According to a survey by the AARP, over one-third of U.S. adults who have made a purchase through an ad on their social media feed has reported being defrauded. Here are tips to get ahead of the ...
Winter is still here and many of us would do just about anything to find some warm weather. Enter the cruise scam. Many of these trips to nowhere literally pop ...
While scams take many forms, scammers may seek payment through a few hard-to-trace methods with few or no protections, including gift cards, cryptocurrency, wire transfers, peer-to-peer apps and, more ...
Amy Nofziger, the director of victim support for the AARP Fraud Watch Network, previously explained to HuffPost that a larger dollar amount, perhaps thousands of dollars, is more obviously a scam ...
It is 100% a scam. The AARP said if anyone has encountered this scam, they should report it to their local law enforcement or file a complaint at ic3.gov. They can also contact the AARP Fraud ...
If you notice fraudulent charges, you can call AARP's Fraud Watch Network helpline ... visit the FTC's scam reporting page. And if you spot a scam, you can report it directly to the FTC's fraud ...
AARP has fought for older adults in state capitols around the country, to protect them from scams and fraud. As a volunteer on the AARP ...
To report the scam to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center, go to www.ic3.gov. You can also report it to the Better Business Bureau or the state’s Attorney General’s Office. AARP says ...