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in Celebrity Impersonation Scams
hellocare.com.au
· 2025-12-08
In 2023, Australian seniors aged 65 and above lost more than $2.7 billion to scams across over 601,000 reported cases, representing a significant increase from 2022's 507,000 reports. Investment scams were the leading threat, accounting for $1.3 billion in losses, followed by remote access scams ($256 million), romance scams ($201.1 million), and phishing scams ($137.4 million), with tactics including deepfake videos and celebrity impersonations. The ACCC reports that the true scale is likely much larger, as an estimated one in three victims never report their fraud, and the government has launche
techtimes.com
· 2025-12-08
A South Korean woman lost $50,000 to a scammer who used deepfake videos to impersonate Elon Musk on Instagram, convincing her to transfer funds through a fake investment opportunity. The scammer built credibility by sharing fabricated photos, identification documents, and intimate details about Musk's life, ultimately conducting a convincing video call using deepfake technology. The victim later appeared on South Korean television to warn others about the dangers of this sophisticated fraud technique.
livemint.com
· 2025-12-08
A South Korean woman lost 70 million won (approximately ₹41 lakh) in a romance scam after being deceived by a scammer impersonating Elon Musk using deepfake video technology. The scammer built trust over Instagram by sharing fabricated details about Musk's life, conducting a deepfake video call to appear authentic, and then convincing the victim to transfer money to a Korean bank account with promises of investment returns. This incident reflects a growing trend of scammers exploiting the identities of high-profile figures like Musk to defraud vulnerable targets.
deseret.com
· 2025-12-08
A Citi survey reveals that while 90% of U.S. adults believe they can spot financial scams, 27% have actually fallen victim to one, highlighting a significant gap between confidence and reality. The FTC reported $10 billion in losses to scams in 2023, with scammers using email, text, phone calls, and mail to target victims. The article outlines five emerging scam types—QR code scams ("quishing"), student loan forgiveness schemes, peer-to-peer payment fraud, and virtual celebrity impersonations—and provides protective measures for each.
newscaststudio.com
· 2025-12-08
CBS News conducted a year-long investigation into romance scams, airing a weeklong series from April 21-28, 2024, revealing the epidemic affects victims across the country and constitutes a billion-dollar crime wave. The investigation, led by correspondent Jim Axelrod, features the story of a woman whose mother died after losing her life savings to a romance scam, and includes interviews with victims, scammers, dating app executives, and law enforcement across seven states. The series explores trends in online dating, the role of Match Group, how scammers operate (many originating from Ghana), and the psychological manipulation tactics used to defraud victims.
vindy.com
· 2025-12-08
AARP identifies four emerging scams to watch for in 2024: check cooking (using software to digitally alter stolen checks rather than chemical washing), voiceprint scams (using deepfake technology to impersonate victims' voices for financial fraud), delayed-action sweepstakes scams (collecting personal information for identity theft that may be exploited gradually), and virtual celebrity scams (exploiting fans' connection to online celebrity presence). Prevention strategies include using safer payment methods, avoiding phone calls from unknown numbers, never providing personal information to unsolicited callers, and remaining skeptical of offers that seem too good to be true.
welivesecurity.com
· 2025-12-08
This article examines cryptocurrency fraud threats, particularly as Bitcoin's value surges and a halving event approaches, attracting both legitimate interest and malicious actors. The main threats include malware like Lumma Stealer and crypto drainers (which stole $59 million and $47 million respectively), phishing scams using spoofed social media accounts and fake investment platforms, and social engineering attacks such as celebrity impersonation schemes. The article advises cryptocurrency users to protect themselves against these unregulated market threats through awareness and digital security practices.
ohioattorneygeneral.gov
· 2025-12-08
Deepfake videos featuring celebrities like Jennifer Aniston, Taylor Swift, and Selena Gomez have been circulating on social media to scam consumers into revealing personal or financial information through fake endorsements for products like MacBooks and cookware. To identify these AI-generated scams, consumers should examine the video for unusual movements or facial expressions, distorted backgrounds, suspicious sources, and lack of context, and can use reverse image searches and hover over links before clicking. The general rule remains that if a deal seems too good to be true, it likely is, and suspicious activity should be reported to the Ohio Attorney General's Office.
aarp.org
· 2025-12-08
A Hong Kong finance worker lost $25.6 million after being deceived in a video conference where the CFO and executives were entirely computer-generated deepfakes, representing a sophisticated AI-enabled fraud scheme. Criminals are increasingly weaponizing generative AI tools like ChatGPT and DALL-E to create convincing fake voices, videos, and identities for various scams including celebrity endorsement frauds, romance schemes, sextortion, and phishing emails. Experts warn that AI technology has dramatically lowered the barrier for fraud perpetration, enabling an "industrial revolution for fraud criminals" with potentially endless victims and losses.
states.aarp.org
· 2025-12-08
Scammers are increasingly using AI technology, including deepfake videos, to impersonate celebrities and defraud fans by offering fake personal connections, VIP access, investment opportunities, or charity support. Victims should be cautious of unsolicited celebrity contact on social media or messaging platforms, as legitimate celebrity interactions are rare, and should report suspected scams to local law enforcement or AARP's Fraud Watch Network.
theverge.com
· 2025-12-08
The FTC enacted a new rule effective immediately that prohibits impersonation scams involving government, businesses, and their officials, and grants the agency authority to file federal court complaints to recover stolen funds from perpetrators. Impersonation scams cost victims $1.1 billion in 2023, including schemes involving fake business communications, spoofed emails and websites, and fraudulent use of government seals and logos. The FTC is also accepting public comment through April 30th on expanding the rule to cover impersonation of individuals through deepfakes and AI voice cloning technology.
9news.com.au
· 2025-12-08
A National Australia Bank teller in Melbourne prevented a woman in her 60s from losing thousands of dollars to a romance scam by identifying red flags in her plan to transfer money to an overseas "boyfriend" she had met on social media. The scammer, posing as someone in Turkey needing medical treatment, had convinced the woman to send funds to an intermediary in Sydney, but the teller's intervention and private counseling stopped the transaction. According to NAB, romance scam reports have increased nearly 30 percent year-over-year, with Australians losing an estimated $33 million to such scams annually.
boothbayregister.com
· 2025-12-08
**Celebrity Impostor Scams Enhanced by AI Technology**
Criminals are leveraging artificial intelligence to make celebrity impostor scams increasingly convincing, moving from fake social media profiles and messaging to deepfake videos that impersonate celebrities like Dolly Parton, Elon Musk, and Tom Hanks. Scammers use these fraudulent schemes to establish false connections with fans, offering personal access, investment opportunities, or charity support to steal money. Consumers should be cautious of any personal contact claims from celebrities and report suspected scams to local law enforcement or AARP's Fraud Watch Network.
whsv.com
· 2025-12-08
In 2023, Virginia residents lost over $200 million to scams according to the Federal Trade Commission. The Better Business Bureau warns that AI-generated content is making scams increasingly sophisticated and harder to detect, with scammers using AI to create fake celebrity endorsements in shopping and investment schemes. The BBB recommends verifying legitimacy through reverse image searches, checking for audio/visual irregularities, and conducting thorough research before engaging with unfamiliar offers.
usatoday.com
· 2025-12-08
**Death-Hoax Scam Using AI-Generated Obituaries**
Scammers are creating fake AI-generated obituaries of real, living people and posting them on low-quality content sites to generate ad revenue through clicks and search traffic, a scheme recently discovered when Los Angeles Times reporter Deborah Vankin found a false obituary about herself online. The scam targets high-traffic names and fills obituaries with keywords to rank in Google searches; while not directly targeting victims for money, the scheme exploits ad networks and has the potential to significantly impact public figures and celebrities. Users should verify the legitimacy of online obituaries, as personal information is readily available on the
usmagazine.com
· 2025-12-08
Actor Jamie Dornan recounted how Warren Beatty nearly fell victim to an email scam in which a fraudster impersonated Oscar winner Eddie Redmayne, sending messages to Redmayne's contacts requesting cash. Beatty was the only one of Redmayne's email contacts who responded positively to the scam message, offering to wire money before the fraud was revealed.
healthjournalism.org
· 2025-12-08
Elder fraud schemes—including grandparent scams, romance scams, and government impersonation scams—have become increasingly sophisticated through AI technology like deepfake videos and robocalls, making them difficult to distinguish from legitimate communications. In 2022 alone, approximately 88,000 people aged 60 and older lost $3.1 billion to fraud, with victims over 70 losing an average of nearly $42,000; scammers typically exploit emotions rather than intelligence, and experts advise victims and their families to watch for financial requests as the key indicator of fraud. The AARP Fraud Watch Network received nearly 100,000 calls last year from victims of all
wglt.org
· 2025-12-07
The Better Business Bureau of Central Illinois reports a 70% increase in scam reports year-to-date (roughly 100,000 compared to 58,000 last year), with seniors age 65 and older being the hardest hit, experiencing median losses of over $6,000 from romance/friendship scams and sometimes losing hundreds of thousands of dollars. To address this rise, BBB leader Jessica Tharp is launching the Senior Scam Stop 2025 education series to combat the stigma around victimization and empower seniors with knowledge about common scams (including romance plots, grandparent scams, and Medicare fraud) and protective strategies.
aol.com
· 2025-12-07
Internet scams have evolved from crude 1990s email cons like Nigerian prince schemes to sophisticated AI-powered deepfakes that can convincingly impersonate voices and faces, with phishing attacks emerging in the early 2000s as online banking adoption grew. Despite technological advances making fraud more convincing and difficult to detect, successful scams continue to rely on exploiting fundamental human emotions—greed, fear, compassion, and loneliness—through predictable psychological manipulation patterns that create urgency and isolate victims from support systems. Understanding how scam tactics have evolved reveals that technological complexity often masks simple psychological manipulation, and recognizing consistent underlying patterns can help potential victims identify manipulation attempts regardless of delivery method.
news.trendmicro.com
· 2025-12-07
This educational piece outlines how to identify and respond to social media scams targeting users. Common scams include fake celebrity accounts, phishing links, romance scams, fraudulent job offers, giveaway schemes, and investment fraud—all designed to steal personal information, credentials, or money through deceptive friend requests and messages. The article recommends verifying profiles for authenticity, reporting suspicious accounts, blocking scammers, and maintaining strong privacy settings to protect against these threats.
koaa.com
· 2025-12-07
A Colorado Springs woman lost her entire $37,000 inheritance to a cryptocurrency investment scam after seeing a fraudulent post from a hacked friend's Facebook account. The scammers used a sophisticated multi-layered approach, including fake Bitcoin wallet instructions and a spoofed cryptocurrency website, to make the scheme appear legitimate and promise returns of $194,000. The victim, who was grieving her recently reconnected father, received nothing when she attempted to withdraw her funds, illustrating how investment fraud remains the top scam in Colorado with nearly 15,000 reports in 2024.
halifaxexaminer.ca
· 2025-12-07
In 2024, Canadians lost $310.5 million to investment fraud, with Nova Scotia seniors accounting for approximately $1.56 million of reported cases in the province. Financial elder abuse—the unauthorized or coercive use of an older person's money—is most commonly perpetrated by family members, caregivers, and financial advisors, with social isolation, cognitive decline, and financial dependence identified as key vulnerability factors. Warning signs include unpaid bills, behavioral changes, requests to sign blank documents, and avoidance of account statements, and experts recommend careful communication with suspected victims and immediate reporting of suspicious activity.
wisbechstandard.co.uk
· 2025-12-07
A grieving widow from Cambridgeshire lost over £500,000 to scammers impersonating actor Jason Momoa on social media, including funds from selling her home, leaving her homeless. The scammers built an online romantic relationship with the vulnerable woman over weeks, convincing her to send money for a house in Hawaii where they would live together. Cambridgeshire Police highlight this case as one of thousands of celebrity-based romance scams targeting isolated or grieving individuals, and emphasize that fraudsters deliberately research and exploit vulnerable people going through difficult times.
gizmodo.com
· 2025-12-07
Scammers are impersonating Elon Musk to defraud victims through cryptocurrency investment schemes, using tactics including fake livestreams during SpaceX/Tesla events, AI-generated videos, and fake endorsements from family members or political figures. FTC complaints reveal multiple victims, primarily elderly individuals, losing substantial sums ranging from $10,000 to $225,000, with some victims remaining confused about whether they interacted with the real Musk or impersonators. The scams exploit vulnerable populations, including those with serious illnesses or cognitive impairment, and often target victims through YouTube, Facebook, and fake cryptocurrency matching schemes.
meta.com
· 2025-12-07
Meta is testing facial recognition technology to combat scams that misuse public figures' and celebrities' images in fraudulent ads and promotional content. The system automatically compares faces in suspected scam ads against public figures' profile pictures to detect matches in real time, then removes confirmed scams; participating public figures will be notified in advance and given the option to opt out.
columbian.com
· 2025-12-07
A woman lost thousands of dollars in a romance scam where she believed she was in a relationship with a celebrity who communicated with her daily before disappearing with her money. Romance scams and other online crimes have surged dramatically in the United States, with the FBI reporting record losses of $16.6 billion in 2024.
express.co.uk
· 2025-12-07
A woman lost a six-figure sum over eight months to a romance scammer who impersonated an Emmerdale actor after connecting with her on social media, claiming to need money for family emergencies, legal issues, and household repairs while repeatedly promising repayment that never occurred. Greater Manchester Police's Economic Crime Unit investigated the case, with detectives emphasizing the emotional and financial devastation of romance fraud and urging victims to report incidents to Action Fraud and their banks. The case highlights an ongoing problem of criminals using fake celebrity identities online, with actress Lisa Riley recently warning fans to verify her official blue-ticked social media accounts and avoid interacting with scams using her name.
news.virginia.edu
· 2025-12-07
AI is enhancing both traditional scams and creating new fraud methods by automating mass attacks and making previously elite techniques accessible to ordinary fraudsters. Common AI-assisted scams include voice-cloned "grandparent scams," months-long fake relationship "pig butchering" schemes with cryptocurrency investments, synthetic identity fraud, sextortion with AI-generated images, and fake product reviews and job postings. To protect themselves, people should remain skeptical of urgent money requests especially via phone calls from claimed family members, verify identities through independent channels, and slow down decision-making during high-pressure situations.
bbc.com
· 2025-12-07
Women are now being targeted by online investment scammers at rates equal to men, with fraudsters moving away from traditional investments toward cryptocurrency and social media-based platforms targeting ages 30-80. Surrey Police report that victims have lost an average of £49,000 to investment fraud in 2024, with one woman losing £350,000 after being groomed over a year on a fake crypto trading platform; scammers use tactics including fake celebrity endorsements and AI-generated videos to build false trust. Police advise victims to seek independent financial advice and verify companies through the Financial Conduct Authority before investing.
yahoo.com
· 2025-12-07
A woman named Abigail Ruvalcaba was deceived by a scammer impersonating actor Steve Burton through Facebook messages and phone calls, eventually selling her home to send money to the fraudster. Romance scams using celebrity impersonation have become increasingly prevalent and profitable, with the FTC reporting nearly 65,000 victims losing $1.14 billion in 2023, and artificial intelligence now enabling scammers to create deepfakes and mimic celebrities like Taylor Swift, Brad Pitt, and Keanu Reeves. Lawmakers have responded by introducing the NO FAKES Act to protect individuals' likenesses from unauthorized AI-generated recreations used in fraud schemes
latimes.com
· 2025-12-07
Abigail Ruvalcaba sold her home after being romance scammed by someone impersonating actor Steve Burton, who used AI-generated videos and promises of love to exploit her. According to the FTC, nearly 65,000 people reported romance scams in 2023 with losses totaling $1.14 billion, with scammers increasingly using deepfakes and AI to impersonate celebrities like Taylor Swift, Brad Pitt, and Keanu Reeves to defraud victims seeking romantic connection. Lawmakers have introduced the NO FAKES Act to protect individuals' voices and likenesses from AI-generated impersonation.
usatoday.com
· 2025-12-07
A 65-year-old man from Athens, Georgia was victimized by a celebrity romance scam in which he believed he had developed an online relationship with singer Miley Cyrus. The scam exploited the common tactic of impersonating a well-known celebrity on social media to build false trust with the victim. No dollar amount or final outcome was specified in the available excerpt.
koaa.com
· 2025-12-07
A Colorado Springs woman lost $200 in an imposter scam after someone posing as Justin Hayward, lead singer of the Moody Blues, contacted her on Facebook and built a false relationship over a month before requesting money for bills and gift cards. The scammer used common tactics including avoiding video calls, false promises of concert attendance, and romantic advances despite Hayward's known marital status. Imposter scams are the number one reported fraud type in Colorado, and authorities recommend victims report the incident, block the account, contact their bank, and monitor their credit.
uk.finance.yahoo.com
· 2025-12-07
A 66-year-old Montana woman named Rita lost $90,000 in a romance scam after developing an emotional connection with someone posing as a celebrity over social media and encrypted messaging platforms. The scammer, who claimed to be going through a divorce like Rita, eventually requested payments in Bitcoin, and it took her 4½ months to recognize the fraud. Rita shared her story as a public service announcement, noting that romance and confidence scams resulted in over $389 million in losses to more than 7,600 victims over 60 in 2024.
people.com
· 2025-12-07
A woman in her 80s in Hokkaido, Japan lost approximately $6,700 (1 million yen) in a romance scam that began on social media in July, when a con artist posed as an astronaut claiming to be in space under attack and in need of oxygen, convincing her to send money for his survival. The incident reflects a broader trend: in 2024, over 7,600 people over 60 in the United States fell victim to romance and confidence scams, resulting in more than $389 million in losses, with elderly victims being particularly vulnerable due to their trustworthiness, financial resources, and reluctance to report fraud.
hola.com
· 2025-12-07
An 80-year-old woman in Hokkaido, Japan lost approximately $6,700 of her life savings to a romance scam in which a man posed as an astronaut claiming his spaceship needed oxygen money. The article highlights the growing epidemic of romance fraud targeting vulnerable elderly populations, noting that in the U.S. alone over 7,600 seniors were scammed through romance and confidence fraud in 2024, losing nearly $389 million, and that seniors remain prime targets due to isolation, trusting nature, and available savings.
wbir.com
· 2025-12-03
Three people were sentenced to prison for orchestrating a romance scam that impersonated celebrities and government officials to defraud elderly victims, including a retired Jonesborough teacher who lost his entire life savings of $87,000 and subsequently died by suicide in October 2023. The scammers, Stephen O. Anagor, Chinagorom Onwumere, and Salma Abdalkareem, targeted multiple victims across the United States by pretending to be celebrities or falsely claiming to be FBI and Justice Department officials to pressure victims into paying fabricated fines and fees. To protect yourself, be cautious of romantic advances from celebrities online, never send money to people you haven't met in person regardless of their claimed identity, and verify any official government communications directly through official channels rather than through email or unsolicited contact.
wjhl.com
· 2025-12-03
# Article Summary
Three individuals—two from New Jersey and one from Washington—have been sentenced to a combined 20 years in prison for orchestrating romance scams that targeted elderly Americans, including a Tennessee man who lost his entire $86,900 life savings and later died by suicide. The scammers impersonated celebrities and government officials online to convince victims they were in romantic relationships, then extorted money by posing as law enforcement claiming investigations were underway. To protect yourself, be extremely cautious of unsolicited romantic advances online, never send money to people you haven't met in person, and verify claims by contacting official organizations directly through their published phone numbers rather than using contact information provided by the scammer.
yahoo.com
· 2025-12-03
Three individuals—two from New Jersey and one from Washington—were sentenced to a combined 20 years in prison for orchestrating a romance scam that defrauded a Tennessee victim of nearly $87,000 in 2023, ultimately contributing to his suicide. The scam involved criminals in Nigeria impersonating celebrities and government officials online to trick elderly victims into sending money, with U.S.-based conspirators receiving the funds and using harassment tactics to extract additional payments. To protect yourself, be skeptical of unexpected romantic connections online, never send money to someone you haven't met in person, and report suspicious communications to authorities immediately.
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FOX 4 Dallas-Fort Worth
· 2024-11-22
A 74-year-old woman from Frisco was scammed out of $600,000 by 56-year-old Jeffrey Monahan Jr., who impersonated Elon Musk and befriended her on Facebook in 2023, promising a $55 million return on investment in Musk's business ventures. Monahan has been charged with Grand Theft, and financial records showed the funds were directed to his painting business; he claimed his online girlfriend was the mastermind behind the scheme.
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NBC News
· 2024-10-22
Meta is testing facial recognition technology to combat celebrity impersonation scams on Facebook and Instagram, which have cost consumers hundreds of millions of dollars. The technology will identify and remove fraudulent celebrity endorsement ads and help users securely regain access to locked accounts. The initiative addresses a growing industry-wide problem that has accelerated since the pandemic began.
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Which?
· 2024-09-15
I cannot provide an accurate summary of this article. The text appears to be a garbled or poorly OCR-scanned transcript of a consumer advice program introduction that repeatedly duplicates phrases and lacks coherent content about specific scams or fraud prevention tips. While it mentions that scams are becoming more sophisticated and references a discussion about ticket scams, the actual substantive advice or details about scams are not clearly present in the provided text. A proper summary would require a clearer, complete version of the source material.
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12 News
· 2024-07-08
Americans lost over $1 billion to romance scams last year, with many Arizona residents targeted. The three most prevalent romance scam tactics involve deepfake video calls using face-swapping technology (employed by Nigerian crime groups), cryptocurrency investment schemes that promise high returns once trust is established, and celebrity deepfakes using artificial intelligence. Victims can protect themselves by watching for unnatural video call indicators like inconsistent blinking, mismatched skin tones, and words not synchronizing with mouth movements.