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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Deborah Cole in Berlin

Bavarian pensioner lays trap to catch phone fraudster who was out for his gold

A phone scammer
German police warned against giving strangers bank details over the phone. Photograph: Lauren Hurley/PA

An 85-year-old Bavarian has managed – twice – to ensnare phone fraudsters trying to shake him down for cash and valuables.

The German pensioner received an apparently urgent call on Tuesday from a man posing as a police officer telling him a family member was in distress – a common trick used to dupe elderly people.

Immediately smelling a rat, he kept the caller on the line saying he would rush to get €10,000 (£8,750) in cash and several gold coins to hand over.

While he strung the conman along, his daughter called Ingolstadt police who were able to catch a 20-year-old male suspect at the pickup spot.

It was the second time the quick-thinking pair had laid a trap for a swindler. In September last year, a man impersonating a police officer tried a similar trick over the phone against the pensioner and demanded more than €60,000 in cash.

“Then, too, he and his daughter reacted in an exemplary manner, which also led to the arrest of a courier,” police said.

When the 40-year-old woman arrived to pick up the bundle at the handover site, police were waiting.

In both cases, the scammers claimed the money was needed as bail for a relative after a fatal car accident. Last year, the callers named his niece as the accused and, in the most recent case, a granddaughter.

Police warned potential victims, particularly elderly people, to be sceptical of similar calls and urged them not to reveal personal data, including bank details.

Earlier this month, a Munich woman in her 80s gave cash and gold valued at up to €600,000 to swindlers after receiving a phone call from a “female doctor” claiming that a family member urgently needed expensive medication she should pay for by courier.

A 24-year-old man arrived to claim the money and the gold while a 59-year-old accomplice waited for him in a nearby car. Police arrested both at the scene and returned the valuables to the woman. It was not immediately clear who alerted the authorities.

In July, criminals cheated an 80-year-old Ingolstadt man out of more than €100,000 in gold. Warning of a rash of burglaries in the region, a caller claiming to be a police officer told the victim to place his gold bars on the doorstep of his home for pickup so they could be taken to a safe location. He complied and the valuables were stolen.

Earlier in the day, a caller pretending to be a bank employee had called the 80-year-old man telling him his account had been compromised by thieves and he should make a series of payments to rectify the problem. The victim made several transfers, each involving thousands of euros.

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