My friend just got scammed, and it breaks my heart, not just because of the money lost but because of the betrayal. A phone call. A personal contact. A voice that sounded trustworthy. And now, a large sum of money is gone, with police saying there's nothing they can do.
This is happening more and more. And
the scammers are getting smarter.
As part of my work with Costco Health
and Wellness Institute I give workshops on Fraud and Scams. Let me share what
the latest research reveals about fraud targeting seniors in 2026, because
forewarned is forearmed.
The Grandparent Emergency Scam (Now
with AI Voice Cloning)
This scam has become terrifyingly
sophisticated.
How it works: A senior receives
a frantic phone call. On the other end is someone who sounds exactly like their
grandchild, crying, saying they're in jail after a car accident, needing bail
money immediately. Another person gets on the line, claiming to be a lawyer or
police officer, demanding cash or cryptocurrency for legal fees.
The AI twist: Scammers now
harvest short audio clips from social media, birthday videos, casual posts, and
use artificial intelligence to clone voices with frightening accuracy. One
Canadian cybersecurity expert explains that the cloned voice may only be used
for a few sentences, just enough to say "Grandma, I'm in jail, please help
me!", before a "lawyer" takes over. That handoff is designed to
mask any imperfections in the clone.
The scale: In January 2026
alone, Ontario police reported multiple incidents. A Pembroke senior lost $800.
Another in Petawawa was almost scammed out of $20,000 before an acquaintance
intervened. In Newfoundland, at least eight seniors lost a combined $200,000 to
an AI, powered grandparent scam
campaign .
What to remember: Any legitimate
authority would never demand payment in cash, gift cards, or cryptocurrency
over the phone. Never .
The Police Impersonation Scam
This one hit close to home for us in
British Columbia.
The Burnaby case: Just last
month, a Burnaby couple in their 80s lost nearly $300,000 to scammers posing as
RCMP officers. The caller claimed their bank account had been hacked and
instructed them to transfer their money to "secure" accounts. Over
several weeks, the couple made multiple deposits. They were told not to contact
the police and were even directed to buy gift cards.
Burnaby RCMP Cpl. Mike Kalanj called
it "despicable" that fraudsters would use such manipulative tactics
to prey upon seniors.
The hard truth: Police will
never call you and tell you to transfer money. If you receive such a request,
hang up and call your local police station directly to verify.
The CRA Benefit Scam (2026 Edition)
With Old Age Security (OAS) and
Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS) payments going out on predictable schedules,
scammers know exactly when seniors are expecting money.
The new tactics: Scammers are
using generative AI to craft hyper-realistic emails, texts, and calls that
perfectly mimic official CRA messaging. They reference actual benefit amounts
or partial personal details obtained from data breaches, making their lies
incredibly convincing.
What they want: They'll claim
there's a problem with your benefits, a missed payment, an eligibility error, and
demand immediate action. They'll ask you to click links, share banking
information, or pay via cryptocurrency or gift cards.
The truth: The CRA will never
ask for payment via gift cards, cryptocurrency, or e-transfers. Legitimate
communications come through registered mail or secure messages in your My
Account portal .
The Voice Cloning Direct Debit Scam
This one is new and particularly
sinister.
How it works: Criminals call
seniors pretending to conduct a harmless "lifestyle survey." They
gather personal, health, and financial information. Then they use AI to clone
the victim's voice and call banks, using the cloned voice to authorize direct debits
or account changes.
Why it's dangerous: The voice
clone is convincing enough to fool even legitimate businesses and financial
providers. Victims often don't realize money is being taken until they check
their statements.
UK authorities have blocked nearly 21
million scam calls and shut down 2,000 numbers in just six months. This is
coming to Canada, if it isn't here already.
The Fake Job Offer That Creates
"Money Mules"
This one is heartbreaking because it
creates multiple victims.
The Vancouver Island case: Two
elderly women lost thousands to a grandparent scam. The money was picked up by
a courier, a man who had accepted an unsolicited job offer and thought he was
doing legitimate delivery work. When he grew suspicious, he went to police.
He had handled about $30,000 from
what police believe were grandparent scams. He kept $200 per pickup as payment,
depositing the rest as instructed.
The lesson: Job seekers and
seniors alike are being targeted. If an unsolicited "job offer"
involves picking up cash from strangers, it's almost certainly a scam.
Why These Scams Work
The statistics are sobering. UK
adults receive an average of seven scam calls or texts per month. One in five receives
them most days. Almost one in ten receive them every single day.
Scammers succeed because they
create urgency and panic. They tell you not to tell anyone. They threaten
consequences. They make you feel that acting now is the only way to save
someone you love.
And with AI, their voices sound real.
Their emails look perfect. Their stories are personalized with data stolen from
breaches or scraped from social media.
What You Can Do to Protect Yourself
Verify before you trust. If
someone calls claiming to be a family member in trouble, hang up and call that
family member directly using a number you know is real. If they claim to be
police, hang up and call your local detachment.
Never pay by gift card or
cryptocurrency. Government agencies, police, and legitimate businesses do
not demand payment this way. Ever.
Protect your voice. Be cautious
about what you post online. Scammers mine social media for audio and video to
create voice clones.
Use a family password. Consider
establishing a password with family members that only you would know. If
someone calls claiming to be a grandchild in trouble, ask for the password.
Check your statements. Regularly
review bank and credit card statements for unauthorized transactions,
especially small ones that might be test transfers.
Report it. If you've been
targeted, contact the Canadian Anti, Fraud Centre at 1, 888, 495, 8501 and your
local police. Even if they can't recover your money, reporting helps them warn
others.
A Final Word
My friend is not alone. The Burnaby
couple who lost nearly $300,000 weren't foolish. They were targeted by
professionals who knew exactly how to manipulate trust and fear.
The best defence is knowledge. Share
this information with everyone you love, especially those who might not be
following the news. A simple conversation could save someone everything they
have.
If you ever feel pressured, pause.
Breathe. Call someone you trust. The scammers want you to act now. The truth
can wait five minutes while you verify.
Stay safe out there.