Here is the third scenario Paul Roberts from TheTaxBook posed to us Thursday evening at the Minnesota EA monthly meeting.
A 92-year-old taxpayer who has been a client for 30 years is showing signs of inability to handle personal financial affairs. Information provided by the client during the tax interview indicates that thousands of dollars have been sent to overseas and Canadian lottery scams. On one occasion the client gave bank routing numbers and account numbers to a stranger over the pone. The elderly gentleman’s son is also a client of mine. I am torn between feeling responsible for alerting the son to the deteriorating condition of his parent and my responsibility for respecting the privacy of a client. I have urged my client to share with his son the letters, phone calls, etc., from these scams, but he apparently is not doing so. There is no court-appointed guardian, and the client has not committed any crime. Is there anything I can do?
A 92-year-old taxpayer who has been a client for 30 years is showing signs of inability to handle personal financial affairs. Information provided by the client during the tax interview indicates that thousands of dollars have been sent to overseas and Canadian lottery scams. On one occasion the client gave bank routing numbers and account numbers to a stranger over the pone. The elderly gentleman’s son is also a client of mine. I am torn between feeling responsible for alerting the son to the deteriorating condition of his parent and my responsibility for respecting the privacy of a client. I have urged my client to share with his son the letters, phone calls, etc., from these scams, but he apparently is not doing so. There is no court-appointed guardian, and the client has not committed any crime. Is there anything I can do?
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