An 85-year-old man in Bavaria, Germany, fooled phone scammers twice by pretending to fall for their tricks. On Tuesday, he got a call from a man posing as a police officer claiming a family member was in trouble. The caller demanded €10,000 and gold coins. The man kept the caller on the line, saying he would fetch the money. While he delayed the scammer, his daughter contacted Ingolstadt police. The police caught a 20-year-old man at the handover spot. This was the second time the pensioner and his daughter trapped fraudsters. Last September, a man pretending to be a police officer asked for over €60,000. Police arrested a 40-year-old woman who came to pick up the money. In both cases, scammers said the money was for bail after a fatal car accident. They changed the accused family member each time, naming a niece first, then a granddaughter. Police warn especially elderly people to be wary of such calls and never share personal or bank details. In a related case this month, a Munich woman in her 80s gave cash and gold worth up to €600,000 to scammers. They posed as a female doctor needing urgent payments for family medication. Police arrested a 24-year-old man and a 59-year-old accomplice trying to collect the valuables. Earlier, criminals stole over €100,000 in gold from an 80-year-old Ingolstadt man after tricking him over the phone. They told him to leave gold bars outside his home for 'safe keeping,' but the items were stolen. The same man had already sent thousands of euros after a caller pretended to be his bank employee. Police advise everyone to stay cautious and report suspicious phone calls immediately.