'Suckers' lists'
The Trading Standards Institute commissioned a report from Bournemouth University's National Centre for Post-Qualifying Social Work into scam victims. Its recommendations to financial institutions and charities include:
- Recognising a duty of care to dementia sufferers who could make an unwise decision as a result of their cognitive state
- Allowing vulnerable people to put a 24-hour delay on new or large transactions from leaving their bank accounts and banks, sending an email or text alerting a carer or loved one at the start of that period
- Ensuring personal data is not shared without a clear opt-in and that it is not held for longer than 12 months before permission is sought again, in order to prevent "suckers' lists"
The estimated amount lost to doorstep crimes in a year is £22.1m, but trading standards officers believe losses could be 10 times greater than this. Victims of scam mail have an average age of 74 and have typically lost more than £1,000, according to Trading Standards officers who identified 10,843 victims in the year to April 2015.....Read more here