Sofija Stefanovic visits her 80-year-old friend Bill and suspects he’s being scammed over the internet – not for the first time. Compelled by Bill’s devastating stories of online dating, heartbreak and bankruptcy, Sofija gets drawn into the underworld of romance scams.
I’m coming up the staircase of Bill’s apartment building with two bottles of wine. We’ll drink one bottle now, and the other he’ll savour for weeks.
I met Bill at a romance-scam victims’ support group two years ago. I was working on a TV show about internet scams, and Bill was one of our stars.
Bill, like millions of other people around the world, joined an online dating site and met someone. After a while, his long-distance lover asked Bill for a small amount of money. This wasn’t a big deal: friends ask each other for loans all the time – credit cards expire, bills get too high, rent is increased. Bill, a generous person, sent the small sum through without raising an eyebrow. Then his significant other needed some more money.
The situation escalated, and, over several years, Bill became involved in a horrific tale of love, death and crime, all the while sending money to a growing cast of characters. When he began to suspect he was being conned, Bill was contacted by police, who assured him they were about to catch the scammers (they were, in fact, scammers themselves). A manager at Barclays bank was holding onto the money Bill was owed (also a scammer). Bill had lost all of his savings, mortgaged his flat and borrowed money from friends. He was sending his pension away as soon as he got it, in the wild hope that he would, one day, get his money back. He was scammed out of more than $80,000. It left him an emotional wreck, and drowning in debt.
But Bill is, I believe, a success story. When I met him two years ago, he had just come out of his scam, ready to tell the tale and help others in the same situation. Bill and I stayed in touch after he participated in the TV show, and I visit him whenever I come to Brisbane.