The Phone Call That Cost a 90-Year-Old Her Retirement: What Families Need to Know About the Gold Bar Scam
TL;DR (Too Long; Didn’t Read)
- The Threat: Scammers call seniors posing as government agents and convince them that their savings are in danger, then send a courier to collect their cash or gold in person.
- How They Do It: They use fake urgency, official-sounding codes, and strict secrecy instructions to run a multi-step con that can last months before the victim realizes anything is wrong.
- Stop It Now: Call the senior in your life today and share this one rule: no real government agency, ever, will ask you to buy gold, withdraw cash, or hand money to a stranger at your door. That phone call takes three minutes, and it ends this scam cold.
The 90-year-old woman answered the phone because the man sounded official.
He said he was from the Social Security Administration. He said her retirement account had been flagged. He said her savings were at risk and that she had to act quickly, and quietly, or lose everything.
She was 90 years old, living alone in Delaware County, Pennsylvania.
What followed wasn’t one mistake. It was nine separate trips to buy gold bars. Nine pickups at her front door by a courier who knew her name, had a code to verify his identity, and reassured her, every time, that her money was safe.
By the time she called Radnor Township police, her account was drained.
Radnor Police Detective Brian Bell told ABC’s Action News Investigative Team that in all his years, he had never seen elder theft reach dollar amounts like that. Two victims in Delaware County combined lost more than $3 million.
This is not a story about a careless person. It is a story about a well-rehearsed criminal operation that has been running across the country for years, and it is happening in Pennsylvania right now.
Vulnerability 01: Pennsylvania Is Already in the Crosshairs
The first victim’s case was not random. Pennsylvania has become one of the hardest-hit states in the country for this kind of fraud.
In a February 2026 hearing of the Pennsylvania House Majority Policy Committee, lawmakers heard directly from victims and experts about the scale of the problem. Pennsylvanians filed more than 4,000 scam-related complaints last year, losing more than $76 million to scammers in 2025 alone. That number is likely larger. Victims frequently don’t report because they feel ashamed, or they don’t realize they were scammed until months later.
Rep. Brian Munroe, who hosted the hearing, said it plainly: his own mother had been defrauded out of close to $40,000 over the span of two years before the family found out.
The national picture is worse. According to the FBI’s 2025 Internet Crime Report, Americans 60 and older filed 201,266 complaints with the FBI in 2025, a 37% increase from the year before. Their total losses reached $7.748 billion, a 59% jump from 2024. The average senior victim lost $38,500. Tech support fraud, the category that feeds directly into gold bar pickups, was the second-largest loss category for seniors, with more than $1 billion lost by that age group alone.
The FBI also tracked approximately 725 gold courier scam complaints in 2025, with losses of $311.8 million reported. Those figures represent only what was reported.
Modus Operandi: How They Run the Play
This scam doesn’t rely on one good lie. It relies on a sequence of them, each designed to make the next step feel normal.
Step 1. The first contact.
It might be a phone call from someone claiming to be from Microsoft, Apple, or a government agency. It might be a pop-up on a computer warning that the device has been hacked. In one of the Pennsylvania cases documented by Attorney General Dave Sunday’s office in April 2026, a woman received a pop-up on her iPhone about fraudulent Apple Pay charges, along with a toll-free number to call. She called it.
The FBI and IC3 refer to the government’s version of this as the “Phantom Hacker” approach. Scammers impersonate, in succession, a technology company, then a financial institution, then a U.S. government official. Each handoff makes the call feel more serious.
Step 2. The escalation.
Once the scammer has the victim on the phone, the story gets bigger. The account has been compromised. There’s criminal activity linked to the Social Security number. The only way to protect the money is to move it. The FBI’s IC3 public service announcement on this scam describes exactly what happens next: victims are told to liquidate their assets into cash or buy gold or other precious metals, which will be placed into a “government-owned” account for safekeeping.
Step 3. The code.
Here is the detail most people don’t know about. Scammers give victims a specific code, sometimes the serial number of a U.S. dollar bill, to hand to the courier as proof of legitimacy. In one of the Pennsylvania cases documented by the Franklin County Free Press, the scammer called it an “exclusive verification code.” That one small bureaucratic touch is what makes a stranger showing up at your door feel like an official transaction.
What makes this so effective is the reversal of authority. The victim believes they are the one verifying the courier. They hold the code. They are in control. That feeling of control is exactly what the scammer designed, because a person who thinks they are checking credentials does not stop to question whether the entire process is a lie.
Step 4. The pickup.
A courier arrives. In the first victim’s case, it happened 9 times over several months. In another Pennsylvania case documented by the Attorney General’s office, scammers used an Uber driver as the unknowing intermediary to collect $16,000 in cash from a mother who believed her daughter had been in a car accident and needed money immediately.
The victim is kept on the phone the entire time. That’s not a coincidence. It prevents them from calling anyone else.
Step 5. Silence.
The “government agent” never calls back. The money is gone. The U.S. government and legitimate businesses will never ask anyone to buy gold or hand cash to a courier. That fact, known in advance, ends this scam before it starts.
Red Flags from the Case File: The Psychology Behind Why It Works
These scams are designed by people who understand how the human mind works under pressure.
The IC3 documentation on this fraud pattern is specific: scammers use an urgent, aggressive tone and refuse to speak to or leave messages with anyone other than their targeted victim. That’s not impatience. It’s a tactic. It creates a sealed environment where the only voice the victim hears belongs to the criminal.
Victims are also told explicitly not to contact their family, their bank, or law enforcement, typically under the guise of protecting a sensitive government investigation. That instruction is worth holding onto. It is the single clearest signal that something is wrong. No legitimate agency operates by instructing people to hide what they’re doing from the people who love them.
The IC3 also notes that these schemes can last weeks or months. During that entire time, victims genuinely believe they are the ones acting responsibly. They are protecting their savings. They are cooperating with an official investigation. They are doing the right thing.
That is not gullibility. That is skilled psychological manipulation, aimed at someone who is often isolated, trusting of authority, and trying to do the right thing under enormous manufactured pressure.
The Pennsylvania House Policy Committee hearing heard directly from Kate Kleinert of Glenolden, who lost more than $40,000 to a Facebook scammer. She put it simply: “It almost seems like they want to make it easy for people like me to be targeted.”
The Defense Protocol: One Conversation That Changes Everything
The good news is that this scam falls apart the moment one person in the family knows the rule.
Share this with every senior in your life. A parent. A grandparent. An aunt who lives alone. The neighbor you check on every few weeks. Say it out loud. Text it. Print it and put it next to the phone.
The rule that ends every version of this scam:
❌ DON’T: Assume a caller is who they say they are, even if the number looks official and they have your name and details.
✅ DO: Know that no government agency, not the Social Security Administration, not the IRS, not the FBI, not the FTC, will ever ask you to buy gold, withdraw cash, or hand money to a courier. If anyone asks you to do that, hang up immediately.
If the call comes:
❌ DON’T: Call back the number they gave you, or the one on caller ID.
✅ DO: Hang up. Then call a family member. Or call your bank using the number on the back of your card. Or call local police.
If they tell you to keep it secret:
That instruction is the scam. Legitimate investigations do not require hiding things from your family. End the call.
If you or someone you know has already sent money:
Contact local law enforcement immediately. File a report at ic3.gov as soon as possible. The FBI’s Recovery Asset Team has successfully frozen funds in cases where victims reported quickly. Time matters. Call first, then report online.
Three numbers worth saving in your phone right now:
- National Elder Fraud Hotline: 1-833-FRAUD-11 (1-833-372-8311)
- PA Bureau of Consumer Protection: 1-800-441-2555
- FBI tip line: 1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324)
The first victim’s account was drained before she understood what had happened. But the families who share this information now, before the call comes, give the people they love a fighting chance.
One rule. Three minutes. Pass it on.
If you want to know where else your family might have an open door right now, I put together a free five-minute assessment called the Digital Open Door Test. It was built from real investigative patterns, and it shows you specifically what to look at first. No tech background needed.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can caller ID really be faked to look like a government number?
Yes. Phone number spoofing is widely available and inexpensive. A call that appears to come from the Social Security Administration or the IRS proves nothing. Always hang up and call the agency back using a number you find yourself at ssa.gov, irs.gov, or on the back of your card.
My parent is sharp and pays attention. Do I really need to warn them?
Yes. The FBI’s 2025 data shows that educated, financially stable, attentive seniors are consistently among the victims in these cases. These scams are not built to fool careless people. They are built to fool careful people who trust authority and are doing their best to protect their savings.
What if my parent has already handed over gold or cash? Is it gone?
Call local law enforcement immediately and file a complaint at ic3.gov. The FBI has a Recovery Asset Team that works directly with banks to freeze fraudulent transfers. Speed matters significantly. Don’t wait to gather all the details before reporting.
They had my parents’ names, address, and account details. How is that possible?
Personal data is widely available on data broker websites, through past data breaches, and through purchases on criminal markets. Having someone’s information is not proof that the caller is legitimate. It makes them sound more legitimate. The same rule applies regardless: hang up, call back on a verified number.
Yeah, but my parents will say, “I’d know if it was a scam.” What do I say?
Share the Radnor case. The first victim was 90 years old and made nine separate gold bar purchases over several months, each time believing she was protecting her retirement. The victims in these cases aren’t fooled in one moment. They are carefully convinced, over time, by someone with a polished script designed specifically to prevent them from stopping. Knowing the rule in advance is the only thing that makes the script fail.
Is there anything I can do if my elderly parent refuses to talk about scams?
Start smaller. Instead of a conversation about scams, have a conversation about one rule: no real government agency will ever ask you to buy gold or hand cash to a stranger. That’s it. One sentence. You don’t need to cover the whole topic. Just plant that rule.
Sources
- Federal Bureau of Investigation, Internet Crime Complaint Center. 2025 IC3 Annual Report. Published April 6, 2026. https://www.ic3.gov/AnnualReport/Reports/2025_IC3Report.pdf
- Pradelli, Chad, and Mettendorf, Cheryl. “‘Gold bar’ scam cost Radnor seniors more than $3 million: Police.” ABC Action News / AOL News. April 24, 2026. https://www.aol.com/news/gold-bar-scam-cost-radnor-040204401.html
- FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center. “Scammers Use Couriers to Retrieve Cash and Precious Metals from Victims of Tech Support and Government Impersonation Scams.” IC3 Public Service Announcement PSA240129. January 29, 2024. https://www.ic3.gov/PSA/2024/PSA240129
- Office of Pennsylvania Attorney General Dave Sunday. “Attorney General Sunday Warns Pennsylvanians of Cash Scams Involving ‘Trusted Person’ Pickups.” April 20, 2026. https://www.attorneygeneral.gov/taking-action/attorney-general-sunday-warns-pennsylvanians-of-cash-scams-involving-trusted-person-pickups/
- Franklin County Free Press. “Attorney General Warns Pennsylvanians About Cash Scam Variant.” April 20, 2026. https://fcfreepresspa.com/attorney-general-warns-pennsylvanians-about-cash-scam-variant/
- Pennsylvania House of Representatives, Office of Rep. Ryan Bizzarro. “Online scammers targeting older Pennsylvanians for millions of dollars.” February 25, 2026. https://www.pahouse.com/Bizzarro/InTheNews/NewsRelease/?id=142479
All sources accessed and verified as of April 26, 2026.
Disclaimer: This article is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal, financial, or cybersecurity advice. If you believe you or a family member has been the victim of fraud, contact local law enforcement immediately and file a complaint at ic3.gov. The victim referenced throughout this article is described only as “a 90-year-old woman” in the original law enforcement and news reporting. Her name was not released by Radnor Township Police or ABC Action News, and no name has been assigned or invented in this article. All facts reflect the documented cases reported by ABC Action News on April 24, 2026, and cited in the Sources section above. Digitath LLC is not affiliated with the FBI, IC3, the Pennsylvania Office of the Attorney General, or the Pennsylvania House of Representatives.
