​Louisiana Attorney General representative warns Winnfield Kiwanis Club of rising elder fraud scams and high-tech artificial intelligence exploitation

​WINNFIELD, LA — The Kiwanis Club of Winnfield welcomed a vital community protection presentation during their regular weekly luncheon meeting on Tuesday, June 30. Courtney Mounce, the Central Louisiana Outreach Representative for Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill’s office, traveled from Vernon Parish to serve as the keynote speaker. Mounce delivered an eye-opening and urgent address focusing on the rapid escalation of elder fraud, predatory financial scams, and the sophisticated ways criminals utilize emerging technologies to target vulnerable residents across the state.

As the regional outreach coordinator, Mounce manages an expansive territory stretching from Vernon Parish eastward to Concordia Parish, bringing critical educational programming directly to municipal groups, civic organizations, and schools. Her message to Winnfield civic leaders was clear: consumer fraud has mutated into a multi-billion-dollar global industry, and local awareness is the first and most effective line of defense.

​”Everyone is a target,” Mounce noted during her presentation, referencing structural data compiled by the Attorney General’s Consumer Protection Division. “Fraud does not care about race, education, or income. However, elderly Americans are heavily targeted because they often live independently, hold hard-earned retirement savings, and possess a traditional politeness that malicious strangers exploit.”

​Mounce detailed several prevalent predatory schemes currently plaguing Louisiana families, emphasizing two categories where local residents have suffered massive financial losses: romance scams and high-tech “grandparent” imposter schemes.

​According to federal data referenced in the presentation, Americans over the age of 60 lost more than $356 million to confidence and romance scams in a single calendar year. Scammers frequently monitor local obituaries and social media platforms to identify recently widowed individuals. Operating through platforms like Facebook Messenger, these digital predators spend weeks building artificial emotional connections before engineering a fabricated crisis requiring urgent financial help.

​Mounce shared a sobering case study from her previous legislative work where an elderly woman was systematically deceived by an online predator claiming to reside domestically. Over several weeks, the victim was manipulated into wiring her family’s entire 401(k) savings—totaling half a million dollars—to an account that vanished into overseas networks. Local authorities later discovered the scammer was operating entirely out of Nigeria, placing the funds beyond the reach of domestic court systems.

​The presentation also highlighted a disturbing new evolutionary leap in criminal tactics: the integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) voice-cloning technology. In modern “Grandparent Scams,” criminals no longer rely on simple generic voice scripts. Instead, they scrape public videos from social media platforms—such as family holiday greetings posted by parents or grandparents—and extract short audio samples of children or grandchildren.

​Using sophisticated software, scammers clone the exact pitch, tone, and inflection of a loved one’s voice. They then execute high-pressure phone calls pretending to be a grandchild who has been arrested, hospitalized, or stranded in an emergency, demanding immediate bail or medical funds. Mounce related a personal family scare where her own grandmother received a cloned collect call that perfectly replicated her brother’s voice, highlighting just how convincing these digital audio deepfakes have become.

​Winnfield civic leaders in attendance verified that the impact is hitting close to home. Local organizational records and feedback indicated that multiple elderly residents within Winn Parish alone have fallen victim to these exact psychological manipulations over the past year, resulting in hundreds of thousands of dollars combined being drained out of local accounts.

​The core barrier to asset recovery, Mounce explained, is that over 90 percent of these financial scams originate overseas, leaving local law enforcement and state agencies without traditional jurisdictional enforcement powers. “Because these funds are sent voluntarily under false pretenses to international entities, recovering them is mathematically improbable,” Mounce stated. “That is why the Attorney General’s mandate focuses heavily on prevention, awareness, and proactive community blocking techniques.”

​In addition to elder fraud prevention, Mounce reviewed the broader logistical scope of the Attorney General’s Outreach Representative program, which covers contractor fraud prevention ahead of hurricane season, fair housing compliance, Medicaid fraud enforcement, and comprehensive digital safety curriculums designed to protect schoolchildren from online predators on gaming platforms like Roblox.

​The Kiwanis Club of Winnfield expressed deep gratitude to Mounce for providing these vital safety materials to the community. Local residents seeking to report suspicious solicitations, file a formal consumer complaint, or coordinate an educational safety presentation for a civic group are strongly encouraged to contact the regional outreach network or utilize the direct hotline channels managed by state and federal authorities.