Vietnam veteran with cancer scammed out of $20,000 speaks out to warn others

BOSTON — If not for the quick thinking of local law enforcement and the victim’s willingness to speak out, more people may have fallen for a scam that cost a Vietnam veteran and cancer patient from Everett, Mass., tens of...

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BOSTON — If not for the quick thinking of local law enforcement and the victim’s willingness to speak out, more people may have fallen for a scam that cost a Vietnam veteran and cancer patient from Everett, Mass., tens of thousands of dollars. CHARLES “CHUCK” FAGONE According to Charles “Chuck” Fagone, it all started — as these scams so often do — with an alarming email.

“I got an email from Amazon, saying I owed multiple monies. They said, you know, they told me the items and so forth, and I said I never ordered anything,” he told the Herald. Fagone said he was told to call his bank, but that he was given a number that didn’t match his normal branch.



The “operator” on the other end put him on with a “Mr. Cooper,” who was supposed to represent some “trade commission.” “Cooper” told Fagone he had to keep his phone connected and on speakerphone, head to the bank, and withdraw $27,000 to cover the cost of Amazon purchases allegedly made in his name.

That money, he was told, would be picked up by a man who would place it in a safe deposit box for keeping until the Amazon issues were worked out. Fagone, who is currently in chemo therapy as he battles stomach cancer, told “Mr. Cooper” he was too sick from treatment and unable to go to the bank.

The thieves pressed, he said. “I told them: Mr. Cooper, I don’t know if I can make it to the bank.

I feel lousy. He said that I had to and that it would only take a couple of minutes,” he said. A GoFundMe has been established to help the 77-year-old Purple Heart recipient recover his lost funds.

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