Scammers Exploit Death Records Within 3 Days, Fueling $7.7 Billion Elder Fraud
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 23
Scammers Exploit Death Records Within 3 Days, Fueling $7.7 Billion Elder Fraud
1 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jun 23
Summary
Death certificates can trigger scam targeting within 1 to 3 days, as records flow through state databases, Social Security updates, obituary scrapers and data-broker systems that flag families as recently bereaved.
Within 2 weeks, fraudsters may use those profiles to pose as debt collectors, insurers or government officials, often citing real family details to pressure survivors into wire, gift-card or crypto payments.
Weeks later, property transfers and probate filings can expose sole ownership, estate values and beneficiary names, creating fresh openings for inheritance scams and other predatory outreach.
A 3-to-12-week lag in death reporting across lenders, credit bureaus and tax systems also leaves room for 'ghosting'—identity theft in the deceased's name through credit, loan, tax-refund or health-benefit fraud.
Experts say the first 2 weeks are critical: freeze the deceased's and survivor's credit at all 3 bureaus, verify any payment demand independently, and remove personal data from broker sites that can repopulate records.