Neszed-Mobile-header-logo
Thursday, October 16, 2025
Newszed-Header-Logo
HomeUSA NewsNYC grandma, 86, loses $700K savings in scam — now she’s suing...

NYC grandma, 86, loses $700K savings in scam — now she’s suing Bank of America, Merrill Lynch for negligence

The fraud started in August 2023 as fear dressed up as urgency. Pop-up warnings began flashing across 86-year-old Nina Mortellito’s computer screen, claiming her bank accounts had been hacked. What followed was a months-long tale of manipulation that ultimately drained her of $700,000 — her entire life savings.

According to a lawsuit filed against Merrill Lynch in Manhattan Supreme Court, the Upper East Side resident who suffers from age-related memory loss was persuaded to make a series of withdrawals over nine months, framed as an act of “safekeeping.”

It was uncharacteristic of Mortellito to withdraw so much at once. For over 30 years, her withdrawals never exceeded $5,000. Her niece had even been added as a co-trustee in 2022 to provide oversight and financial safeguards. Even though the withdrawals were out of character for Mortellito, the banks never raised a red flag.

“We are extremely disappointed the banks have not acted according to reasonable professional standards,” Mortellito’s nephew-in-law, Stephen Kuhn, told The New York Post. (1) “We are left with no choice but to bring this lawsuit, which we hope will bring real change to the banks’ policies and procedures, lessening the chances this will happen to others.”

But who’s really at fault?

According to court documents, Mortellito was tricked into believing her savings were at risk and that the only way to protect them was to convert everything into gold bullion. Over several months, she withdrew about $275,000 from her Merrill Lynch accounts and wired another $150,000 from her TD Bank account to a gold dealer in Texas.

The sophisticated scam doesn’t just stop there. She also mailed a $30,000 check and took out more than $100,000 from her Union Bank of Switzerland (UBS) accounts at the scammers’ direction, according to the lawsuit.

These weren’t just withdrawals — they were acts of trust for someone who alleges they have our best interests in mind. That’s the power of an imposter scam. A criminal pretends to be someone they’re not, just long enough to make you feel safe.

Then they take everything. And business is booming. A report from the Federal Trade Commission shows impersonation scams are now four times more likely to happen than before. (2) And older Americans are paying the price. The FBI reports seniors lost $4.8 billion to scams in 2024, a record-breaking sum that reflects a new, digital breed of con artist. (3)

Source link

RELATED ARTICLES

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Most Popular

Recent Comments