording of Suspect Interviews

Bonnie Olsen, Ph.D. Professor of Clinical Medicine Keck School of Medicine at The University of Southern California

NOTICE OF PRIVACY PRACTICES UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA DAVIS HEALTH SYSTEM

What You Need to Know About Elder Abuse

Adult Protective Services (APS)

BRAIN PERFORMANCE & PSYCHOLOGY CENTER NOTICE OF PRIVACY PRACTICES

Statement of Paul R. Greenwood, Deputy District Attorney, Head of Elder Abuse Prosecution Unit, San Diego DA s Office

CASCADE COUNTY ATTORNEY S OFFICE PARTNER/FAMILY MEMBER ASSAULT PROSECUTION PLAN

Types of Elder Abuse

The President s Task Force on Identity Theft and The FTC s Role in Identity Theft

Transcription:

Stopping Financial Fraud and Abuse Keys to Success July 13, 2015 Sponsored by: National Association of Area Agencies on Aging

Panelist Introductions Moderator Paul Greenwood, Deputy District Attorney,San Diego County, California Expert Panelists Joseph Snyder, Director of Older Adult Protective Service at Philadelphia Corporation for Aging (PCA) Ronald Long, Director of Regulatory Affairs and Elder Client Initiatives, Wells Fargo Advisors 2

AVOID STEREOTYPING OF SENIORS Forgetful Senile Longwinded Grumpy Disabled Fragile

Watch for an explosion of elder financial abuse cases

Financial Abuse: Theft Credit card fraud Real Property transfers Home Improvement scams/burglaries Work by unlicensed contractors/overcharging Telemarketing, sweepstakes & e-mail scams Investment fraud

Building the case.

Where do reports come from?

Adult Protective Services (APS) APS is statutorily authorized under State and Tribal law to receive and investigate reports of elder abuse including financial exploitation In almost all states APS serves all adults with significant disabilities 18 and above and in a few states APS serves older persons only.

Adult Protective Services (APS) Programs stress older person s right to make own decisions but take protective actions when it is determined that senior lacks capacity to make decisions Reporting to APS generally confidential; banks often permitted to report; maltreatment does not have to rise to level of criminal behavior Puts older person in touch with services; Reduces isolation

Who can and should file reports?

Who Can and Should File Reports Financial Institutions Mandatory Reporters determined by statute and state Medical Staff Service Providers

Wells Fargo Advisors Organizational Chart

Top 5 Challenges POA Abuse 3 rd Party Investment Scams Dementia / Diminished Capacity Familial Disputes New ( and expensive) Best Friends 13

Common Scams Lottery Scams Grandma Scams Trust Mill Scams

Destroying some myths. Some of these myths affect all forms of elder abuse Some affect only financial elder abuse

Myth #1 Elderly people make terrible witnesses Myth # 2 If elderly victim refuses to provide information, there is nothing that can be done

We can still build a case by talking to other key witnesses Start on the outside and work your way to the middle Let the DA figure out a way to break through victim s wall of silence

Victim declines prosecution

Why self-determination is a problem If not punished, the perp WILL abuse again We CAN convict even without the assistance of the victim Abuse is a crime against NOT JUST the abused

Myth # 3 If elderly victim gives the money voluntarily, it is not a crime Myth # 4 If the financial institution reimburses the elderly victim and then declines to seek prosecution, we have no victim

Myth #5 If victim is deceased before we discover the theft, we cannot prosecute Myth #6 Any case where the elderly victim is involved in a home repair & there is a dispute over money this is ALWAYS a civil matter.

Myth # 7 - the anyway excuse There are more important cases out there and anyway we don t have the additional resources The victim was going to die anyway She was going to inherit anyway Myth # 8 We don t have jurisdiction... the crime did not occur here...

What Do We Want to Know While Building a Case

Lack of consent To consent to a transaction a person must: Act freely & voluntarily & not under the influence of threats, force or duress Have knowledge of the true nature of the act or transaction involved Possess the mental capacity to make an intelligent choice whether or not to do something proposed by another person

Consent requires a free will and positive cooperation in act or attitude

Undue Influence Victim was pushed in a direction that he did not want to go. The influence by suspect was sufficient to remove the voluntariness of the transaction No longer free will Victim has been evaluated by a geriatric psychiatrist/psychologist

How to prove undue influence? Length of relationship Place of first meeting Prior spending habits Prior charitability What is left? Multiple escalating transactions Statements & conduct by suspect

What do we do?

Witnesses Bank teller Pastor Neighbor Doctor, pharmacist, optometrist of V Family Ex- spouse of suspect Business contacts of suspect

Evidence collection Bank, credit card statements Bank surveillance tapes Prior medical records Look for the inappropriate purchases Ask questions, questions, questions!!!

Interviewing an elderly victim Venue is important Build a rapport Look for achievements Try to identify areas of vulnerability Preserve the interview on video

Evaluating the victim s cognitive functioning Memory deficits? Memory tests

Assess the impact of the crime Financial Emotional Residual

What Can We Do To Prevent Financial Fraud and Abuse

Adult Protective Services Variations in Program Practice and Standards MDT s and Taskforce Developing All Over the Country National Financial Exploitation Advisory Board

Recent Development in Combating Financial Exploitation Global Summit Creation of National Institute on Elder Financial Exploitation Creation of Standard Form to Request Records

One Firm s Inventory Training Partnerships Centralized Unit Educational Outreach Client Focused Information 37

Own it Observe Are there physical changes? Patterns and habits are different? Wonder Why Why is money missing? Negotiate Isolate Tell Negotiate the delay of money movement. Talk to the elder alone. Contact appropriate authorities to report suspected financial exploitation. 38

What Is Still Needed to Combat Financial Fraud and Abuse

What is needed? Help with Diminished Capacity. Work on Privacy Safe Harbors. Express Authority to Delay or Decline. Nationwide Entry Point & Database of Elder Financial Abuse Cases. Online Form for Reporting at State and National Levels.. SARs Reporting Clarification, Dedicated Review and Additional Considerations. Better access to financial documents needed to prove an elder financial abuse case. 40

What is needed? (cont.) Better Trained and Coordinated Efforts with APS, Prosecutors, Regulators, Industry & Investors. Eliminate the Chilling Effect of Reporting Elder Financial Abuse. Public, Private and Non-profit Partnerships. Public Service Announcements. National Oversight Agency to coordinate APS. Communications from APS to Financial Institutions on opening, closing or current status of cases. Uniform standards to accept APS cases. 41

What Are Keys to Success

Keys to Success Make timely reports to Adult Protective Services Help Build the case with facts and quick action Know your community resources and create networks that include Financial Institutions, Adult Protective Services, Law Enforcement and Prosecutors.

Philadelphia Financial Exploitation Taskforce Members Beneficial Bank Citizens Bank CARIE Philadelphia Corporation for Aging Philadelphia District Attorney Philadelphia Police Department PNC Bank Senior Law Center Susquehanna Bank TruMark Credit Union University of Pennsylvania Healthy Brain Research Center U.S. Department of Homeland Security

Current Resources

National Guidelines To Implement The 2013 Federal Interagency Guidance On Privacy Laws And Reporting Financial Abuse Of Older Adults For local resources, check the Eldercare Locator: eldercare.gov or toll-free at 1-800-677-1116.

Wells Fargo Hands on Banking Seniors (http://www.handsonbanking.org/financial-education/handson-banking-for-seniors/) American Bar Association Legal Issues Related to Elder Abuse: A Pocket Guide for Law Enforcement (www.ambar.org/elderabuseguides) National Center for Victims of Crime Webinar Series - Recognize, Report, and Recover (http://www.victimsofcrime.org/training/archived-trainings) 47

San Diego District Attorney s Office - http://www.sdcda.org/helping/elderabuse.html National Center on Elder Abuse - http://www.ncea.aoa.gov

Questions?

THANK YOU! sponsor of the Stopping Financial Fraud and Abuse: Hot Topic National Association of Area Agencies on Aging