Fraud schemes are a growing threat to all Americans – but no group is more vulnerable than our nation’s seniors. Older Americans are disproportionately targeted by scammers who exploit their trust, isolation, and savings.
While many of these criminals operate independently, a disturbing number of these scams originate from or are tolerated by, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) – raising serious concerns that these fraud networks are more than just financial crimes. They may be part of a broader effort to destabilize American society.
Two recent cases offer a glimpse into the scale and coordination of these attacks.
In June, a federal grand jury indicted two men, one a Chinese national, accused of running scams that defrauded elderly victims in Northeast Ohio out of thousands of dollars. The men allegedly impersonated law enforcement, threatened arrest, and convinced seniors to withdraw cash and hand it over to couriers or drop-off points.
Last July, five Chinese nationals were also indicted in California for orchestrating a $27 million fraud operation targeting elderly Americans across the country. The defendants used call centers and elaborate scripts to convince victims that their identities had been stolen or they were implicated in crimes, pressuring them into transferring funds to so-called “safe accounts” under the scammers’ control.
These are not isolated incidents.
Earlier this year, the House Select Committee on China and the Senate Special Committee on Aging held a rare joint hearing to examine the CCP’s role in exploiting America’s retirees. Senator Rick Scott, who chairs the Aging Committee, warned that Communist China is “actively infiltrating American markets” and “manipulating financial systems that millions of American retirees rely on.”
Rep. Mike Gallagher, chair of the House China Committee, added that China is “weaponizing U.S. capital against U.S. interests”—a strategy that includes defrauding elderly Americans out of their life savings.
A retired FBI agent and founder of the National Elder Fraud Coordination Center, Brady Finta, testified at the hearing that these scams are part of a much broader and more organized ecosystem. “We’ve seen scammers in India working with money mules in the Dominican Republic and laundering networks tied to China and Canada,” he said. “This is not something you solve with a few arrests. This requires a task force approach similar to how we fight terrorism or narcotics.”
According to the FBI’s 2023 Elder Fraud Report, scams targeting Americans over 60 rose 11 percent in one year. Older victims lost over $3.4 billion in 2023 – an average of $33,915 per victim. Investment scams, including so-called “pig butchering” schemes, were the costliest, totaling more than $1.2 billion in losses.
The problem may be even worse than the numbers show, as only a small fraction of elder fraud victims ever come forward. Finta also testified that “only 10 to 15 percent” of seniors who are scammed report their losses, due to embarrassment, shame, or simply not knowing where to turn. As a result, he warned, criminals feel emboldened. “I estimate we’re only addressing one percent of what has grown to epic proportions,” he said.
Pig butchering scams – a particularly cruel tactic traced in part to Chinese-based networks – begin as friendly chats on social media, often posing as potential romantic interests or business partners. After gaining the victim’s trust, the scammer shifts the conversation to encrypted apps like WhatsApp and offers a lucrative investment opportunity, usually involving cryptocurrency. Once the victim sends money, the scammer disappears.
The Global Anti-Scam Organization, founded by a victim of one such scheme, has identified pig butchering as one of the fastest-growing forms of online fraud. While younger women were once the most common targets, the victim pool has expanded. Now, seniors are falling prey in increasing numbers.
Experts warn that fraud tactics are evolving faster than law enforcement can keep up. Professor Jean-Pierre Ampère, a retired computer science and mathematics lecturer, told me that “a single click on a malicious link or QR code can drain someone’s bank account or compromise their identity.” He emphasized that “the threat is not exaggerated, but underestimated.”
Three recent reports – from the Federal Trade Commission, the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center, and blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis – help illustrate the financial toll. According to their data, Americans lost between $12.5 billion and $16.6 billion to fraud in 2023. Email, phone calls, and text messages remain the primary vectors.
FBI Cyber Division Deputy Director B. Chad Yarbrough described today’s scammers as “increasingly savvy criminals,” while FTC official Christopher Mufarrige acknowledged that “their tactics are constantly evolving.”
One factor that enables this crime wave is the complexity of global cybercrime enforcement – particularly when it involves foreign actors shielded by hostile governments.
U.S. and European cybercrime investigators have repeatedly warned that strict online privacy laws are hampering enforcement. In May, the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau dropped a Biden-era proposal that would have limited the sharing of “sensitive personal data” between institutions – a move applauded by the Financial Technology Association, which argued that restrictions would “harm institutions’ ability to detect and prevent fraud.”
Frank Schüssel, a former German financial crime investigator who advised Europol, told me, “Geolocation data and financial trail records should be mandatory for all completed transactions and instantly accessible to law enforcement.” He emphasized that real-time data access is essential in cross-border fraud cases, particularly those involving CCP-linked actors.
Online fraud is no longer just a nuisance – it is a national security threat. And when that fraud is backed, tolerated, or exploited by a hostile foreign power like the CCP, the stakes are even higher. This is not just about stolen money. It’s about eroding public trust, overwhelming law enforcement, and destabilizing American society from within – one vulnerable victim at a time.
Ben Solis is the pen name of an international affairs journalist, historian, and researcher.
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