A man who scammed people out of nearly $300,000 by pretending to be a police officer has been arrested.

On Monday the 25-year-old man, a UK national, was chased by police through Auckland central on foot.

The scam involved a call to a landline by someone pretending to be a police officer and providing a fake badge number.

There were 18 Aucklanders, aged between 56 and 90, with the majority over 80, allegedly duped out of money.

“The scam will always involve this so-called officer asking for financial information or asking you to withdraw cash to be collected as part of an investigation into banks,” Detective Senior Sergeant Craig Bolton said.

  • Dave@lemmy.nzOPM
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    4 months ago

    Not sure about age 56 but by the time you get to 90, many people’s brains just aren’t what they used to be. If you’re a scammer, it doesn’t matter if 9/10 people see you coming, you just latch onto the 1/10 that can’t tell they are being scammed.

    By 90 my grandmother had a Benjamin Button memory. She didn’t recognise the youngest grandkids, over time she couldn’t remember the oldest ones, and then her kids started fading from her memory starting with the youngest.

    Even before that point, in her 80s (like most of these victims), if you walked up to her, said you’re a police officer and need her EFTPOS PIN to investigate fraud, she would have told you it.

    • liv@lemmy.nz
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      4 months ago

      It’s not all natural either. I’ve recently learned about anticholinergic burden and am annoyed I didn’t know sooner because with the health system the way it is now (so many locums, no continuity of care, overworked hospitals) elderly people really need their family looking out for stuff like this.

      • Dave@lemmy.nzOPM
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        4 months ago

        Interesting, and good to know! I just assumed the cognitive decline of my grandmother’s cognition was partly because her diet was 50% butter or thereabouts, but maybe there was more to it 🙂

        • liv@lemmy.nz
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          4 months ago

          Diet can do it too, e.g vitamin D deficiency also causes cognitive decline, and if doctors find out someone is eating 50% butter and puts them on statins (anti cholesterol) that causes reversible cognitive decline as well.

          Bizarrely, with elderly people you also have to watch out for “silent” UTIs - they don’t hurt so the person might not realise they have one and it causes really marked signs of dementia, eg they say really dementia-ish things. Antibiotics clears it up. I saw this one first hand and it was such a relief to actually figure it out and get the person back to normal.

          • Dave@lemmy.nzOPM
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            4 months ago

            With my grandmother is was gradual over a really long time, but I’m curious about the anti cholesterol medication which she was almost certainly on. I’m learning about this a decade too late though 🫤

            • liv@lemmy.nz
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              4 months ago

              Yeah I was kind of mentioning this stuff more because one day your parents will get old.

              Statins have benefits that typically outweigh the side effects, and confusingly they seem to protect people from dementia as well as causing issues with memory and cognition. It’s nothing to regret, just worth knowing it’s a factor.

              • Dave@lemmy.nzOPM
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                4 months ago

                Oh right, people get old! Well, some people 🫤

                It’s good to know, so thanks for sharing. I’ll try to remember this in the future when the knowledge is useful.