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washingtontimes.com
· 2025-12-07
Two U.S. senators requested detailed information from Match Group about its fraud-prevention measures following reports that romance scams have become a leading form of financial fraud in the U.S., costing Americans $1.14 billion in 2024. The FTC previously found that up to 30% of new Match.com members were scammers between 2013 and 2018, resulting in a $14 million settlement last month. Match Group, which owns Tinder, OkCupid, Hinge, and other dating platforms, has committed to fraud detection investments and requested a constructive dialogue with the senators, who set an October 15 deadline for the company's response
clickorlando.com
· 2025-12-07
An Orange County couple lost their entire life savings of $12,300 after being defrauded in a vehicle purchase scam on Facebook Marketplace, where scammers impersonating a legitimate business (Driveline Motorcars as "Driveline Motor") disappeared after receiving a wire transfer. The Better Business Bureau warns that social media marketplaces do not vet listings and recommends buyers inspect high-ticket items in person, use credit cards instead of wire transfers, and only send money they can afford to lose.
timesofmalta.com
· 2025-12-07
A 24-year-old Ukrainian woman was arrested in Malta for defrauding multiple victims through AI-generated videos of Prime Minister Robert Abela promoting fake cryptocurrency investments; at least one victim lost €52,000 across multiple transactions before police conducted a controlled delivery operation using marked cash, resulting in the suspect's arrest at Żurrieq square. The court froze €63,000 in assets and remanded the accused in custody, with prosecutors citing concerns about evidence tampering, potential ties to organized crime, and flight risk due to her lack of local connections.
wral.com
· 2025-12-07
An elderly woman near Wake Forest, North Carolina was scammed out of $200 by a man claiming to represent the NC Department of Transportation who offered to pour leftover concrete on her driveway for $500 total. The scammer took the $200 cash she had available, roped off the driveway with caution tape, and promised to return the next morning with workers to complete the job, but never returned. The Wake County Sheriff's Office is investigating the incident, and NCDOT confirmed no legitimate work was occurring in the area and advised residents to verify any such offers through official NCDOT offices.
10tv.com
· 2025-12-07
A Knox County, Ohio man lost over $807,000 in a cryptocurrency investment scam after being befriended online by a scammer who pressured him to keep investing or lose everything. Federal authorities located the frozen funds, but they remain inaccessible due to complications involving foreign-based cryptocurrency exchanges that may not comply with U.S. legal processes, leaving the 70-year-old victim waiting months for potential recovery while continuing to work full-time.
10tv.com
· 2025-12-07
I appreciate you providing this text, but this appears to be a technical instruction or advertisement snippet about downloading a TV streaming app rather than content about fraud, scams, or elder abuse.
To provide a proper summary for the Elderus database, I would need an article or transcript that contains information about:
- A scam or fraud incident
- Elder abuse or exploitation
- Fraud awareness/educational content
- Related criminal activity
Could you provide the actual article or transcript you'd like summarized?
dailyhodl.com
· 2025-12-07
An Ohio nursing home resident lost between $40,000-$55,000 to a romance scam conducted on TikTok by someone posing as "Sydney," who made excuses to avoid meeting in person while requesting escalating cash transfers and eventually asking him to open joint accounts under false pretenses. The victim, who died in summer, is one of numerous seniors targeted by similar schemes, as the U.S. Department of Homeland Security warned of increasing romance scams targeting widowed and divorced seniors; nationally, romance scams resulted in nearly 70,000 reported victims and $1.3 billion in losses in 2022.
coinfomania.com
· 2025-12-07
A hacker who stole over 542 million UXLink tokens (worth tens of millions of dollars) from the platform's multi-signature wallet subsequently fell victim to a phishing scam themselves, losing all stolen funds to a group called Inferno Drainer after unknowingly approving a malicious contract. The incident demonstrates that phishing attacks in cryptocurrency remain a widespread threat, affecting even experienced attackers who exploit similar vulnerabilities, and highlights the irony that sophisticated hackers are not immune to common Web3 security exploits.
valuethemarkets.com
· 2025-12-07
A cryptocurrency hacker who illegally minted $48 million in UXLINK tokens fell victim to a phishing scam that tricked them into revealing sensitive wallet information, resulting in the loss of their stolen assets. The incident demonstrates how phishing attacks exploit human error rather than technical vulnerabilities, and highlights that even experienced cybercriminals are susceptible to sophisticated social engineering tactics. The case underscores the persistent threat of phishing schemes in the cryptocurrency ecosystem, where stolen funds often become targets for subsequent attacks.
foxnews.com
· 2025-12-07
This educational article explains how fraudsters exploit social media platforms through fake accounts and purchased verification badges to deceive users. The piece outlines why social media is vulnerable to scams—including speed of information sharing, weakened verification systems, and users' tendency to lower their guard—and provides practical protective steps such as scrutinizing profiles before engagement, avoiding suspicious links, and using reverse image searches to verify authenticity.
rstreet.org
· 2025-12-07
A House Financial Services Committee hearing highlighted that fraud and scams cost Americans over $2 billion weekly, with the FTC reporting $12.5 billion in annual losses for 2024, though experts believe the true figure is significantly higher due to lack of unified tracking mechanisms. The testimony and accompanying research emphasize that combating this fragmented, internationally-organized problem requires a comprehensive national strategy with coordinated buy-in from social media companies, telecommunications firms, financial institutions, law enforcement, and government agencies, along with legal protections allowing institutions to share fraud data. Key scams affecting Americans include romance, sextortion, "pig butchering," AI-generated voice calls impersonating family members
finance.yahoo.com
· 2025-12-07
Thai and South Korean authorities arrested 33 members of the "Lungo Company" scam ring that defrauded over 870 South Koreans of approximately $15 million through a multi-layered scheme combining cryptocurrency fraud, romance scams, and fake lottery schemes. The group laundered proceeds through prepaid cards, over-the-counter brokers, and micro-transactions coordinated via encrypted messaging apps, with nine core members currently in Thai custody awaiting extradition to South Korea.
coincentral.com
· 2025-12-07
Thai police dismantled the "Lungo Company" scam ring that defrauded over 870 South Koreans of $15 million using cryptocurrency, romance, and fake lottery schemes, resulting in the arrest of 25 suspects in South Korea and 9 core members in Thailand. The sophisticated operation employed multiple fraud tactics combined with complex money laundering methods including prepaid cards, casino cash-outs, and encrypted messaging apps like Telegram and WeChat to conceal stolen funds through OTC brokers in Southeast Asia.
shorenewsnetwork.com
· 2025-12-07
A 79-year-old Wilkes-Barre woman lost $25,000 after receiving a fake computer warning about a compromised bank account and being directed to transfer funds to a Bitcoin account controlled by an unidentified scammer. The victim called the provided phone number, followed the suspect's instructions to withdraw cash and use a Bitcoin ATM, and completed the transfer before realizing the fraud. The case remains under investigation, with law enforcement noting the difficulty in tracing cryptocurrency transactions.
bu.edu
· 2025-12-07
Boston University students lost $624,300 to scammers between January and September, with 90 percent of losses occurring in four cases involving impostors posing as Chinese police or officials. The BUPD reports 29 total larceny scams occurred through multiple channels, with job/employment scams being most common among students, while authorities also warned of nationwide fraud schemes involving fake apartment rentals, fraudulent identity theft reports, and immigration-related extortion targeting international students. Key prevention advice includes not answering calls from unknown numbers, verifying direct contact with authorities through official channels, and never providing payment or personal information before viewing rental properties in person.
koreajoongangdaily.joins.com
· 2025-12-07
Police arrested 25 members of a fraud ring called "Lungo Company" operating from a Thailand resort who stole approximately $15.1 million from nearly 900 Korean victims between July 2024 and July 2025. The organized group specialized in multiple scam methods including romance scams, cryptocurrency fraud, fake reservation schemes, and impersonation of government institutions, with members divided into specialized teams and subjected to strict control including passport confiscation and movement restrictions. The ringleader and additional members remain in Thai custody while Korea pursues extradition, with investigators examining potential connections to other fraud operations and the group's money laundering methods.
cantonrep.com
· 2025-12-07
Since 2020, the BBB has received over 4,000 reports of cryptocurrency investment scams, with increasingly sophisticated schemes now targeting users on TikTok through direct messages offering unrealistic returns. Scammers create fake investment opportunities, request initial deposits via digital wallets, then demand escalating "service fees" while promising multiplied returns that never materialize. To protect yourself, verify investment opportunities through the SEC and BBB, avoid guaranteed get-rich-quick schemes, resist pressure tactics, and only use digital wallet services with trusted contacts.
cryptorank.io
· 2025-12-07
The District of Columbia attorney general sued Athena Bitcoin Global, a Bitcoin ATM operator that sponsored a UK political event, alleging the company knowingly profited from scams targeting elderly victims, with approximately 93% of deposits in DC being fraud proceeds. One elderly victim lost $98,000 in three days, and the average age of victims was 71; Athena allegedly collected hundreds of thousands in fees while doing little to prevent fraud or aid recovery. UK officials are pushing to ban cryptocurrency donations to political parties over concerns about foreign interference and money laundering.
ainvest.com
· 2025-12-07
A 75-year-old man in Hong Kong lost HK$26.2 million (US$3.35 million) to a cryptocurrency investment scam involving a fake "National Hong Kong Coin" promoted through a fraudulent social media account impersonating the Chief Executive. The incident is part of a broader surge in crypto fraud in the region, where scammers use impersonation tactics, deepfake technology, and compromised accounts to deceive investors, with Hong Kong authorities urging residents to verify information through official government channels and warning of severe legal consequences for perpetrators.
cheknews.ca
· 2025-12-07
Medical fraud targeting seniors is rapidly growing, with scammers increasingly using deepfake technology and artificial intelligence to create convincing fake advertisements featuring real public figures and medical professionals. One example involved a fraudulent ad claiming Type 2 diabetes could be cured in 14 days using a supplement, featuring fabricated footage of CBC journalist Adrienne Arsenault and a real doctor. Authorities recommend seniors protect themselves by slowing down before making purchases, verifying claims through independent research, using strong passwords and multi-factor authentication, and resisting pressure tactics that create artificial urgency.
cowboystatedaily.com
· 2025-12-07
A 76-year-old man in Gillette, Wyoming was nearly victimized in a cryptocurrency ATM scam when he attempted to deposit $16,000 after being manipulated by a scammer who kept him on the phone; a bystander alerted police, preventing the loss. Cheyenne police have identified 50 BTM fraud cases totaling over $645,000 in unrecovered losses, part of a nationwide pattern where seniors lose retirement funds to overseas criminals who use emotional manipulation to direct victims to crypto kiosks. AARP is proposing new regulations for cryptocurrency machines as the FBI estimates $9.3 billion was stolen through various crypto frauds in
ainvest.com
· 2025-12-07
Elderly individuals are increasingly targeted by sophisticated cryptocurrency scams, with Beaufort County, South Carolina reporting $3.1 million in crypto-related losses in 2024 and Minnesota experiencing over $189 million in losses from crypto kiosk fraud in 2023, using tactics such as voice cloning, fake websites, QR codes, and emotional manipulation. A prominent councilman was released without charge during an investigation into one such scam, highlighting authorities' challenges in tracing funds through irreversible cryptocurrency transactions. Experts recommend seniors protect themselves through education, using trusted platforms with two-factor authentication, discussing large transactions with family members, and promptly reporting incidents to law enforcement and the FTC
amp.scmp.com
· 2025-12-07
A 77-year-old Hong Kong man lost HK$21.8 million (US$2.8 million) after a scammer impersonating a mainland Chinese official called him claiming he was involved in a criminal case and demanded payment to prove his innocence; the victim made 24 transfers to three bank accounts between June and August before the scammer became unreachable. A second elderly victim lost an additional HK$26.2 million in a cryptocurrency scam, bringing the total losses to HK$48 million across the two cases, with police investigating both incidents as obtaining property by deception with no arrests made yet.
legit.ng
· 2025-12-07
A US federal court sentenced Nigerian national Adetomiwa Seun Akindele to nearly six years in prison for defrauding an elderly American woman of $1.6 million in a romance scam, in which he posed as a wealthy Italian-American businessman and convinced her to transfer funds through cryptocurrency accounts between January and October 2018. Akindele was ordered to repay $1,692,945 in restitution and will be deported to Nigeria after completing his sentence following guilty pleas to wire fraud and money laundering charges.
consumerfinanceandfintechblog.com
· 2025-12-07
On September 8, the D.C. Attorney General filed a lawsuit against a crypto ATM operator for violations of consumer protection and elder financial exploitation laws, alleging undisclosed markups up to 26 percent, ineffective fraud safeguards, and arbitrary refund denials that disproportionately harmed elderly residents. Early data showed that most deposits were connected to scams, with victims averaging 71 years old and median losses of $8,000 per transaction. The suit seeks injunctive relief, restitution, damages, and civil penalties, reflecting increased regulatory scrutiny on crypto kiosk fee transparency, fraud controls, and licensing requirements.
yahoo.com
· 2025-12-07
Scammers in 2025 exploit AI, cryptocurrencies, and stolen data to target vulnerable individuals through deepfakes, emotional manipulation, and evolving traditional fraud methods. AI-generated audio and video impersonations caused over 105,000 deepfake attacks in the U.S. in 2024, costing more than $200 million in Q1 2025 alone, with elderly victims particularly vulnerable to fake emergency calls from supposed relatives. Cryptocurrency scams include pump-and-dump schemes and "pig butchering" (romance fraud leading to fake crypto investments), while phishing, tech support scams, and fake websites continue to exploit victims by impersonating legitimate
theconversation.com
· 2025-12-07
Scammers in 2025 exploit AI, cryptocurrencies, and stolen data to target vulnerable individuals through deepfakes, impersonation, and emotional manipulation. AI-generated audio and video impersonations cost over $200 million in losses in early 2025, while cryptocurrency scams like "pig butchering" (romance fraud hybrid) and pump-and-dump schemes manipulate victims into investing in fake platforms. Traditional fraud methods—phishing, tech support scams, and fake job listings—have evolved with AI to become more convincing, with scammers leveraging emotions like duty, fear, and hope to exploit targets across all demographics, particularly elderly victims.
jdsupra.com
· 2025-12-07
This article covers an FTC Commissioner's keynote address at a National Advertising Division conference highlighting the agency's enforcement priorities to protect consumers from fraud and misleading practices. Key areas of focus include cracking down on false earning opportunity scams that harm family budgets, protecting children from exploitative digital platforms and data misuse, and enforcing subscription cancellation rules. The Commissioner emphasized that trust is essential to advertising and warned that the FTC will continue enforcement actions against deceptive practices, despite recent legal setbacks that have limited the agency's ability to obtain monetary redress for victims.
fedweek.com
· 2025-12-07
According to the Senate Aging Committee's latest report, scams targeting older adults are increasingly leveraging artificial intelligence, cryptocurrency, and person-to-person payment transfers to defraud victims who are targeted for their accumulated assets and trusting nature. Reported losses to those age 60 and over surged by over 40% in 2024, with cryptocurrency-related losses jumping by two-thirds, while scammers employ AI-enabled tools like voice cloning and deepfake videos to make imposter scams more convincing and easier to deploy at scale. Common fraud types include imposter scams, online shopping fraud, lottery scams, and investment fraud, with cryptocurrency and P2
justice.gov
· 2025-12-07
Olamide Shanu, 34, a Nigerian national, was extradited to the United States and charged with eight counts including wire fraud, extortion, and cyberstalking for operating sextortion and romance scams that targeted victims across the United States. Shanu and his conspirators posed as women on social media to coerce male victims into sending explicit images, then threatened to distribute those images unless paid, defrauding victims of at least $2 million with proceeds laundered through peer-to-peer payment apps and cryptocurrency. If convicted, Shanu faces up to 20 years in federal prison and restitution to victims.
dailyfly.com
· 2025-12-07
A 34-year-old Nigerian man was extradited to the United States to face federal charges for operating cyber-enabled sextortion and romance scams that targeted victims across the country, including an Idaho college student. Shanu and his co-conspirators impersonated women on social media to coerce victims into sharing sexual images, then extorted money by threatening to distribute the images to family and friends, while also conducting romance scams and laundering at least $2 million in proceeds through payment platforms and cryptocurrency. If convicted on eight counts including wire fraud, identity theft, extortion, and money laundering, Shanu faces up to 20 years in federal prison and restitution to victims.
rollingout.com
· 2025-12-07
Americans lose billions annually to sophisticated investment fraud schemes that have evolved to exploit digital platforms and psychological manipulation, with the Federal Trade Commission reporting substantial increases in complaints related to romance scams and fake investment opportunities. Common fraud tactics include romance-based investment schemes, Ponzi schemes promising unrealistic returns, cryptocurrency fraud exploiting digital confusion, and fake financial advisor services targeting seniors, all of which use advanced technology, fake websites, testimonials, and social pressure to build false credibility. Recognizing warning signs—such as guaranteed high returns, pressure to invest quickly, difficulty withdrawing funds, and reluctance to provide detailed information—is essential for protecting against these increasingly sophisticated threats across all demographics.
dlnews.com
· 2025-12-07
37-year-old Nigerian national Adetomiwa Seun Akindele was sentenced to 71 months in prison for a romance scam in which he posed as "Frank Labato," a wealthy Italian-American businessman, and defrauded a widowed Colorado woman of $1.7 million in cryptocurrency over 10 months in 2018. Akindele will be deported to Nigeria after serving his sentence; he exploited the speed and irretraceability of cryptocurrency to move the funds through multiple exchanges before converting them to dollars in his bank accounts.
aarp.org
· 2025-12-07
AARP has supported passage of gift card fraud laws in 11 states during 2025, addressing two main types of fraud: scammers impersonating government agents or IT specialists who trick victims into purchasing gift cards, and criminals who drain gift card values from store shelves before purchase. A 2022 AARP survey found that 34 percent of U.S. adults reported being targeted by gift card scams, while legislation creating legal frameworks to prosecute these crimes helps deter criminals and protects consumers from financial harm.
cumberland.crimewatchpa.com
· 2025-12-07
The Shippensburg Police Department warns of rising Bitcoin scams that use fear tactics—including threats involving money, family members, or Social Security—to pressure victims into fraudulent investments promising unrealistic returns. Scammers aim to steal money and personal information, and residents are advised to be skeptical of investment opportunities that seem too good to be true and to stay vigilant against potential scams.
wlos.com
· 2025-12-07
A woman posing as a federal agent scammed a North Carolina resident out of $25,000 in a two-stage scheme that began with a phone call claiming the victim had committed a crime. When the scammers initially failed to convince the victim to transfer funds via cryptocurrency, they escalated by sending the woman to the victim's home to collect cash in person. The suspect was captured on camera and authorities released her image to the public seeking identification.
balkanweb.com
· 2025-12-07
A municipal employee in Divjakë invested $1,000 in the XUEX platform, an online pyramid scheme she discovered through Facebook ads, after being directed to administrators claiming to offer cryptocurrency investment guidance. The victim made multiple withdrawals totaling approximately €2,000 but struggled to account for exact amounts, while also recruiting her husband ($1,000), mother-in-law, and two friends to the platform. XUEX is under investigation by authorities for defrauding numerous citizens through false promises of quick cryptocurrency profits.
sg.finance.yahoo.com
· 2025-12-07
A Utah couple in their 70s lost approximately $500,000 in retirement savings and borrowed an additional $250,000 after the husband fell victim to a cryptocurrency investment scam initiated by a former coworker who promised high returns. The scammers convinced him to send additional funds to cover supposed fees, leaving the family with no recovery options since cryptocurrency transfers are irreversible; they now work multiple part-time jobs and have taken a reverse mortgage on their home to repay debts. This case reflects a broader trend: Americans 60 and older lost $2.8 billion to cryptocurrency fraud in 2024, making them the hardest-hit age group, as scamm
thebaptistpaper.org
· 2025-12-07
Romance scams targeting vulnerable older adults, particularly widows, are increasing on social media platforms like Facebook and Instagram, with scammers using fake identities and emotional manipulation to extract money and financial information. One victim lost at least $40,000 after meeting a scammer through a Words With Friends game who claimed to work on an offshore oil rig and requested funds for various emergencies. The nonprofit Advocating Against Romance Scammers (AARS) established World Romance Scam Prevention Day to raise awareness, noting that scammers typically initiate contact on social media, move conversations to encrypted messaging apps to avoid law enforcement, and employ elaborate stories about foreign locations or financial hardships to justify requests for
christianindex.org
· 2025-12-07
Romance scams on social media platforms like Facebook and Instagram are increasingly targeting vulnerable older adults, particularly widows and widowers, with fake identities designed to extract money and personal financial information. Scammers typically initiate contact, move conversations to encrypted messaging apps to avoid detection, and create elaborate stories (such as being stranded overseas or in jail) to justify requests for money, with victims losing thousands of dollars. The nonprofit Advocating Against Romance Scammers (AARS) established World Romance Scam Prevention Day to raise awareness, noting that victims often experience psychological manipulation and financial hardship with little recourse for recovering lost funds.
cnalifestyle.channelnewsasia.com
· 2025-12-07
Reshma Vasu, a senior product manager at Singapore's Open Government Products, led an AI-powered upgrade of the ScamShield app after her aunt lost her entire S$500,000 retirement savings to a sophisticated 2021 OCBC phishing scam. The upgraded ScamShield app, launched in August 2024 and downloaded 1.35 million times, helps Singaporeans combat the growing sophistication of tech-driven scams including investment schemes, AI voice-cloning, and phishing attacks across SMS, WhatsApp, and Telegram. Singapore saw reported scam cases fall 26% in the first half of 2025, though total losses
states.aarp.org
· 2025-12-07
Cryptocurrency ATMs are being exploited by scammers who deceive victims into withdrawing cash and converting it to digital currency, which is difficult to trace and recover. Criminals typically initiate contact posing as trusted sources or representatives of legitimate businesses, directing victims to crypto ATMs to address purported urgent financial problems. The scams succeed because crypto ATMs are poorly understood by the public; victims should verify any such requests independently and recognize that directions to use crypto ATMs are always fraudulent.
leravi.org
· 2025-12-07
The FBI issued a warning about increasing scam calls and texts targeting smartphone users, primarily involving fake unpaid toll notices and impersonation of law enforcement officials demanding immediate payment via gift cards, cryptocurrency, or wire transfers. Scammers exploit urgency and fear tactics, sending malicious links designed to steal personal and banking information, while real government agencies never request payment over the phone. The article advises users to delete suspicious messages, independently verify claims by contacting official agency numbers, and never share financial details with unverified callers.
kolotv.com
· 2025-12-07
The Truckee Police Department warns of growing imposter scams in which fraudsters pose as legitimate businesses or government agencies to extract money, financial account access, or personal information from victims. The department advises never paying anyone who demands cryptocurrency, wire transfers, or gift cards, as legitimate entities do not use these payment methods for unexpected demands.
royalexaminer.com
· 2025-12-07
This educational article identifies six major cryptocurrency scam tactics targeting consumers: demands for crypto payment, fake investment managers showing false account growth, romance scams involving crypto solicitation, AI-generated celebrity endorsement videos, corporate impersonation schemes, and pressure tactics promising unrealistic returns. The article advises cryptocurrency investors and curious consumers to recognize these red flags, verify sources independently, and avoid sending crypto payments to anyone applying pressure or making unrealistic promises, noting that legitimate businesses and government agencies never demand cryptocurrency payment.
buzzfeed.com
· 2025-12-07
This article is not about elder fraud, scams targeting seniors, or elder abuse. Instead, it's a compilation of personal anecdotes comparing the cost of living and quality of life between the United States and other countries (UK, Poland, Germany, Korea, Taiwan, Panama, and Australia), focusing on healthcare costs, housing prices, worker benefits, and general expenses. While some commenters use the term "scam" colloquially to describe perceived inefficiencies in American systems, this is not relevant to Elderus's focus on financial exploitation or abuse of elderly individuals.
ca.news.yahoo.com
· 2025-12-07
A Boise, Idaho gas station clerk named Avalon Hardy intervened to stop at least seven cryptocurrency scams targeting elderly customers by questioning suspicious Bitcoin ATM transactions and unplugging the machine to prevent a 79-year-old from losing $15,000 and a 75-year-old from losing $19,000. Crypto fraud has become increasingly prevalent, with scammers using tactics like impersonation, fake government agencies, and AI-powered deepfakes to target older adults, who reported losses exceeding $1.6 billion in 2023 alone and are the most vulnerable demographic to these schemes.
citationneeded.news
· 2025-12-07
**Type:** Cryptocurrency/Financial Fraud Alert
The Trump family's World Liberty Financial (WLFI) cryptocurrency project has raised significant concerns about conflicts of interest and market manipulation, with the project team blocklisting major investor Justin Sun from selling his tokens shortly after trading commenced, potentially to prevent price decline. The Trumps have profited approximately $412.5 million from early token sales and indirect payments, though media reports claiming $5 billion in gains are misleading since these represent unrealized "paper" profits and insider selling would likely cause market collapse. Congressional Democrats are pushing for stronger oversight language in proposed crypto legislation to prevent similar presidential conflicts of interest in financial ventures.
jdsupra.com
· 2025-12-07
On September 8, the District of Columbia's Attorney General filed a lawsuit against a bitcoin ATM operator for violations of consumer protection and elder abuse laws, alleging the operator charged excessive fees (up to 26 percent) and failed to protect vulnerable elderly customers from fraud. The complaint detailed how 93 percent of deposits during the operator's first five months were linked to fraud schemes targeting elderly residents with a median age of 71 and median losses of $8,000 per transaction, while the operator refused refunds despite awareness of the scams. The Attorney General sought injunctive relief, restitution, damages, civil penalties, and implementation of proper consumer protections and refund processes.
securityboulevard.com
· 2025-12-07
The "Phantom Hacker" scam, which has stolen over $1 billion in the past year, uses a three-phase impersonation scheme targeting seniors and others by posing as tech support, financial institution, and government representatives to trick victims into transferring funds to fraudulent "safe" accounts via wire transfer, cryptocurrency, or cash. The scam's effectiveness lies in its elaborate layering of trusted personas, remote computer access, and official-looking communications that convince victims to move money while remaining silent about the transactions. Experts warn that artificial intelligence will make such scams increasingly convincing and scalable, requiring stronger security controls at the vendor and service provider level to protect vulnerable populations.