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3,874 results in Investment Fraud
the-sun.com · 2025-12-07
A woman using multiple aliases, including Adva Lavie and Mia Ventura, is wanted by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department for a series of residential burglaries targeting elderly and lonely men she met on dating apps; she posed as a romantic interest to gain access to their homes before stealing valuables. The case reflects a broader surge in online romance fraud, with the FBI reporting $1.3 billion in losses during 2024, with victims aged 60 and older accounting for nearly 40% of losses and an average loss of $12,000 per victim.
bnnbloomberg.ca · 2025-12-07
A Toronto man lost $80,000 to a romance scam after meeting a woman claiming to be from Seattle on social media; she convinced him to invest in cryptocurrency under the promise of tripling his money. According to the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre, romance scams have already cost 778 Canadians over $54.6 million in 2024, making it one of the most common frauds in Canada. The Canadian Association of Retired Persons is calling for stricter criminal penalties, mandatory fraud prevention measures at banks and telecoms, and greater bank responsibility in preventing large transfers associated with fraud.
troopers.ny.gov · 2025-12-07
New York State Police warn of a phone scam targeting senior citizens in which callers falsely claim identity theft has occurred and pressure victims to withdraw large sums of money or purchase gold bars for "safekeeping," with scammers then sending couriers to collect the funds. In one documented case in Tompkins County, victim(s) lost $500,000 in gold bars across two incidents in 2024, leading to the indictment of Akash B. Thakkar, age 41, on Grand Larceny charges after investigators identified him as a courier who picked up the gold bars. Authorities advise victims to hang up and contact trusted family members rather than comply with such demands
abc7news.com · 2025-12-07
Scammers operating from overseas, many in Southeast Asian compounds, are exploiting Bitcoin ATM machines to steal from victims through classic fraud schemes—including impersonation scams, computer hacking claims, and fake legal emergencies—directing them to convert cash into cryptocurrency. Victims like San Jose resident Jim Meduri and an 82-year-old Minnesota woman lost thousands of dollars this way, though some funds have been recovered through blockchain tracking and law enforcement intervention. The DC attorney general has sued Bitcoin ATM provider Athena Bitcoin over inadequate fraud protections, as cryptocurrency theft through these machines has become a major scam tool with victims often unaware their money goes directly to criminals.
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.
bnnbloomberg.ca · 2025-12-07
Canada's Ontario Securities Commission has identified seven prevalent investment scams targeting victims in autumn, including romance scams (fraudsters gaining trust online before pitching fake investments), cryptocurrency scams (requesting additional funds before allowing withdrawals), affinity fraud (targeting social groups with Ponzi schemes), pump-and-dump schemes (artificially inflating stock prices before selling), boiler room operations (fake trading platforms), AI voice scams (deepfakes impersonating relatives or celebrities), and exempt securities fraud (misrepresenting fraudulent investments as legitimate exclusive opportunities). The advisory emphasizes that common red flags include unsolicited contact about investment tips, requests for money from online contacts never met in person, an
kdhlradio.com · 2025-12-07
Scammers posing as Wells Fargo contacted Minnesota residents and convinced three people in the Duluth area to overnight ship cash to Florida, resulting in $48,000 in combined losses before authorities recovered the funds. Police warn that legitimate financial institutions never request customers send money, gift cards, or wire funds, and advise victims to hang up and call their bank directly using a verified number rather than returning the scammer's call. Criminals are also increasingly using AI technology to mimic loved ones' voices in phone scams targeting seniors, making it critical for families to discuss these threats and verify unusual requests in person at bank branches.
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.
reddit.com · 2025-12-07
Hugo Sanchez, a Toronto man in his 40s, lost $80,000 to a romance scam after meeting a woman named "Lina" on social media following his separation. The scammer convinced him to invest in cryptocurrency, falsely promising he would triple his money. Advocates from the Canadian Association of Retired Persons are calling for stricter criminal penalties and mandatory fraud prevention measures at banks and telecoms, noting that romance scams have cost 778 Canadians over $54.6 million so far this year.
cnhi.com · 2025-12-07
Older adults aged 60-plus lost $3.4 billion globally to financial scammers in 2023, with fraudsters targeting this population because they believe older adults have substantial savings and are less likely to report crimes. The article describes five common scams targeting seniors: grandparent scams (emotional manipulation using impersonation), financial services scams (impersonating banks or debt collectors), tech support scams (the most frequently reported type), government impersonation scams (IRS/Social Security threats), and romance scams, all of which exploit trust, fear, or emotion to extract money or personal information.
Romance Scam Crypto Investment Scam Investment Fraud Lottery/Prize Scam Government Impersonation Cryptocurrency Wire Transfer Gift Cards Cash Check/Cashier's Check
dailyinterlake.com · 2025-12-07
A free two-hour educational seminar titled "Scam Smart: Protecting Seniors from the Newest Scams" is scheduled for October 21 in Kalispell, Montana, hosted by state officials and community organizations to help older adults recognize and prevent fraud. The program will cover emerging scams including AI-generated calls, text phishing, cryptocurrency schemes, and investment fraud, providing practical strategies to protect personal information and finances. Seniors, caregivers, and community members are invited to attend free of charge, with advance registration required due to limited space.
abc6onyourside.com · 2025-12-07
An 82-year-old in Northern Virginia was nearly scammed out of over $20,000 by a fraudster posing as a lawyer claiming to represent their son in a criminal case, complete with a crying man in the background for authenticity. The victim's family intervened before money was lost, and law enforcement coordinated a fake cash pickup that led to the arrest of Yordanys Rodriguez, 33, of the Bronx, who was found to be impersonating a law enforcement officer and is now facing charges of conspiracy to commit a felony and obtaining money by false pretenses.
newtimes.co.rw · 2025-12-07
Money mule schemes accounted for 29 percent of Rwanda's reported fraud losses between August and December 2024, with scammers targeting vulnerable job seekers through fake employment offers on social media that promise easy remote work involving payment transfers. Victims unknowingly become part of money-laundering chains, exposing their bank accounts to closure and themselves to legal consequences, though banks use advanced monitoring tools to detect suspicious activity such as sudden large transfers. Protection requires individuals to verify job offers, avoid sharing bank details with strangers, and report suspected scams to law enforcement or the Financial Intelligence Centre.
atholdailynews.com · 2025-12-07
Between 2023 and May 2025, the FBI's Boston Division documented 103 courier-based fraud schemes targeting elderly residents, resulting in over $26 million in losses, with 59 Massachusetts victims losing $18.6 million combined—98% of losses reported by people over 60. The scams typically involved impersonation (grandparent, government, or tech support) to convince victims to either transfer funds to fake government accounts or hand cash and gold bars to couriers; nationally, the FBI documented 1,737 similar instances totaling approximately $186.2 million in losses. The FBI advises the public to discuss these schemes with elderly relatives and warns that the government
earth.com · 2025-12-07
Gabriel Aguilar, a University of Texas at Arlington professor, was nearly victimized by a fake job offer scam involving a fraudulent check years ago; this experience inspired his current research on how artificial intelligence tools like chatbots, deepfakes, and voice clones are making scams more convincing, particularly targeting Latino communities who face obstacles including limited digital access and financial stress. Aguilar's published study and teaching methods focus on educating students to recognize AI-powered manipulation tactics—including fake job listings, impersonated government websites, and voice cloning—by teaching them to identify tone, rhythm, and context in deceptive messages. He emphasizes that AI did not revolutionize
wjla.com · 2025-12-07
An 82-year-old in Northern Virginia nearly lost over $20,000 to a fake lawyer scam in October, where a caller claimed the victim's son needed legal representation and used emotional manipulation (including recorded crying) to pressure payment. Quick intervention by a family member and coordinated law enforcement stopped the fraud; investigators identified the scammer as Yordanys Rodriguez, 33, of New York, who used the name of a deceased attorney and was arrested in Pennsylvania on charges of conspiracy and obtaining money by false pretenses, and was also found to be impersonating a law enforcement officer.
newsmeter.in · 2025-12-07
A father and daughter from Hyderabad were separately defrauded of a combined Rs 2 lakh through a fake investment app called "LF Work" that promised guaranteed returns. M Rama Krishna, an RTC employee, lost Rs 1,35,210 after being introduced to the app by a friend in August 2025, while his daughter M Mithali lost Rs 86,220 after being introduced by a family friend in September 2025; both were unable to withdraw their investments. The Rachakonda Cybercrime Police registered two cases under fraud and IT Act sections and initiated an investigation to trace the perpetrators.
betanews.com · 2025-12-07
In 2024, cybercrime complaints to the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center reached 859,532 with reported losses of $16.6 billion—a 51-fold increase in complaints and 2,400-fold increase in losses since 2000. Seniors were disproportionately affected, filing 147,127 complaints and losing $4.8 billion, while investment scams caused the highest financial losses at $6.6 billion despite phishing generating more complaints overall. Corporations have faced even larger aggregate losses exceeding $128 billion from major incidents over the past 37 years, with ransomware attacks causing the greatest corporate damage at over $6
theguardian.com · 2025-12-07
A Chinese court recently sentenced 11 people to death for operating an illegal scam network along the Myanmar border, but experts warn this represents only a fraction of a multibillion-dollar "pig-butchering" fraud industry spanning Southeast Asia and beyond. The schemes victimize two groups: those defrauded by romance or business scammers, and trafficked workers forced to perpetrate crimes in prison-like compounds under threat, torture, and modern slavery conditions. An estimated 220,000 people have been trafficked into online scam centers in Myanmar and Cambodia alone, with operations now identified in Serbia, Peru, Pakistan, and Africa, exploiting deepfake technology and evading enforcement through corrupt
maltatoday.com.mt · 2025-12-07
A 70-year-old Maltese woman named Maria lost €568,000 in a romance scam after meeting a man on Facebook who claimed to be a surgeon in Gaza; over six months, she made 39 bank transfers to various accounts and even mailed €8,000 cash in a teddy bear to Germany before customs intercepted it. Her case exemplifies a surge in online fraud affecting Malta, with Bank of Valletta alone reporting €5.3 million in losses to clients by September 2024 (double the 2024 total), while an additional €2.2 million was prevented from being fraudulently transferred. Experts note that reported figures likely represent
switzer.com.au · 2025-12-07
In 2024, Australians lost over A$2.03 billion to scams across 494,732 reported cases, with most enabled by technology through online or phone contact. Scammers exploit universal psychological principles—including need, greed, authority, distraction, and social proof—that are similar to legitimate persuasion techniques used in advertising and marketing, making everyone vulnerable regardless of expertise or background. Understanding these manipulation tactics can help people recognize and resist scams by questioning whether they're being rushed, whether claims seem too good to be true, and whether the request matches legitimate practices.
independent.co.uk · 2025-12-07
UK and US authorities seized a record $15 billion in bitcoin and 19 luxury London properties in a joint crackdown on a criminal network operating romance scam centres across south-east Asia. The network, led by Cambodian businessman Chen Zhi and his Prince Holding Group, lured victims into fake romantic relationships and fraudulent cryptocurrency investment schemes, often employing trafficked foreign nationals forced to commit fraud under threat of torture. Romance scams cost the UK at least £92 million in 2023-2024, with over 8,000 reported cases that year.
bankingjournal.aba.com · 2025-12-07
The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network finalized a rule barring Cambodian firm Huione Group from the U.S. financial system due to its role as a money laundering conduit for romance scams and other cybercrimes. Simultaneously, the Treasury Department sanctioned 146 targets within the Cambodia-based Prince Group Transnational Criminal Organization for operating online investment scams targeting Americans and people worldwide.
bbc.com · 2025-12-07
Cambodian businessman Chen Zhi was charged in the US for allegedly orchestrating a massive cryptocurrency scam through his Prince Group, which operated at least ten fraudulent compounds in Cambodia that used forced labor to conduct online romance and investment fraud schemes targeting thousands of victims worldwide. The US and UK seized approximately $14 billion in bitcoin and froze assets including 19 London properties valued at over £100 million, with prosecutors describing the operation as one of the largest financial takedowns in history involving human trafficking, forced labor camps, and the use of phone farms controlling thousands of fake social media accounts to deceive victims into transferring cryptocurrency.