At a press briefing on the 12th, the Ministry of Public Security said frauds targeting the elderly fall into three high-frequency types. First, pension-investment schemes that lure seniors with supposedly guaranteed high-yield wealth products, collec

2026-06-12

At a press briefing on the 12th, the Ministry of Public Security said frauds targeting the elderly fall into three high-frequency types. First, pension-investment schemes that lure seniors with supposedly guaranteed high-yield wealth products, collectibles or pre-IPO shares, senior apartments, or retirement/healthcare project investments. Second, health-product scams using free clinics or health talks to exaggerate efficacy or fabricate illnesses to sell overpriced supplements and therapy devices. Third, impersonation scams where callers pose as police, prosecutors, medical-insurance, social-security or civil‑affairs staff — alleging the elder is implicated in a case, that insurance is frozen, or there are pension-subsidy issues — to request cooperation and induce transfers to “verify” funds; or impersonate relatives to claim emergencies or request urgent transfers.