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KiD OF THE YEAR
TIME Magazine
|September 29, 2025
THROUGH HER HARD WORK, 17-YEAR-OLD TEJASVI MANOJ HOPES TO CREATE A SAFER WORLD FOR SENIORS
THE UNNAMED CYBERCRIMINALS trying to scam seniors out of their money got more than they bargained for when they targeted Tejasvi Manoj's grandfather back in February 2024. Tejasvi, then a 16-year-old junior at Lebanon Trail High School in Frisco, Texas, was driving home from Scouting America camp with her father when he suddenly noticed five missed calls on his phone—all from his 85-year-old father. He called back, and the older man reported that he had received an urgent email from another relative, Tejasvi's uncle, asking for $2,000 to settle an unexpected debt. Given the apparent emergency, Tejasvi's grandfather was prepared to transfer the funds—but her father urged him not to and the grandfather, at the suggestion of his wife, then called the uncle to see if the request was legitimate.
"I never asked you for money," came the response. "Please don't send anything until I can look into what's going on."
It was a near miss for the unsuspecting senior. The fact that criminals would seek to take advantage of an old man's lack of sophistication about the workings of the internet galled Tejasvi. When she got home she went to her room and immediately began researching how common such scams are. Very common, it turns out.
This story is from the September 29, 2025 edition of TIME Magazine.
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