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3,102 results in Crypto Investment Scams
1011now.com · 2025-12-08
Since 2020, law enforcement in Lincoln, Nebraska has investigated cryptocurrency scams resulting in millions of dollars in losses, with individual victims losing up to $1.5 million and the Lancaster County Sheriff's Office documenting 18 cases with losses as high as $156,000 per case. Scammers employ sophisticated social engineering tactics including romance scams and fake social media messages, often keeping victims on the phone while directing them through withdrawal processes, making recovery of funds unlikely. Banks and law enforcement recommend reporting suspected fraud to local police and the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center, as reporting helps prevent future scams even when victim restitution is rare.
myupnow.com · 2025-12-08
Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel released a scam awareness roundup highlighting major fraud schemes targeting state residents, including disaster relief and charity scams, government imposter fraud, phishing/smishing attacks, cryptocurrency "pig butchering" romance scams, and data breach identity theft. The advisory recommends consumers verify charity legitimacy before donating, never click suspicious links or provide personal information to unsolicited contacts, monitor credit reports regularly through AnnualCreditReport.com, and implement security measures like two-factor authentication and password changes following data breaches.
yahoo.com · 2025-12-08
The FBI seized $8.2 million in cryptocurrency connected to the "pig butchering" dating scam, which affected more than 30 victims who were manipulated into transferring money or investing in crypto schemes after being emotionally groomed through fake romantic relationships. One victim, a Cleveland woman, liquidated her retirement savings and transferred over $650,000 in digital assets. The FBI's use of blockchain intelligence to trace funds across multiple platforms is considered a breakthrough that will help authorities pursue similar romance scams in the future.
blog.knowbe4.com · 2025-12-08
**Cash Bag Scamming** Thousands of victims are currently being defrauded through "cash bag scamming," where scammers impersonate federal law enforcement (FBI, CIA, IRS, etc.) or retail companies like Amazon to convince victims their accounts are compromised by terrorists and their money is at risk. Victims are instructed to withdraw large sums of cash from their banks, avoid telling family members, and hand over their life savings to strangers, with scammers using social engineering tactics like fake official paperwork, coached bank withdrawal instructions, and isolation tactics to manipulate victims into complying.
livebitcoinnews.com · 2025-12-08
**Operation Avalanche:** U.S. Secret Service and Canadian authorities dismantled a $4.3 million Ethereum approval phishing scam through a collaborative investigation involving crypto platforms and blockchain analysis firms. The scam used deceptive tactics to trick users into signing malicious transactions that granted attackers access to their wallets; authorities identified compromised wallets, froze assets on trading platforms, and notified victims to revoke old approvals. Key prevention measures include verifying transaction links, using hardware wallets, checking wallet permissions regularly via Etherscan, and avoiding unsolicited messages promising high returns.
timesofindia.indiatimes.com · 2025-12-08
Two professionals in Hyderabad lost a combined 67 lakh rupees to separate cyber fraud schemes in early 2025: a microbiologist lost 39.7 lakh to scammers operating a fake stock trading platform via Instagram and WhatsApp between January and April, while a software engineer lost 28 lakh within two days to fraudsters posing as a cryptocurrency trading company that initially advertised part-time work on WhatsApp. Both victims were asked to make additional payments before being denied access to their accounts, leading to cases filed under the IT Act by Cyber Crime Police in Cyberabad.
newsweek.com · 2025-12-08
A new phishing attack attributed to threat actor Rockfoils exploits Google Sites to create convincing fake domains that bypass Gmail's security filters, deceiving users into visiting fraudulent support portals and sharing personal information like Social Security numbers. Google confirmed awareness of the attack and stated it has been rolling out protections over the past week that will fully deploy soon. In the interim, Google recommends users enable two-factor authentication and passkeys, and remain cautious of any unsolicited emails requesting personal information.
Crypto Investment Scams Phishing Scam Awareness Cryptocurrency Check/Cashier's Check
states.aarp.org · 2025-12-08
Cryptocurrency scams linked to romance fraud have caused billions in annual losses, exploiting emotional connections to manipulate victims into risky financial investments. AARP Connecticut is hosting a free webinar on April 25 featuring a victim's story and fraud prevention resources to educate the public about these deceptive schemes.
investopedia.com · 2025-12-08
**Article:** "The Surprising Truth About the Age Group Most Likely to Fall for Financial Fraud" Recent FTC data reveals that younger adults (ages 20-29) are losing money to scams at nearly twice the rate of older adults, with 44% experiencing financial losses compared to 24% of those aged 70-79. Younger adults are primarily targeted through online scams including fake shopping sites, cryptocurrency fraud, and social media job offers, with their "digital native" status and tendency toward impulsive decision-making making them particularly vulnerable despite overconfidence in their tech savviness. The study emphasizes that scammers exploit age-specific psychological factors and online
fiftyplusadvocate.com · 2025-12-08
Cryptocurrency ATMs have become a prevalent tool for scammers targeting older adults, with the FTC reporting $65 million in fraud losses through Bitcoin ATMs in the first half of 2024 alone—$46 million from victims aged 60 and older. Scammers use these unregulated kiosks in various schemes including romance and grandparent scams to trick victims into depositing cash. AARP Massachusetts is advocating for legislation requiring cryptocurrency ATM operator licensing, daily transaction limits, fraud warning notices, and consumer education to strengthen protections for residents.
harlemworldmagazine.com · 2025-12-08
AARP New York, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, and other officials launched "The Big Shred NY!" initiative, offering 27 free document shredding locations across New York State through May 2025 to help residents safely dispose of personal documents and prevent identity theft. Fraud targeting Americans reached $12.5 billion in 2024—a 25% increase from 2023—with New York State accounting for $534 million in losses, and adults over 50 reporting $159 million in losses from 28,578 documented fraud cases.
nanaimonewsnow.com · 2025-12-08
A Parksville senior in his 70s lost $160,000 over several years to a cryptocurrency investment scam that began with a $2,000 deposit at a crypto machine. The victim believed he was making legitimate investments but encountered increasingly demanding requests for taxes and fees when attempting to withdraw funds, eventually realizing the entire scheme was fraudulent and reporting it to Oceanside RCMP in March.
states.aarp.org · 2025-12-08
AARP New York, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, and city officials launched "The Big Shred NY!" initiative, offering 27 free document shredding locations across New York State through May 2025 to help residents safely dispose of personal documents and prevent identity theft. Fraud targeting Americans reached $12.5 billion in 2024—a 25% increase from 2023—with New York State accounting for $534 million in losses, and older adults particularly vulnerable with $159 million lost among those over 50. The program aims to combat the rising sophistication of scams targeting seniors through document destruction as a preventive measure against financial fraud.
finance.yahoo.com · 2025-12-08
Fraud losses nationwide reached $12.5 billion in 2024, with New York State accounting for $534 million in losses across 118,933 reported cases; older adults were disproportionately affected, with those over 50 reporting 28,578 fraud cases totaling $159 million in losses. AARP New York, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, and local officials launched "The Big Shred NY!" — a statewide initiative offering 27 free document shredding locations through May 10, 2025, to help residents safely dispose of personal documents containing sensitive information that could be used for identity theft.
states.aarp.org · 2025-12-08
**Social Security Imposter Scams on the Rise** Government imposter scams, particularly those posing as Social Security Administration officials, represent one of the most common fraud schemes targeting consumers, with the Social Security OIG receiving 73,626 reports in 2023—a 13.7% increase from the previous year. Scammers contact victims via phone, text, or email claiming account problems, benefit suspensions, or legal threats, then demand immediate payment or personal information through threats of arrest or account seizure. The Social Security Administration never initiates contact unexpectedly, communicates changes by mail, and never demands immediate payment via gift card, cryptocurrency, or cash—
dfpi.ca.gov · 2025-12-08
**Summary:** Pig butchering is an investment scam in which fraudsters build trust with victims over weeks or months through social media and messaging apps before convincing them to invest in fake cryptocurrency platforms that promise high returns but prevent withdrawals. Scammers use fabricated websites and fake trading apps to collect victim funds, often requesting additional payments for fees or taxes before allowing any withdrawal. Victims should report scams quickly to the DFPI with complete transaction details, wallet addresses, and screenshots to help investigators trace stolen cryptocurrency on the blockchain.
fedscoop.com · 2025-12-08
A Government Accountability Office audit found that federal agencies lack a coordinated strategy to combat consumer scams, resulting in a fragmented approach across the FBI, FTC, CFPB, and other agencies with no uniform data collection, common definitions, or comprehensive loss estimates. The FBI reported approximately 589,400 scam complaints totaling over $10 billion in losses in 2023, with scammers increasingly exploiting peer-to-peer payment apps, bank transfers, and cryptocurrency. The GAO recommended establishing a governmentwide scam-fighting strategy led by the FBI director with formal coordination mechanisms, collaborative data collection, and performance metrics to address this growing threat.
sheridanmedia.com · 2025-12-08
In 2024, Americans lost $12.5 billion to fraud and scams, a 25% increase from 2023, with most scams originating outside the U.S., according to the Federal Trade Commission. Cryptocurrency and investment scams were the most financially damaging, accounting for $5.7 billion in losses.
investopedia.com · 2025-12-08
This educational article explains romance scams, which involve scammers creating fake dating profiles to build romantic relationships with victims—particularly older Americans—before requesting money for fabricated emergencies or opportunities. Older people are targeted because they typically have more savings, less familiarity with online scams, and may experience isolation, making them vulnerable to the emotional manipulation of promised romantic connections. The article provides guidance for adult children whose parents fall victim, including stopping communications, reporting to authorities and platforms, attempting to recover funds through banks and financial institutions, and protecting against identity theft.
Romance Scams Crypto Investment Scams Investment Fraud Government Impersonation Law Enforcement Impersonation Cryptocurrency Wire Transfer Gift Cards Bank Transfer Check/Cashier's Check Money Order / Western Union
fox61.com · 2025-12-08
Romance and friendship scams cost Connecticut residents more money than any other scam type last year and ranked as the third riskiest scam overall. These scams target vulnerable people, build emotional connections through deception and false promises, and often involve cryptocurrency schemes; the BBB documented one victim who lost $100,000 after a scammer posed as a romantic interest and claimed financial need. Red flags include requests for money after establishing trust, inability to meet in person, poor grammar despite claiming local origin, offers involving cryptocurrency, and relationships that progress too quickly.
aarp.org · 2025-12-08
A Nigerian-based scammer used fake photos of a German life coach to catfish Liza Likins, a widow in her mid-70s, during a 19-month online romance on Facebook Dating, eventually exploiting her for money. Catfishing—creating fraudulent identities on dating apps and social media to deceive victims—has become the top dating scam, with Meta removing 1.4 billion fake accounts in late 2024 and a Norton survey finding 40% of dating app users targeted by such scams. Scammers typically use stolen photos, AI-generated images, or celebrity identities to build trust before requesting cash or promoting bogus
coinfomania.com · 2025-12-08
Kauai police issued an alert about "pig butchering" scams targeting elderly citizens, where fraudsters build romantic or friendly relationships online before convincing victims to invest in fake cryptocurrency schemes with fabricated profit screenshots. The scammers, often operating from Southeast Asia, manipulate victims through dating apps and social media, eventually disappearing with their money; one documented case involved a Maryland woman losing over $3 million. Police advise seniors and their families to recognize warning signs—including rapid relationship escalation, crypto investment pitches, and pressure to keep investments secret—and to never send money to online-only contacts without verifying with trusted family members or advisors first.
forbes.com · 2025-12-08
The Department of Justice recovered $8.2 million in Tether cryptocurrency stolen through romance baiting scams, including $663,352 from an Ohio woman who fell victim after responding to a wrong-number text in 2023. Romance baiting is a psychological manipulation scheme that builds false intimacy through casual conversation before introducing cryptocurrency investment opportunities with fake trading dashboards and fabricated returns, ultimately trapping victims unable to withdraw their funds. The article also references an 80-year-old Maryland retiree, Judith Boivin, who was targeted by scammers impersonating FBI agents using spoofed caller IDs and forged government communications to extract money under false pretenses of a
aol.com · 2025-12-08
Criminals are increasingly targeting older adults by directing them to cryptocurrency ATMs to deposit funds, with the FTC reporting a tenfold increase in losses since 2020 and Rhode Island State Police documenting cases rising from 3 in 2023 to 40 in 2024 and 23 in the first three months of 2025—all victims over age 50, with individual losses ranging from $15,000 to $40,000. Crypto ATMs are attractive to scammers because victims are unfamiliar with them, there are no daily transaction limits, and cryptocurrency's decentralized nature makes funds nearly impossible to recover, unlike
kauainownews.com · 2025-12-08
The Kaua'i Police Department is warning residents, particularly elderly kupuna, about a "pig butchering" cryptocurrency scam in which fraudsters build trust with victims through social media, phone calls, and text messages before convincing them to invest money in fake cryptocurrency schemes and then disappearing with their funds. The scam exploits emotional manipulation and promises of high returns, with warning signs including unsolicited contact from strangers, requests for secrecy, and pressure to use unfamiliar cryptocurrency platforms. Residents are advised to avoid sending money to online-only contacts, be skeptical of unsolicited messages, and consult trusted family members before making financial decisions.
kfiz.com · 2025-12-08
Online car sellers are being targeted by fake check scams, where fraudsters pose as interested buyers, claim they cannot inspect the car in person, and send checks for more than the asking price—then request the seller return the overpayment. Victims who deposit these fake checks may send money to scammers before banks discover the fraud weeks later, leaving sellers responsible for repaying their banks. Consumers should avoid accepting overpayment checks, never send money back based on check deposits, and use escrow or legitimate online payment services when selling vehicles online.
Crypto Investment Scams Online Shopping Scams Cryptocurrency Gift Cards Payment App Check/Cashier's Check Money Order / Western Union
chaincatcher.com · 2025-12-08
Spanish police dismantled a cryptocurrency investment scam ring that used AI-generated deepfake videos of celebrities to defraud over 200 victims of approximately 19 million euros ($21.5 million). The scheme convinced investors to contribute funds to fake crypto ventures and pay additional fees to access their supposed returns. Seven suspects, including the ringleader who was arrested while attempting to flee to Dubai, face charges including fraud, money laundering, and document forgery.
wionews.com · 2025-12-08
Nine individuals were sentenced to 5-14.75 years in prison in China for operating a sophisticated telecommunications and romance fraud scheme that defrauded 66,800 Indian victims of Rs 517 million ($6.2 million) between June 2023 and January 2024. The syndicate, led by a suspect named He, used fake investment platforms (SENEE), fraudulent social media profiles of wealthy Indian women, forged corporate documents, and cryptocurrency conversion to lure victims with promises of 8-15% monthly returns on small investments before stealing funds or freezing accounts. Members received sentences based on their roles, with the operation demonstrating coordinated recruitment, training, payment channel
bangaloremirror.indiatimes.com · 2025-12-08
The Karnataka Criminal Investigation Department released a report revealing that cybercriminals tailor scams to exploit specific age groups' vulnerabilities: young adults (18-20) are targeted with fake job offers, working professionals (30-45) with investment and crypto scams, and senior citizens (50-70) with digital arrest threats impersonating law enforcement. Karnataka receives 100-200 cybercrime reports daily, with metro cities accounting for 20% of India's cybercrime cases, prompting authorities to intensify awareness campaigns and deploy advanced technological tools to combat the rising white-collar crime.
newslj.com · 2025-12-08
This article compiles multiple fraud and cybersecurity alerts: a Wyoming resident received a fake PayPal email demanding $379.99 in Bitcoin with artificial urgency, and another resident fell for a suspicious University of Wyoming impersonation email containing a QR code. The piece also highlights that 40 million Americans lost $47 billion to identity fraud in 2024, recommends protective measures like automatic updates and document shredding, and reports on a ChatGPT security vulnerability (CVE-2024-27564) that enabled over 10,000 attack attempts in one week targeting financial institutions, plus a separate Oracle data breach exposing 6 million records including usernames, emails,
thenerdstash.com · 2025-12-08
Christine Joan Echohawk was charged with money laundering after operating a romance scam targeting four elderly women across multiple states, fraudulently obtaining over $1.5 million by posing as a man named "Edward Lotts" and convincing victims to send money under false pretenses. Operating from April 2023 through October 2024, Echohawk convinced her first victim to sell her home and send $600,000, and continued targeting additional victims despite a police confrontation in January 2024; she was arrested in April and now faces 24 to 62 years in prison plus up to $260,000 in fines.
coinfomania.com · 2025-12-08
A 34-year-old Nigerian national, Charles Uchenna Nwadavid, was arrested at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport in April 2024 after operating a sophisticated romance scam between 2016 and 2019 that defrauded victims of $2.5 million in cryptocurrency. Nwadavid created fake online personas to manipulate at least one primary victim in Massachusetts into unknowingly facilitating the transfer of over $2.5 million through remote account access and peer-to-peer crypto platforms. He faces up to 40 years in federal prison on charges of mail fraud and money laundering following his indictment by a Boston federal grand jury
naija247news.com · 2025-12-08
A 34-year-old Nigerian man, Charles Uchenna Nwadavid, was arrested in Dallas-Fort Worth in April 2025 after being indicted for masterminding a $2.5 million romance scam that operated from 2016 to 2019. The scheme involved creating fake dating profiles to manipulate vulnerable victims into sending money under false pretenses, with one Massachusetts victim unknowingly serving as a money mule who converted stolen funds into cryptocurrency through platforms like LocalBitcoins. Nwadavid faces charges of mail fraud and money laundering, each carrying up to 20 years in prison, plus fines, restitution
ynetnews.com · 2025-12-08
A woman in Israel nearly fell victim to a romance scam when she attempted to deposit bitcoin into what she believed was tennis star Roger Federer's personal wallet at a crypto ATM. The article reveals that romance scams are a growing threat, with scammers impersonating celebrities and prominent figures to establish emotional connections before requesting money for fabricated crises. Crypto-related fraud has surged dramatically, with an 800% increase in fake cryptocurrency platforms and increasingly sophisticated schemes using AI-generated personas, fake trading platforms, and fabricated celebrity endorsements to deceive victims into transferring funds.
local12.com · 2025-12-08
A 73-year-old Greater Cincinnati woman recovered over $35,000 after falling victim to a tech support scam involving a fake Microsoft pop-up that convinced her to convert nearly $42,000 into Bitcoin to repair her compromised computer. The Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation's Electronic Financial Investigations Unit was able to trace and recover most of the funds because the case was reported promptly, highlighting the importance of contacting law enforcement immediately upon suspecting fraud. Investigators could not identify the scammer but cautioned the public against responding to unsolicited calls demanding money and reminded people that law enforcement will not call about warrants or missed court dates.
states.aarp.org · 2025-12-08
AARP identifies six major scams threatening consumers in 2025, with particular risks for older adults: AI-powered scams using deepfakes and convincing phishing, imposter scams impersonating trusted figures, employment scams targeting job seekers with fake offers, tech support scams (which cost Americans 60+ over $175 million in 2023), romance scams exploiting emotional connections, and cryptocurrency scams (resulting in $1.6 billion in losses for those 60+ in 2023). The article advises vigilance against sophisticated tactics, emphasizing that legitimate companies don't request Social Security numbers during hiring, tech support representatives shouldn't demand remote access, and legitimate
defector.com · 2025-12-08
This opinion piece argues that Florida exemplifies America's vulnerability to fraud and scamming, and expresses concern that cryptocurrency and current political leadership are enabling widespread fraud at scale. The author contends that scamming has become endemic to American society, from corporate fraud to crypto schemes, and that the president's creation of a memecoin represents a normalization of fraud at the highest governmental levels.
fedweek.com · 2025-12-08
**Summary:** The Government Accountability Office called for better federal coordination in countering scams, finding that while 13 agencies have anti-scam roles, they operate independently without a comprehensive government-wide strategy. The report noted that common scams include impersonations of federal agencies (particularly SSA, IRS, and DHS), tech support, and family members in crisis, and recommended developing unified strategies, national scam estimates, and measurement of consumer education effectiveness.
local12.com · 2025-12-08
An Ohio woman who lost nearly $42,000 to an online scam in August was able to recover $35,600 with help from law enforcement. The victim was tricked into sending Bitcoin to a scammer posing as Microsoft support after receiving a fake hacking warning on her computer. The Bureau of Criminal Investigation's Electronic Financial Investigations Unit traced and froze the funds, returning the majority of her money.
straitstimes.com · 2025-12-08
Scammers operating from Cambodia use sophisticated money laundering networks to quickly move billions of dollars stolen through various schemes, including online romance scams and fake cryptocurrency exchanges. By the time victims realize they've lost their life savings to these frauds, the money has already disappeared into complex financial channels designed to obscure its origins. The article examines how these criminal networks operate with apparent impunity, moving stolen funds at high speed to prevent recovery.
people.com · 2025-12-08
An Oklahoma woman, Christine Joan Echohawk, 53, was arrested in April 2025 for laundering approximately $1.5 million from four elderly victims (ages 64-79) in an online romance scam between September and December 2024. One victim sold her house to send $600,000 to the scammer, while others sent gift cards, cash, and cashier's checks; Echohawk allegedly converted the funds through cryptocurrency accounts and sent payments to an unidentified suspect. She faces charges carrying 24 to 62 years in prison and up to $260,000 in fines.
elderjustice.usc.edu · 2025-12-08
This article collection presents educational resources on elder abuse prevention and protection across multiple topics: nutrition services as a preventive touchpoint for vulnerable seniors, a new Bill of Rights model for guardianship, practical scam prevention strategies, technology's role in reducing isolation (a risk factor for abuse), community-coordinated elder justice responses, faith community engagement on World Elder Abuse Awareness Day, and awareness about relationship investment scams using digital platforms. The materials emphasize that elder abuse prevention requires multi-sector approaches involving healthcare providers, legal advocates, community organizations, and faith leaders working together to protect older adults' rights and wellbeing.
yahoo.com · 2025-12-08
In 2024, scammers targeted elderly residents and visitors in Beaufort County, South Carolina, stealing over $3.1 million across 62 cases by impersonating law enforcement and demanding cryptocurrency transfers via Bitcoin ATMs. The scams exploited urgency and fabricated threats of arrest or legal consequences, with victims directed to convert cash to cryptocurrency at predatory ATMs with high transaction fees. Officials across South Carolina are calling for government oversight of cryptocurrency ATMs, as these machines have become primary tools for targeting aging communities, with the FTC noting that cryptocurrency scam losses in the U.S. increased tenfold between 2020 and 2023.
actuarialpost.co.uk · 2025-12-08
The Pensions Regulator (TPR) and Pension Scams Action Group (PSAG) are using technology and multi-agency collaboration to combat pension scams, having reviewed 830 websites, removed 29 high-risk sites, and made 94 referrals to partner agencies. A new Fraud and Cyber Crime Reporting and Analytics Service will replace Action Fraud later this year, improving intelligence gathering and police investigation timelines. Only 11% of pension schemes correctly understood that scams should be reported to Action Fraud, highlighting the need for continued education and reporting compliance.
investopedia.com · 2025-12-08
Research identifies loneliness and financial fragility as the two most significant risk factors for elder financial fraud victimization. Socially isolated individuals are more vulnerable to relationship-based scams (romance, pig-butchering, affinity fraud) because they lack trusted contacts to validate suspicious offers, while financial stress impairs rational decision-making and increases willingness to take risky financial gambles that fraudsters exploit.
wmar2news.com · 2025-12-08
The FBI launched "Operation Level Up" in January 2024 to proactively contact victims of cryptocurrency investment scams in progress, using emails and phone calls to prevent further money transfers. From January 2024 to February 2025, the FBI contacted over 5,000 victims and estimated it saved approximately $318 million in planned transfers, with 76 percent of contacted victims unaware they were being scammed. The scammers typically pose as romantic interests or influencers on social media, build trust over weeks, then direct victims to fake investment websites promising high cryptocurrency returns before requesting increasingly larger deposits.
koco.com · 2025-12-08
Americans lost a record $12.5 billion to scams in 2024, according to the Federal Trade Commission and a new Better Business Bureau report analyzing the year's most dangerous schemes. The top scams involved investment and cryptocurrency schemes (80% loss rate), employment scams targeting young adults 18-34, romance and friendship scams on dating platforms, and imposter scams impersonating major companies. Experts advise consumers to verify credentials, ask questions about investment claims, and verify unsolicited communications to protect against scammers using financial grooming tactics to build trust before exploitation.
wesh.com · 2025-12-08
Americans lost a record $12.5 billion to scams in 2024, with the Better Business Bureau identifying investment/cryptocurrency schemes, employment scams, and romance/friendship scams as the year's most dangerous, often involving financial grooming tactics where scammers build trust over time. Victims of investment and cryptocurrency scams lost money at rates exceeding 80%, while young adults aged 18-34 were primary targets for employment fraud, and imposter scams frequently involved fraudulent claims from PayPal, Publishers Clearing House, and the U.S. Postal Service. Experts recommend verifying credentials, asking questions about unsolicited offers, and confirming communications to avoid falling victim
cointelegraph.com · 2025-12-08
Australia's corporate watchdog (ASIC) secured court approval to shut down 95 "hydra" companies suspected of operating "pig butchering" scams—romance and cryptocurrency investment frauds where scammers build fake relationships to manipulate victims into investing in fraudulent schemes. Nearly 1,500 investors across 14 countries filed claims totaling over $35.8 million in losses, with the scam activity believed to originate largely from Southeast Asia. ASIC has removed over 10,000 scam websites in recent efforts, though the regulator warns that new fraudulent sites continue to emerge rapidly.
mitrade.com · 2025-12-08
Australia's Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC) shut down 95 companies operating as fronts for crypto romance scams following Federal Court approval, with liquidators appointed to manage the wind-down. Over 1,500 victims from 14 countries have filed claims totaling more than $35 million, with scammers using fake company registrations, stolen identities, and AI-generated content to perpetrate "pig butchering" schemes that increased 40% between 2023-2024. Despite ASIC taking down over 10,000 fraudulent websites, regulators warn that scams remain persistent and evolving, though Australia saw a 26% decline in total sc
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