The Joplin Globe, Joplin, MO

Carthage, Jasper County

October 10, 2008

Phone check with police saves Carthage grandparents from scam

By Greg Grisolano

ggrisolano@joplinglobe.com

CARTHAGE, Mo. — Delpha Speak got what could have been the most expensive phone call of her life on Thursday morning.

Speak, a 72-year-old retiree living in Carthage, thought her grandson-in-law was in some trouble.

“He said, ‘Grandma,’ and I said, ‘Which grandson?’” said Speak, who has 13 grandchildren. “He said, ‘Guess,’ and I said, ‘Oh, it’s Jamie,’ and he said, ‘Yeah, it’s Jamie.’”

Speak said her grandson-in-law lives in Kansas City, and frequently travels for business reasons, so she didn’t think it implausible that the caller said he was in Niagra Falls, Ontario, Canada.

“He said, ‘Grandma, I’m really in trouble,’” she said. “He said, ‘I’ve had a car wreck and I have to have $5,000 to get out of the police station.’”

Speak said the caller urged her to wire the money via MoneyGram at Wal-Mart, and begged her not to call her granddaughter.

“By now he was crying almost,” she said. “He said, ‘Don’t tell anyone, because I didn’t tell anyone I was coming here.’”

Speak said after she hung up, her husband, Bill, headed to the bank to the get the money. While he was gone, she decided to call the police station and find out what was going on.

“As soon as I said do you have Jamie, my grandson, there, they said, ‘Ma’am it’s a scam,’” she said. “They’re calling people from out of the country, and it’s always grandparents.”

While not a commonly occurring scam in Missouri, a spokesman for Attorney General Jay Nixon said the scammer’s line is a familiar one.

“That’s the classic grandparents’ scam,” said Travis Ford, consumer educator for Nixon’s office. “The scammer doesn’t know the granchild’s name, so they call and say grandma and hope the grandparent gives them the name of the person they’re impersonating.”

Ford said his office has one other documented case of the scam, which nearly bilked $8,000 out of a central Missouri man earlier this year.

“Our advice is for grandparents to stop and collect their thoughts for a minute, and then do whatever they can to verify the location of their grandchildren,” he said.

Speak said she was able to get in touch with her daughter later Thursday, and that she confirmed her grandson-in-law was, in fact, at home in Kansas City.

Speak said she never thought she could be a victim of a phone scam.

“I felt so dumb,” she said. “I just never thought it would happen to us.

“When they hit you with your grandchildren, you’re going to help them,” she said. “We’d do that for any of them.”

Ford said scammers routinely target the elderly, who are often vulnerable to lottery or “phishing scams” that seek to gather personal information.

“Lottery is the big one that preys on the elderly,” he said, and he urged anybody who believes they may have been a victim of a scam to contact local law enforcement. “It doesn’t matter where the scammer is. If the consumer is in Missouri, they can call local police and they can call us.”

Ford said he believes the current economic downturn may make scams more prevalent.

“People are going to be more desperate for money, and more vulnerable to these scams,” he said. “We want consumers to know that scammers out there may be trying to take advantage of that concern.”





Consumer-complaints hot line

Travis Ford, a spokesman for Missouri Attorney General Jay Nixon, said any person who may have been a victim of a telephone or e-mail scam should contact local law enforcement, and the Missouri Attorney General’s Office, Consumer Complaints Division. The consumer-protection hot line can be reached toll-free at 1-800-392-8222, or online at www.ago.mo.gov.

Text Only
Carthage, Jasper County
  • Jim-Spradling-obit.jpg Carthage attorney, reformer of revenue department, dies

    James R. Spradling, a Carthage attorney who was noted for his reform of the Missouri Department of Revenue in the 1970s, died at 5:50 a.m. Monday at McCune-Brooks Regional Hospital.

    August 9, 2010 1 Photo

  • Bondswoman charged with false imprisonment

    A bail bondswoman from Carthage is facing a charge of false imprisonment for allegedly attempting to put a man in jail without a judge’s order, then taking him home and handcuffing him to the banister of a staircase until a friend of the man paid her his bond money.

    January 4, 2012

  • Man’s last statement to be given to defendant

    A judge ruled Monday that the Jasper County prosecutor must provide attorneys for Darren J. Winans with a videotaped statement co-defendant Matthew D. Laurin made about the Sheldon murders shortly before killing himself.

    August 23, 2010

  • Carthage proposes 1.6-cent rise in city property tax

    A drop in the assessed value of Carthage real estate will translate to an increase of about 1.6 cents in the city’s proposed property tax rate.

    August 9, 2010

  • Open house to celebrate projects at courthouse

    Projects completed last year at the Jasper County Courthouse will be celebrated in ceremonies Thursday in the courthouse lobby.
    County officials will join representatives of local chambers of commerce and others for a ribbon-cutting and open house to mark the opening of a Route 66 display in the lobby and a new “peace star” atop the building.

    May 9, 2010

  • Newton County Jail State budget cuts reduce county funds

    County officials are bracing for more state budget cuts to translate into a loss of county revenues.
    In an effort to balance Missouri’s budget, the state earlier this year cut the amount it reimburses county assessors for work to determine property values. The budget approved by lawmakers for fiscal 2011 calls for cutting the amount the state reimburses counties to house prisoners bound for state lockup.

    May 9, 2010 1 Photo

  • Jo Ellis: County home to rare yellowwood tree

    In late spring, drifts as white as snow fill the gutters and curbs on the east side of the Jasper County Courthouse. It isn’t snow, of course; it’s the fallen petals of the yellowwood tree that grows squarely in front of the door to the Jasper County Extension office.

    May 9, 2010

  • Jasper County Commission gets building project update

    Plans to close out one building project and start another were reviewed by the Jasper County Commission last week.
    Darieus Adams, Western District associate commissioner, met Thursday with officials of the firm who designed a $292,400 project to upgrade the lighting and make other changes to make four county-owned buildings more energy efficient.

    May 8, 2010

  • Two men running for associate judge in 39th Circuit take case to court

    Two men running for associate judge in Missouri’s 39th Circuit began battling it out in a Jasper County courtroom this week.
    Jasper County Circuit Judge Gayle Crane heard arguments Wednesday concerning the disclosure of documents sought by Robert “Bobby” George, Aurora, the current Lawrence County prosecutor.

    May 7, 2010

  • Carthage tiger Unveiling ceremony celebrates CHS tiger

    Kandy Frazier, Carthage High School principal, summed it up once the new addition to the CHS campus was unveiled Thursday.
    The bronze tiger sculpture created by Carthage artist and sculptor Bob Tommey, she said, is the kind of work that would be found at a big university.

    May 6, 2010 1 Photo

Facebook
Poll

One of the first bills that Gov. Jay Nixon has signed into law this year is one that redirects casino fees to nursing homes for military veterans. Do you think this is a good bill?

Yes.
No.
     View Results
Parade
Magazine

Click HERE to read all your Parade favorites including Hollywood Wire, Celebrity interviews and photo galleries, Food recipes and cooking tips, Games and lots more.
NDN Video
Youngest-ever Speller Disappointed by Mistake 2 American Tourists Kidnapped in Egypt Chen Guangcheng: 'Historic Transition' in China New York City Seeks Big Drink Ban Los Angeles Bans Plastic Grocery Bags Raw Video: SpaceX Dragon Leaves Space Station Police: Gunman Kills 5, Self in Seattle Experts: Americans Must Prepare for Storm Season Forest Fire Becomes New Mexico's Largest Ever Montreal Police: Mailed Body Parts From Same Man Facebook Expands Campus As Stock Shrinks