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Concerned UPS employee takes action when elderly man tries to send package
After Myro asked the gentleman several questions - he grabbed the phone to call the cops.
Mary Rose Garra
10.26.21

When your phone rings, you’d like to believe that whoever’s on the other end is calling with good intentions. However, that’s not always the case.

There are many people out there that call up strangers to try and scam them out of money. Sadly, the elderly are often preyed upon when it comes to scams, just like in the story below.

Pixabay - Dean Moriarty
Source:
Pixabay - Dean Moriarty

A scam, also known as a “confidence trick,” is an attempt to defraud a person or group by gaining their trust. Unfortunately, they happen every day, and to people all over.

There is a long list of confidence tricks.

One of the most common examples of a scam is the “grandparent scam.” As its name implies, grandparents (elderly folks) are the targets.

Pixabay - congerdesign
Source:
Pixabay - congerdesign

According to AARP, formerly called the American Association of Retired Persons, grandparent scams usually go something like,

“The victim gets a call from someone posing as his or her grandchild. This person explains, in a frantic-sounding voice, that he or she is in trouble: There’s been an accident, or an arrest, or a robbery.”

In a news report, one UPS store worker saved a scam victim.

YouTube Screenshot - News4 WSMV Nashville
Source:
YouTube Screenshot - News4 WSMV Nashville

The swindle nearly robbed thousands of dollars from a Mount Juliet man in Tennessee.

An elderly man was about to send $4,000 to someone who claimed a family member was in trouble. Luckily, a local business owner intervened.

Pexels - Pixabay
Source:
Pexels - Pixabay

You despise seeing people fall for these types of con games. Sadly though, it was on the verge of happening on a Monday afternoon.

There was an elderly gentleman that went into the Mt. Juliet Road UPS Store.

YouTube Screenshot - News4 WSMV Nashville
Source:
YouTube Screenshot - News4 WSMV Nashville

Fortunately, Myro Kuzmyn, the store owner, was at the register and struck up a conversation with the senior.

He inquired of the elderly gentleman (who was in his eighties) on what he was sending and where it was going.

Myro informed News4 WSMV Nashville that he had “very specific instructions.” They covered “what to say, how to ship the money, and when it should arrive.”

YouTube Screenshot - News4 WSMV Nashville
Source:
YouTube Screenshot - News4 WSMV Nashville

Myro recalled that,

“When I asked the customer if he knew this individual, he kind of gave it a little pause, and also said ‘not quite.’ I had this uneasy feeling about the transaction.”

“It just didn’t make sense to me,” Myro stated confidently.

Since Myro was concerned that it might be a scam, he called the police.

YouTube Screenshot - News4 WSMV Nashville
Source:
YouTube Screenshot - News4 WSMV Nashville

And it turns out, he was correct!

A scammer pretended to be an attorney and claimed that a family member was in jail.

Captain Tyler Chandler of Mt. Juliet Police told News4 WSMV Nashville,

“Of course, a man at this age, he wanted to help a family member and immediately wanted to send the cash. Luckily, Myro stepped in and prevented the elderly gentleman from becoming a victim.”

YouTube Screenshot - News4 WSMV Nashville
Source:
YouTube Screenshot - News4 WSMV Nashville

Everything sounded suspicious.

The UPS store owner points out that the incident had three warning signs.

The first is that the package did not appear to be a “document,” as the man had claimed. The senior also had no idea who the package was going to.

Lastly, it was required that it arrive the next morning, exactly at eight o’clock.

YouTube Screenshot - News4 WSMV Nashville
Source:
YouTube Screenshot - News4 WSMV Nashville

It’s critical to be cautious every time.

AARP shared some tips to avoid a grandparent scam.

“Don’t engage with the caller or reply to a text.”

“Contact your grandchild or another family member to check the story out.”

“Resist the urge to act immediately no matter how dramatic the story.”

Pexels - Ono Kosuki
Source:
Pexels - Ono Kosuki

They mentioned that scammers will almost certainly ask you to provide gift card information, wire money, or send cash. Because they are difficult to trace, they preferred those payment methods.

“If you can spot a scam, you can stop a scam.”

More information is available on the AARP website.

Watch the video below to see how a UPS worker helped a scam victim!

Please SHARE this with your friends and family!

Sources: YouTube – News4 WSMV Nashville, Wikipedia – Grandparent scam, American Association of Retired Persons (AARP)

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