© 2020 – 2024 AEA3 WEB | AEAƎ United Kingdom News
AEA3 WEB | AEAƎ United Kingdom News
Image default
News

Fraudsters are using power-of-attorney rules to steal people’s homes

Lawyers warn that a scammer could use falsified names and addresses to get legal document entitling them to take over the affairs of an another

The system for taking control of a person’s financial affairs is “wide open” to fraud, an investigation has found. It revealed that the application process for obtaining the document known as lasting power of attorney (LPA) has no routine identity checks or effective fraud controls. Labour said it was a “national scandal” and called for an urgent inquiry.

The scheme is intended to help manage the affairs of those who are vulnerable or seriously ill. The stamped paper documents can be checked by organisations such as banks and investment firms against a national register.

Continue reading…

Related posts

UK asylum seekers who refuse to live on barges could lose government support

AEA3

Eels have vanished from Somerset Levels, DNA tests show

AEA3

Ghislaine Maxwell lawyers cannot keep retrial arguments under seal, judge rules

AEA3