AARP Hearing Center
In Surfside, Florida, the death toll was rising from the collapse of a high-rise condo when state officials warned in June that fake fundraisers on GoFundMe had been set up for victims.
In July, a woman near Las Vegas asked for help on GoFundMe, saying she had three daughters — ages 5, 6 and 8— and was $1,900 behind on her rent. But after she and the girls appeared on CNN, the kids’ real mother came forward.
In August, after a 29-year-old Chicago policewoman was killed during a traffic stop, a police group warned of scam GoFundMe accounts supposedly set up to support her family.
GoFundMe, the world's largest fundraising platform, boasts having collected $15 billion from 200 million donations since its launch in 2010. Amid the outpouring, though, crooks and con artists have prowled the platform for a quick buck.
Warsan Mohamoud, a GoFundMe safety specialist, addressed the problem in a statement to AARP: “We believe in the good and kind in people. We are also realistic about the fact that there are bad actors in every physical and digital space.”
Shutting down shady pleas for assistance
Twenty-one campaign pages tied to the Surfside disaster were suspended “out of an abundance of caution” and none raised money, according to GoFundMe, a privately held company in Redwood City, California. It said $1.7 million has been raised for the South Florida calamity and 71 funds still are active.
The suspension of 21 sites did not placate Florida's chief financial officer, Jimmy Patronis, who said the firm has a “transparency problem” and observed: “The company has admitted they closed 21 accounts, which begs the question: How many fraudulent accounts did they not find?"
Patronis said unlike many other entities that transmit currency, GoFundMe is not licensed as a money transmitter in Florida, so it is not subject to the same audit requirements as other licensed money-services businesses, such as Western Union.
In Chicago, several GoFundMe pages purportedly established to benefit the fallen officer's family have been shut down, the company said.