Cross-posted from “How elderly dementia patients are unwittingly fueling political campaigns” by @Domiku@beehaw.org in !usnews@beehaw.org


A CNN investigation reveals how deceptive political fundraising has misled elderly Americans into giving away millions of dollars

Excerpt:

But as dementia robbed him of his reasoning abilities, he began making online political donations over and over again — eventually telling his son he believed he was part of a network of political operatives communicating with key Republican leaders. In less than two years, the man became one of the country’s largest grassroots supporters of the Republican Party, ultimately giving away nearly half a million dollars to former President Donald Trump and other candidates. Now, the savings account he spent his whole life building is practically empty.

The story of this unlikely political benefactor is one of many playing out across the country.

More than 1,000 reports filed with government agencies and consumer advocacy groups reviewed by CNN, along with an analysis of campaign finance data and interviews with dozens of contributors and their family members, show how deceptive political fundraisers have victimized hundreds of elderly Americans and misled those battling dementia or other cognitive impairments into giving away millions of dollars — far more than they ever intended. Some unintentionally joined the ranks of the top grassroots political donors in the country as they tapped into retirement savings and went into debt, contributing six-figure sums through thousands of transactions.


I really hate the “interactive” stories like this where they spoon feed you details as you scroll, but about 1/3 down is the actual article.

  • zephorah@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    They only refunded 1/3? What a bag of dicks. That’s elder abuse.

    Subscription plans for donations? We truly are on the worst timeline.

    • fed0sine@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      Eh, NPR mentions a “sustained donation” during their monthly support pledge drive.

      There’s also Patreon for ongoing support for content, and newspaper/media outlet subscriptions for un less-biased coverage like The Guardian.

      I’m not defending elder financial abuse by any means, only widening the lens with examples.