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in Money Mule / Laundering
ainvest.com
· 2025-12-08
The U.S. Secret Service has seized nearly $400 million in cryptocurrency over the past decade, including a record $225 million from a money laundering network, with many funds traced to romance scams and fake investment schemes targeting victims through catfish tactics. Despite these enforcement successes, crypto-related crimes continue to surge, with Americans losing $9.3 billion to crypto scams in 2024 alone and wallet hacks, phishing attacks, and protocol exploits causing over $2.47 billion in losses in the first half of 2025, indicating that criminal tactics are becoming increasingly sophisticated.
jdsupra.com
· 2025-12-08
The Department of Justice issued a memorandum outlining its white-collar crime enforcement priorities, which include fraud targeting government programs (Medicare, Medicaid, defense spending), complex market frauds (Ponzi schemes, investment fraud, and elder fraud), trade and customs violations, and national security-related financial crimes involving foreign adversaries. The DOJ also prioritized money laundering, drug manufacturing-related crimes, and violations of controlled substances laws, while noting that corporate misconduct may be addressed through individual prosecution or civil remedies rather than corporate criminal charges, with reduced penalties offered for companies that self-disclose and cooperate with the department.
justice.gov
· 2025-12-08
Michel Duarte Suarez, a 50-year-old Cuban national, pleaded guilty to orchestrating a scheme from Panama to steal approximately $803,000 from an 82-year-old victim's bank account over four months using forged checks and fraudulent signatures. Suarez and his South Florida-based co-conspirators laundered the stolen proceeds through his Miami company, Online Electronics, with co-conspirators returning 50% of the fraud to Suarez. He faces up to 30 years in prison on charges of conspiracy to commit bank fraud and mail fraud, plus a mandatory additional two years for aggravated identity theft, with sentencing scheduled for September 29, 2025
cbsnews.com
· 2025-12-08
James and Maureen Wilson of Baltimore County were sentenced to 12 and 4 years in prison, respectively, after defrauding insurance companies of over $20 million through a 25-year scheme involving more than 40 fraudulent life insurance policies and money laundering across multiple accounts and trusts. The couple was ordered to pay $16 million in restitution to victims, $2.7 million to the U.S., and forfeit nearly $14.8 million. The case highlights a broader problem in Maryland, where the FBI reported that over 3,200 residents over 60 lost $80 million to scams in 2024.
nwestiowa.com
· 2025-12-08
Romance scams involve criminals creating fake personas on dating sites and social media to build false relationships and extract money from victims through emotional manipulation and fabricated emergencies. The Federal Trade Commission estimates approximately 64,000 Americans lost $1.14 billion to romance scams in 2023, with seniors—particularly widowed and divorced individuals—being frequent targets. Red flags include refusal to meet in person or video call, rapid escalation of romantic declarations, requests to move to private messaging platforms, and endless excuses for financial assistance, with some victims also being coerced into becoming "money mules" for money laundering schemes.
globalnews.ca
· 2025-12-08
The RCMP arrested Gareth West, 38, on July 4 in Quebec, alleging he was the ringleader of a grandparent scam that defrauded American seniors of $21 million between summer 2021 and June 2024. West and 24 other Canadians operated call centers near Montreal, impersonating grandchildren in distress and lawyers to convince elderly victims in 40+ U.S. states to send bail money, which was then transferred to Canada via cash delivery and cryptocurrency. West faces up to 40 years in prison if convicted and is being held pending possible extradition to the United States.
ktvz.com
· 2025-12-08
James and Maureen Wilson of Baltimore County were sentenced to 12 and 4 years in prison, respectively, for operating a 25-year insurance fraud and money laundering scheme that defrauded insurance companies and investors of over $20 million. The couple opened more than 40 fraudulent life insurance policies, laundered proceeds through multiple bank accounts and trusts, and failed to report approximately $7.7 million in income on tax returns; they were ordered to pay $16 million in restitution and forfeit nearly $14.8 million.
police.tas.gov.au
· 2025-12-08
Tasmania Police contacted 15 Tasmanians who lost a combined $2.5 million to scams involving cryptocurrency ATMs (CATMs), with approximately $900,000 deposited directly to these machines. Investigation found all top cryptocurrency ATM users in the state were involved in scams—primarily romance and investment fraud—where victims were directed to CATMs after banks blocked suspicious transfers. Police advise recognizing warning signs including pressure tactics, promises of high returns, and requests to deposit cash to CATMs from unknown individuals, and recommend reporting incidents to police and Scamwatch.
pulsetasmania.com.au
· 2025-12-08
Victims of romance and investment scams deposited over $2.5 million into cryptocurrency ATMs across Tasmania, with individual losses averaging $165,000 and one victim losing more than $750,000. The majority of victims were around 65 years old and were targeted through fake relationships or schemes promising 30-40% returns, with scammers using phone calls, social media, and encrypted messaging to manipulate, threaten, and intimidate victims into making deposits. Police warn that crypto ATM deposits are nearly impossible to recover once sent, and the Australian government is implementing deposit limits of $5,000 per transaction to help prevent such scams.
hospicenews.com
· 2025-12-08
Five California hospice operators pleaded guilty to defrauding Medicare of approximately $16 million by operating sham hospice companies, misusing deceased doctors' identities, and using foreign nationals' personal information to submit false claims. The scheme involved healthcare fraud, identity theft, and money laundering, with defendants spending fraudulently obtained funds on real estate and vehicles; sentences ranged from 10-12 years in prison, with additional penalties including potential deportation.
capeargus.co.za
· 2025-12-08
Two suspects, aged 26 and 22, were arrested in the Western Cape by the Hawks' 419 Scam Task Team in connection with a romance scam in which a middle-aged woman lost over R3.4 million after being deceived by an online fraudster posing as a white man named Mark Hermanus who claimed his son was sick. Five suspects total have been arrested in this case, with the arrested individuals facing charges of fraud and money laundering. The article also highlights similar romance scams targeting older and middle-aged individuals, including cases where victims lost R650,000 and R24 million respectively.
cointelegraph.com
· 2025-12-08
In 2025, five men operating across multiple countries orchestrated a sophisticated cryptocurrency romance scam that defrauded over 400 American victims of more than $225 million. The scheme began with romantic messages on dating apps, progressed to fake investment tips and trading platforms showing fabricated gains, and culminated in international money laundering through shell companies, fake crypto businesses, and Tether stablecoin transfers routed through Cambodia. The DOJ charged the conspirators and moved to seize the stolen crypto, highlighting how romance scams (also called "pig butchering" scams) represent the most prominent category of crypto fraud, with Americans losing $5.6 billion to crypto scams
aarp.org
· 2025-12-08
In September 2023, scammers impersonating law enforcement and the FBI targeted 81-year-old Judith Boivin of Maryland by exploiting her well-researched background as a nurse, social worker, and humanitarian to convince her she needed to assist in an FBI operation against a Mexican cartel allegedly using her Social Security number for money laundering. Over three months of twice-daily contact with the fraudsters, who used authentic-sounding case numbers and FBI branding, Boivin transferred nearly $600,000 of her retirement savings before discovering the elaborate scheme was fraudulent.
news.sky.com
· 2025-12-08
Children as young as seven are being referred to Britain's cyber crime intervention program, with an average referral age of just 15, as young hackers steal millions from major UK companies. Former cybercriminals Ricky Handschumacher and Joseph Harris—who each served prison sentences for stealing millions in cryptocurrency—warn that teenagers are increasingly exploiting gaming platforms and social engineering tactics to commit cyber attacks, with gaming being a major pathway into crime for vulnerable youth. Insurance payouts to hacked UK businesses have increased 230%, with teenagers and young adults suspected in major attacks on companies including Marks & Spencer (£136m loss), Co-op (6.5 million customer records stolen),
silive.com
· 2025-12-08
Scammers are targeting senior citizens with phishing emails and texts impersonating the Social Security Administration, using alarming language about suspected criminal activity to pressure victims into clicking malicious links or providing personal information. To protect themselves, seniors should verify sender contact information, avoid clicking unverified links, ignore requests for urgent action or gift cards, use separate email accounts for different purposes, and maintain strong, unique passwords across all accounts.
straitstimes.com
· 2025-12-08
Singapore police investigated 536 people for their suspected involvement in scams and unlicensed moneylending activities totaling over $12.2 million in losses during a June 30-July 11 enforcement operation by the Bedok Police Division. Of those under investigation, 391 suspects were linked to more than 2,400 cases including e-commerce, investment, job, rental, and phishing scams, while 145 were implicated in loan scams and unlicensed moneylending involving over $250,000. The operation resulted in 36 arrests, with the suspects ranging in age from 16 to 81 years old.
newsghana.com.gh
· 2025-12-08
The European Commission updated its list of high-risk jurisdictions for money laundering and terrorist financing, adding Algeria, Angola, Côte d'Ivoire, Kenya, Laos, Lebanon, Monaco, Namibia, Nepal, and Venezuela while removing eight others. EU financial entities must now apply enhanced vigilance to transactions involving the newly listed countries to protect the EU financial system. The update aligns with the Financial Action Task Force standards and is based on technical assessments incorporating FATF data, bilateral dialogues, and on-site visits.
newindianexpress.com
· 2025-12-08
The Golden Triangle Special Economic Zone (GTSEZ) in Laos has evolved from a purported tourist development into a major cybercrime hub operating elaborate finance and romance scams targeting English-speaking victims worldwide, a multibillion-dollar criminal enterprise. Founded in 2007 by Chinese businessman Zhao Wei and operating with minimal government oversight, the zone houses towers leasing to international scam operations staffed by workers from multiple countries who are allegedly coerced or trafficked into forced labor. Despite multiple crackdowns by Chinese, Laotian, and British authorities—including sanctions against Zhao Wei in 2018 and 2023 for trafficking, drug smuggling,
the420.in
· 2025-12-08
A 62-year-old retired professor in Mumbai lost ₹1.93 crore ($231,000 USD) in a two-stage romance scam involving cryptocurrency: first, a woman named "Ayesha" befriended him on Facebook, gained his trust, and convinced him to deposit funds into a Binance account she controlled before disappearing; then a second scammer named "Koyal" contacted him posing as a recovery agent and extracted additional payments with false promises of restitution. The Cyber West Division has registered a criminal case under India's Information Technology Act, which provides for 3-10 years imprisonment for crypto fraud convictions.
pulse.com.gh
· 2025-12-08
Romance fraud causes billions in annual losses globally, with the United States leading at $697.3 million lost by nearly 59,000 victims in 2024, followed by the United Kingdom (£106 million), Australia ($33 million), Canada ($25 million), and Germany ($20 million). These organized crime schemes use fake profiles, stolen images, and emotionally manipulative tactics to build trust with victims before requesting money, often targeting vulnerable individuals through dating apps and social media platforms. The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated romance scam prevalence as lockdowns drove millions online, and scammers increasingly overlap these schemes with other financial crimes such as fake investment and money laundering operations.
lgbtqnation.com
· 2025-12-08
In June, former congressman George Santos and Rep. Eric Burlison fell victim to an identity theft scam when an imposter using an outdated number posing as Rep. Rick Crawford contacted them via Telegram, claiming to offer Santos a "coordinator" position with the First Lady. Santos downloaded a suspicious app and shared a PIN with the imposter before realizing the deception and ending contact, though he reported no information was compromised. This incident is part of a growing trend of scammers using AI-generated messages to target government officials, and Santos has previously been targeted by another scammer who fraudulently claimed to have connections with prosecutors and judges.
mondaq.com
· 2025-12-08
The Department of Justice's Criminal Division has established three enforcement priorities—focus, fairness, and efficiency—to guide white-collar crime prosecution under the Trump administration. Elder fraud is explicitly identified as a priority alongside healthcare, securities, trade, and customs fraud, with prosecutors directed to target cases involving senior-level personnel, demonstrable losses, and victims' compensation. The Department aims to balance rigorous prosecution of significant threats to U.S. interests with fair application of the law that avoids punishing legitimate business risk-taking.
justice.gov
· 2025-12-08
**Summary:**
Roger Roger, a 41-year-old Costa Rica resident, was sentenced to over 15 years in prison for leading an international telemarketing fraud scheme that defrauded hundreds of victims, many elderly, of over $4 million. The scheme involved co-conspirators posing as U.S. government officials using Voice Over Internet Protocol technology to convince victims they had won sweepstakes prizes, then soliciting up-front payments for non-existent prizes. Roger was ordered to pay $3.3 million in restitution and forfeit $4.2 million.
calgary.citynews.ca
· 2025-12-08
A 34-year-old Quebec man was charged with fraud, money laundering, and identity theft after defrauding a Calgary senior of over $300,000 in a cryptocurrency scam. Beginning in June 2022, the suspect impersonated the victim's grandson claiming legal trouble, then posed as a lawyer directing her to make daily bitcoin ATM deposits for fake bail and legal fees over six weeks. Calgary police executed a search warrant in the Montreal area and arrested the suspect, who will appear in court in August.
newsbreak.com
· 2025-12-08
**Summary:**
Antonio Petrosino, 60, of Union City, New Jersey, was indicted on federal wire fraud and money laundering charges for defrauding elderly and other victims of over $1 million between January 2016 and November 2024. Petrosino posed as a financial advisor, soliciting investment funds under false pretenses while diverting the money for personal expenses including gambling and luxury apartment rent, and issued falsified account statements to conceal the scheme. He faces up to 20 years in prison on each of five wire fraud counts and 10 years on the money laundering charge.
wkyc.com
· 2025-12-08
A Cuyahoga County grand jury indicted 16 individuals for their roles in a $2.6 million money order scam that operated across over 100 Walmart locations nationwide from December 2019 to January 2024. The suspects purchased money orders ranging from $1,000 to $5,000 at Walmart, deposited the funds remotely, and then returned the money orders for full refunds. Three suspects were arrested by the U.S. Secret Service's Money Laundering Task Force, with charges including money laundering, telecommunications fraud, and aggravated theft.
ca.news.yahoo.com
· 2025-12-08
A Quebec man was charged with defrauding a Calgary senior of over $300,000 in a grandparent scam that occurred over six weeks in June 2022, in which he impersonated her grandson claiming to need bail money and then posed as a lawyer directing her to make over 300 cryptocurrency deposits. Jeremy Rattray, 34, faces charges of identity theft, fraud over $5,000, and money laundering, and the victim's funds have not been recovered. Calgary police warn seniors to hang up on callers requesting money transfers and note that legitimate officers will never ask for cryptocurrency or gift cards as part of an investigation.
seehafernews.com
· 2025-12-08
Evelyn Cross-Beacham of Milwaukee faces charges of conspiracy to commit money laundering and mail fraud for her role in a tech support scam targeting seniors over 65 across multiple states. She allegedly deposited checks totaling $578,000 from victims who believed they were paying for legitimate computer repairs. Authorities are investigating her connections to a broader scheme defrauding older adults.
justice.gov
· 2025-12-08
Christen Lee Cosgrove, age 40, and Brian Cosgrove, age 37, of Pennsylvania were indicted on federal charges including conspiracy, bank fraud, wire fraud, and money laundering for defrauding a 93-year-old senior citizen and financial institutions of approximately $1 million between October 2022 and May 2023. The defendants allegedly used fraudulent wire transactions to obtain the money and spent it on personal purchases including a house, recreational vehicle, boat, and vacations. The case was investigated by the Internal Revenue Service and Luzerne County District Attorney's Office, with potential sentences of up to 30 years for bank fraud and 20
taipeitimes.com
· 2025-12-08
Cambodian authorities arrested over 1,000 people, including 75 Taiwanese, 271 Indonesians, and 213 Vietnamese, during raids on internet scam centers across the country following Prime Minister Hun Manet's directive to crack down on cybercrime operations. The UN estimates these Southeast Asian scam centers defraud social media users of approximately $40 billion annually using romance and business cons, with Amnesty International reporting at least 53 scam compounds in Cambodia involved in human trafficking, forced labor, and other abuses on a "mass scale."
techtimes.com
· 2025-12-08
Roman Storm, co-founder of the Tornado Cash crypto mixing service, is on trial in Manhattan federal court for allegedly laundering over $1 billion, including funds linked to North Korean hackers. Testimony from a 23-year-old convicted NFT scammer revealed how he used Tornado Cash to hide more than $1 million in stolen cryptocurrency from the Frosties NFT rug pull, and victims' testimony showed the service ignored requests to freeze stolen funds, including $150,000 from a Georgia woman's life savings and $196 million stolen from crypto exchange BitMart. Storm faces over 40 years in prison if convicted, though his defense argues Tornado Cash is simply
thehindu.com
· 2025-12-08
Hyderabad Police reported a 75% drop in digital arrest scams in the first half of 2025, with 34 cases compared to 140 in the same period of 2024, attributed to awareness campaigns and advisories. However, senior citizens—particularly those aged 60-80, highly educated, and living alone with children abroad—remain primary targets, as illustrated by recent cases where an 84-year-old lost ₹44 lakh and a 69-year-old lost ₹38.7 lakh after being falsely accused of money laundering and human trafficking. Police emphasize that these scams aim for psychological control and isolation, not just
straitstimes.com
· 2025-12-08
A 65-year-old man in Singapore was scammed into withdrawing $52,700 from his savings and purchasing gold bars, which he handed to a stranger at an MRT station after being deceived by callers impersonating financial services and Monetary Authority of Singapore officials who claimed his identity had been misused in a money laundering investigation. This represents a new variant of government impersonation scams where victims are asked to provide physical cash or gold bars rather than wire transfers, using authority figures and fabricated urgency to manipulate victims into compliance. Notably, the victim made a police report immediately upon learning of the scam, and the perpetrator was apprehended at the border the next
newsmeter.in
· 2025-12-08
Digital arrest scams in Hyderabad decreased by over 75% in the first half of 2025 (34 cases) compared to the same period in 2024 (140 cases), attributed to increased public awareness efforts. Senior citizens aged 60-80, particularly retired professionals with children abroad, remain primary targets of these scams, where fraudsters impersonate law enforcement officers and coerce victims to liquidate assets through psychological manipulation and threats of arrest. Recent cases included an 84-year-old man defrauded of Rs 44 lakh and a 69-year-old woman defrauded of Rs 38.7 lakh, with police adv
forbes.com
· 2025-12-08
Michael Shannon Sims and Juan Carlos Reynoso were charged with wire fraud and money laundering for operating OmegaPro, a fraudulent forex trading platform that defrauded investors of over $650 million between 2019 and 2023. The scheme operated as a Ponzi scheme with pyramid scheme elements, using lavish promotional events and social media displays of wealth to lure victims with promises of up to 300% returns, while no actual trading occurred and the defendants used stolen funds for personal expenses. The scam eventually collapsed in 2023 when victims were told their accounts had been "hacked" and were directed to a non-existent successor platform, leaving them unable
express.co.uk
· 2025-12-08
Advanced fee job scams in the UK surged 237% since the start of the year, with victims losing up to £5,000, according to Lloyds Bank. These increasingly sophisticated scams, predominantly targeting job seekers aged 18-34 through social media platforms, lure victims with fake remote work opportunities before demanding upfront payments for processing fees, training, or other fictitious costs; the average loss per victim is £1,420, with scammers sometimes manipulating victims into making multiple payments or unknowingly participating in money laundering schemes. Fraudsters employ tactics ranging from simple fake task postings (liking TikTok videos, writing fake reviews) to elaborate schemes
afp.gov.au
· 2025-12-08
Australian authorities are cracking down on money mules who rent or sell their bank accounts to criminals for $200-$500, with the AFP and Australian Banking Association warning that this activity enables money laundering and supports organized crime. Criminals recruit mules through employment scams, romance scams, and threats, routing illicit funds through legitimate bank accounts to obscure their origin; in one case, a Sydney woman was imprisoned in April 2025 for renting 10 accounts used to launder $3.8 million. Renting or selling bank accounts is illegal and can carry life imprisonment charges, and account holders risk being implicated in serious crimes including drug trafficking, extortion, and terrorism financing.
au.finance.yahoo.com
· 2025-12-08
Australians are being targeted in a growing "money mule" scheme where individuals rent out their bank accounts to criminals who use them to launder illegally obtained funds, typically earning $200-$500 plus commissions per transfer. The Australian Banking Association and Australian Federal Police reported detecting nearly 13,000 mule accounts in 2024-25, with one Sydney woman jailed in April 2024 after her 10 accounts were used to launder almost $4 million in criminal funds that were transferred overseas. Criminals recruit mules through social media, gaming platforms, and employment, threat, or romance scams, but authorities warn this activity facilitates money laundering and exposes participants
vocal.media
· 2025-12-08
Romance scams cost Americans over $1.3 billion in 2022, with losses quadrupling over five years and affecting victims across all age groups, though those 50 and older account for approximately 60% of reported cases. Sarah, an Ohio woman, lost $45,000 to a romance scammer impersonating a successful oil rig worker named Marcus over three months before discovering the entire relationship was fabricated. These increasingly sophisticated, organized international schemes employ specialized teams that steal identities, build emotional connections through psychological manipulation, and exploit fundamental human needs for connection to extract money from victims.
diyatvusa.com
· 2025-12-08
A New Jersey man, Pranav Patel, was sentenced to over six years in federal prison for acting as a "money mule" in a nationwide elder fraud scheme that defrauded 11 seniors across seven states of nearly $1.8 million between October and December 2023. Overseas scammers impersonated U.S. Treasury agents, convincing elderly victims they were under investigation and needed to surrender cash and gold for "safekeeping," with two Florida victims losing $170,000 and $732,000 respectively. Patel collected and transported the stolen funds and was arrested during a sting operation in December 2023; he was ordered to forfeit $1,
aol.com
· 2025-12-08
A 36-year-old Canadian man, Jia Hua Liu, was arrested in July after conducting a multi-state door-to-door scam targeting seniors across Ohio, Indiana, New Mexico, and Tennessee, defrauding victims of an estimated $309,000 total. One Charlestown, Indiana resident was tricked into withdrawing $27,000 from his retirement accounts and handing it over in cash; three additional attempted scams in Indiana, Kentucky, and Michigan were prevented by family members, potentially saving another $70,000 in losses. Liu was apprehended at Louisville airport while attempting to flee the country and faces charges including theft, fraud, conspiracy, an
san.com
· 2025-12-08
A 39-year-old California man, Christopher Earl Lloyd, was indicted on 14 federal charges for operating a romance scam across multiple dating apps (Tinder, Hinge, Bumble) from April 2021 to February 2024, defrauding victims of over $2 million. Lloyd posed as a successful financial manager and falsely promised investment opportunities while collecting money via wire transfers, Zelle, Cash App, and cash, then spent the funds on personal expenses instead of investments. He faces up to 20 years in prison per wire fraud count and an additional 10 years for money laundering.
abc.net.au
· 2025-12-08
Donna Nelson, a Western Australian woman serving a six-year sentence in Japan for drug smuggling, appealed her conviction with expert testimony from romance scam researcher Monica Whitty, who concluded Nelson was likely a victim of organized crime that manipulated her through a romance scam into becoming an unwitting drug mule. The court rejected the appeal despite Whitty's evidence suggesting Nelson had been victimized by a sophisticated romance scam operation.
aol.com
· 2025-12-08
An $8.8 million fraud ring targeting 235 elderly victims across multiple states was dismantled following a suspicious $250,000 transfer detected by Synchrony Bank in April 2023. The scheme involved eight suspects and three bank employees, including insider Antonio Penn, who stole customer banking data and sold it via Telegram to accomplices who opened fraudulent accounts and laundered the stolen funds. The 15-month investigation, led by the Polk County Sheriff's Office with support from the Florida Attorney General and multi-state agencies, recovered the full $8.8 million and highlighted the importance of transaction alerts, financial monitoring services, and bank fraud protections to prevent insider fraud targeting seniors.
wgxa.tv
· 2025-12-08
An 83-year-old Peach County, Georgia man nearly lost $20,000 in cash after scammers posing as Bank of America convinced him he was involved in a money laundering investigation and instructed him to mail the funds to Miami. His son Keith intercepted the package through connections with law enforcement before it could be delivered on Monday, recovering the money safely. The incident highlights the prevalence of elder fraud, with the FBI reporting millions of seniors fall victim annually, losing an estimated $3 billion, and elder fraud complaints rising 14% as of 2023.
timesofindia.indiatimes.com
· 2025-12-08
In the first six months of 2025, Telangana victims lost Rs 681 crore to cyber fraudsters—a 24% decline from the previous year—attributed to increased public awareness campaigns and rapid reporting mechanisms. While cyber fraud complaints nationally rose 37%, Telangana experienced a 13% reduction, with notable decreases in reward points scams (74%), gift fraud (60%), and digital arrest cases (56% fewer senior citizens affected), though loan fraud complaints increased 16%. Of the Rs 681 crore lost, the largest losses came from stock market investment and part-time job fraud (Rs 170 crore), with authorities recovering Rs 107
thehansindia.com
· 2025-12-08
A bank manager in Mandya was defrauded of ₹50 lakh by cyber scammers posing as CBI officials who used "digital arrest" tactics, threatening her with involvement in a money laundering racket and keeping her on video call while she transferred funds to fake accounts. The scammers immediately dispersed the money across 29 different bank accounts to evade tracing. Following a nine-month investigation, police arrested three accused in Rajasthan and identified them as part of a larger cybercrime syndicate operating fake accounts.
abc.net.au
· 2025-12-08
Sam responded to an unsolicited text about a marketing job opportunity and was drawn into a task-based scam after being contacted via WhatsApp by scammers posing as recruiters. The scammers lured him with promises of $900+ weekly wages for easy work, daily payments, and a paid trial, ultimately resulting in Sam losing thousands of dollars before he ended contact. The article identifies multiple red flags Sam missed, including error-riddled messages, unrealistic wages for unskilled work, requests to move communication off legitimate platforms, and pressure to proceed without standard employment verification procedures.
ainvest.com
· 2025-12-08
**Summary:**
Indian authorities arrested 23-year-old computer science student Shaurya Singh for his involvement in a Rs. 3.81 crore ($457,000) cryptocurrency fraud scheme, where he allegedly assisted criminals by transporting financial documents and facilitating transactions through his bank and crypto accounts. Singh's arrest is part of a broader investigation into cross-border crypto fraud networks linked to Southeast Asia that employ romance scams and "pig-butchering" schemes, highlighting vulnerabilities in India's crypto ecosystem including weak KYC requirements and regulatory gaps that enable financial crimes.
indianexpress.com
· 2025-12-08
Between 2023 and July 2025, Chandigarh police registered 23 FIRs for "digital arrest" scams, with 13 cases reported in the first half of 2025 alone, indicating a rising trend. Fraudsters impersonate government officials (CBI, ED, NCB) via WhatsApp or video calls to convince victims—primarily elderly individuals—that they are under investigation, then coerce them into transferring money to fake "safe government accounts"; notable victims include a retired Colonel who lost Rs 3.41 crore, an 82-year-old woman who lost Rs 2.5 crore, and others.