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Next Gen Econ > Debt > FBI Issues Warning: Deepfake Kidnappings and Voice Clones Target Seniors—Here’s How to Stay Safe
Debt

FBI Issues Warning: Deepfake Kidnappings and Voice Clones Target Seniors—Here’s How to Stay Safe

NGEC By NGEC Last updated: May 20, 2026 7 Min Read
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The FBI is warning seniors that they are targets of sophisticated scams. Americans aged 60 and older are losing over $3.4 billion to scams in 2023. Andrey_Popov/Shutterstock

Imagine getting a frantic phone call that sounds exactly like your granddaughter crying for help. A panicked voice says she has been kidnapped, hurt, or arrested, and the caller demands money immediately to “save” her. For many seniors, that nightmare is no longer hypothetical because scammers are now using artificial intelligence to clone voices, fake videos, and create terrifying “virtual kidnapping” scams. The FBI has repeatedly warned that AI-powered fraud is becoming more sophisticated, with criminals using deepfake audio, altered photos, and emotionally manipulative tactics to pressure victims into sending money fast. Older Americans are especially vulnerable because scammers intentionally target people who may be more trusting, isolated, or emotionally attached to family members.

Voice Cloning Technology Can Sound Shockingly Real

Scammers no longer need hours of recorded audio to imitate someone’s voice. Experts say artificial intelligence tools can now create convincing voice clones using only a few seconds of speech gathered from social media videos, voicemail greetings, TikTok clips, Facebook posts, or YouTube uploads. The FBI and consumer protection groups warn that criminals are increasingly using these cloned voices during extortion and virtual kidnapping scams. In many cases, victims hear what sounds like a child or grandchild screaming, crying, or begging for help before a fake “kidnapper” demands immediate payment. The emotional shock often causes victims to panic before stopping to verify whether the emergency is real.

Deepfake Kidnapping Scams Exploit Fear and Urgency

Virtual kidnapping scams are designed to overwhelm logical thinking. Criminals may call unexpectedly, claim they are holding a loved one hostage, and threaten violence if money is not sent immediately through cryptocurrency, wire transfers, or gift cards. The FBI recently warned that scammers are now using AI-generated photos, videos, and fake “proof-of-life” media to make these scams appear more believable. Some scammers even research family members online beforehand so they can mention schools, workplaces, hometowns, or pets during the call. Seniors who regularly share family details online may unknowingly provide criminals with exactly the information needed to build a convincing scam.

Social Media Is Fueling These AI Scams

Many families do not realize how much personal information they post publicly every day. Vacation photos, birthday videos, graduation clips, and family livestreams can all provide enough material for scammers to build realistic voice clones or fake emergency stories. Scam prevention experts say criminals often scrape social media accounts looking for names, relationships, locations, and audio samples. A scammer who knows a grandchild attending college in another state can create a far more believable story than someone making random cold calls. Even short videos posted by proud grandparents may accidentally give criminals access to recognizable speech patterns and family dynamics.

Seniors Lost Billions to Fraud Last Year

The financial damage from fraud targeting older Americans is staggering. According to FBI data, cyber-enabled scams cost Americans nearly $21 billion in 2025, with AI-related fraud becoming one of the fastest-growing categories. Financial crime experts say seniors remain prime targets because scammers assume retirees may have savings, retirement accounts, or home equity available. Some victims lose only a few thousand dollars, while others drain retirement accounts trying to “save” loved ones from fake emergencies. Beyond the financial loss, many seniors report lasting emotional trauma and embarrassment after discovering they were manipulated by AI-generated deception.

Families Need a “Safe Word” Before a Scam Happens

One of the simplest ways to stop voice-cloning scams is by creating a private family password or “safe word.” If someone calls claiming to be a kidnapped relative, family members can ask for the safe word before believing the emergency. Law enforcement agencies and elder fraud experts increasingly recommend this strategy because AI-generated voices may sound authentic but cannot easily answer unexpected personal verification questions. Families should also agree never to send money during a phone call without independently contacting the relative first. Even taking 60 seconds to hang up and call a known number directly can expose the scam immediately.

Slowing Down Could Save Thousands of Dollars

The biggest weapon scammers use is urgency. They want victims scared, emotional, and isolated before they have time to think critically or contact someone else for help. Consumer protection experts say one of the most effective defenses is simply slowing the conversation down and refusing to act immediately. If a caller demands secrecy, insists on cryptocurrency payments, or threatens harm for contacting police, those are major red flags. Legitimate emergencies can always be verified through local law enforcement, hospitals, schools, or direct contact with family members.

AI Scams Are Getting Smarter, but Families Can Still Fight Back

Artificial intelligence is changing the fraud landscape faster than many families realize. Voice cloning, deepfake videos, and AI-generated kidnapping scams are specifically designed to exploit fear and emotional trust, especially among seniors worried about children or grandchildren. The FBI warns that these scams will likely become even more convincing as AI tools improve and become easier for criminals to access. The good news is that simple habits—using family safe words, limiting personal information online, verifying emergencies independently, and refusing rushed payments—can dramatically reduce the risk of becoming a victim. Staying calm during unexpected emergency calls may feel difficult, but in many cases, that pause could prevent devastating financial loss and emotional heartbreak.

Have you ever received a phone call that you were certain was a scam? How did you handle it? Drop your thoughts in the comments. 

What to Read Next

Five Simple Steps to Prevent Deepfake Scams Targeting Your Family

Your Voice Could Live On as a “Ghostbot” — Without Consent: Lawyers Warn AI Afterlife Rights Are Still a Legal Gray Area

7 Red Flags in Senior Dating Profiles That Signal a “Grandparent Scam” in Progress

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