Federal Elder-Fraud Policy Tracker
This page tracks federal-level legislative, regulatory, and enforcement activity affecting US elder fraud. It is updated quarterly. Coverage includes active bills in Congress, federal agency rulemakings, major court-case outcomes (described by scheme and outcome, not individual defendants per our editorial policy), interagency coordination, and OFAC designations. The tracker is intended as a citable reference for journalists, researchers, and policy professionals working on elder-fraud prevention.
How to use this page: Each section below covers one branch of federal elder-fraud activity, updated quarterly. Cite as: HCSK Inc., Federal Elder-Fraud Policy Tracker, seniors.hcsk.org/federal-elder-fraud-policy-tracker, accessed [date].
Last updated
Q2 2026 update — May 2026. Next scheduled update: August 2026 (Q3).
Active Congressional bills
The 119th Congress has active legislation on elder fraud across both chambers. The following are bills with substantive progress as of Q2 2026:
- Senate Special Committee on Aging — has continued annual hearings on elder fraud throughout 2025-2026, with focus on AI-enabled scams and transnational compounds.
- Stop Senior Scams Act — proposed strengthening of FTC/DOJ coordination, retailer reporting requirements for gift-card scams.
- Elder Fraud Protection Act proposals — various versions enhancing prosecutorial tools for transnational elder-fraud cases.
- Crypto-kiosk consumer-protection bills — both chambers have introduced versions requiring identity verification, transaction limits, and scam-victim refund windows.
- Senior Investor Protection Act — would expand FINRA Rule 2165 authority and create federal floor on transaction holds.
- Bank Secrecy Act updates — proposed enhanced reporting requirements for crypto-related elder-fraud SARs.
Federal agency rulemakings and advisories
Treasury / FinCEN
- Continuing implementation of FinCEN advisories on pig butchering and Cambodian compound operations.
- OFAC designations of compound-linked entities continue to expand on a quarterly basis.
CFPB
- Enhanced enforcement of Reg E protections in P2P scam cases. See our P2P payment scams pillar.
- Continuing pressure on major banks for Zelle scam refund policy.
FTC
- Consumer Sentinel Network elder-fraud data publishing.
- Enforcement actions on tech-support and gift-card-payment scams.
- Updated rules on consumer-deceptive practices in crypto-investment marketing.
SEC
- Investor alerts on AI-augmented investment scams targeting seniors.
- Enforcement against fake crypto investment platforms.
FBI
- IC3 2025 Elder Fraud Annual Report (released June 2025).
- Recovery Asset Team continues to recover funds in pig-butchering and wire-fraud cases when victims report quickly.
DOJ
- Elder Justice Initiative — continuing prosecutions of transnational fraud rings.
- Indictments and forfeitures targeting compound-linked actors.
HHS / Medicare / SSA
- HHS OIG continues enforcement of Medicare fraud schemes targeting seniors.
- SSA OIG continuing public-awareness campaigns on SSA impersonation.
HUD
- OIG continues enforcement on reverse-mortgage fraud. See our reverse-mortgage pillar.
Major case outcomes (anonymized)
Per editorial policy we describe schemes and outcomes, not individual defendants. The following are representative case categories with material outcomes in the past year:
- Pig-butchering wire-laundering takedown — multiple coordinated DOJ indictments resulting in nine-figure asset seizures from compound-linked crypto-exchange flows.
- Tech-support scam ring takedowns — federal indictments of organizations that staffed call centers running fake Microsoft/Apple scripts against US seniors.
- Romance-scam money-laundering indictments — US-based money mules indicted for receiving and forwarding senior-victim funds.
- Reverse-mortgage forgery prosecution — federal charges in cases involving forged signatures on HECM applications.
- Compound trafficking-victim repatriations — State Department coordinated repatriations of US citizens released from Southeast Asian compounds.
OFAC designations relevant to elder fraud
Treasury OFAC continues to expand designations targeting compound operators, crypto-laundering intermediaries, and individual organizers. New designations are typically announced through Treasury press releases. The most material categories for US elder fraud:
- Cambodian compound operators and casino-linked organizations.
- Crypto-exchange operators with material compound-laundering flows.
- Individuals identified as facilitators of forced-labor recruitment for compound operations.
- Property and entity designations within Special Economic Zones associated with compound activity.
State-level coordination
Federal action operates alongside expanding state-level activity. The following states have active elder-fraud legislation, units, or task forces with material activity in 2025-2026: California, New York, Illinois, Texas, Florida, Massachusetts, Arizona, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Washington, and Virginia. The National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG) has multistate task forces on tech-support fraud, crypto-kiosk fraud, and pig-butchering.
How to suggest a tracker entry
If you are a journalist, researcher, or policy professional with a federal elder-fraud development you think we should track, see For Press & Journalists or For Researchers for contact and submission information.
Sources
- Congress.gov
- Senate Special Committee on Aging
- FinCEN press releases
- CFPB newsroom
- FTC press releases
- FBI IC3 annual reports
- DOJ Elder Justice Initiative
- Treasury press releases (OFAC)
