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401 results for "Washington"
cftc.gov · 2025-12-08
A federal court ordered five defendants—two Chinese residents (Qian Bai and Chao Li), one Oklahoma resident (Lan Bai), and two UK companies (Aipu Limited and Fidefx Investments Ltd.)—to pay approximately $19 million in civil penalties and restitution for operating fraudulent trading websites that misappropriated at least $3.6 million from at least 34 customers over 18 months. The scheme involved soliciting victims through fake platforms claiming to offer leveraged commodity and foreign currency trading contracts. The CFTC advises the public to verify company registration before investing and warns of increasing romance scams that lure
donalds.house.gov · 2025-12-08
Congressman Byron Donalds announced a free, in-person scam awareness workshop in Bonita Springs, Florida, co-hosted with regional FBI partners for constituents of Florida's 19th Congressional District. The workshop aims to educate attendees about common scams and elder fraud prevention strategies.
miamitimesonline.com · 2025-12-08
U.S. Sen. Ashley Moody joined a bipartisan group of lawmakers in sending a letter to federal officials demanding coordinated efforts to combat international financial scams targeting seniors, which cost victims over $3.4 billion annually. The letter, signed by senators including Rick Scott, Mark Kelly, and Kirsten Gillibrand, requested enhanced investigations, increased foreign law enforcement partnerships, public awareness campaigns, and improved interagency coordination. Moody, a member of the Senate Special Committee on Aging, has prioritized senior fraud issues, previously recovering millions of dollars for victims as Florida's Attorney General and supporting the designation of National Slam the Scam Day.
cleveland.com · 2025-12-08
The Federal Trade Commission warned of a phishing scam where scammers send text messages impersonating Amazon, claiming customers are entitled to refunds due to product recalls or quality issues and instructing them to click a link to claim the money. Instead of issuing refunds, the malicious links direct victims to phishing sites designed to steal personal and financial information. The FTC advises consumers not to click links in suspicious texts, to verify any account issues by visiting Amazon's official website directly, and to report scam messages to 7726 (SPAM).
donalds.house.gov · 2025-12-08
Congressman Byron Donalds' office co-hosted a free scam awareness workshop at the Bonita Springs Library in partnership with regional FBI representatives, providing attendees with guidance on elder fraud prevention and strategies to avoid common scams. The workshop was the third event in the congressman's Community Workshop Summer Series and emphasized that while scams can be life-altering, they are largely preventable.
legaltalknetwork.com · 2025-12-08
This is an educational podcast episode featuring cybersecurity expert Steve Weisman discussing scam prevention and identification strategies. The episode covers various scam types (including VA imposter and "free piano" scams), the role of AI in modern fraud schemes, and protective measures such as a "zero trust" verification approach where all transactions—particularly checks—must be independently confirmed before trusting them.
cutoday.info · 2025-12-08
Representatives Zach Nunn (R-IA) and Jim Himes (D-CN) introduced the bipartisan TRAPS Act to combat rising payment scams affecting Americans, particularly seniors, by establishing a coordinated federal task force involving law enforcement, regulators, and industry partners. Iowa residents lost over $52 million to scams in the past year across schemes including fake investments and romance cons, with the U.S. experiencing a 25% increase in fraud in 2024, prompting support from credit unions and military advocacy groups who note the scams disproportionately affect senior veterans and active-duty families.
budd.senate.gov · 2025-12-08
U.S. Senators Ted Budd (R-N.C.) and Peter Welch (D-Vt.) introduced the bipartisan Foreign Robocall Elimination Act to combat unlawful robocalls originating from overseas, which victimize tens of millions of Americans and steal billions of dollars annually. The bill would establish an interagency task force with federal agencies (FCC, FTC, DOJ) and private sector experts to develop strategies for eliminating foreign robocalls and increase international cooperation and law enforcement prosecution efforts. The legislation has been endorsed by AARP and USTelecom, with advocates noting that older Americans are disproportionately targeted by
broadbandbreakfast.com · 2025-12-08
Senators Budd and Welch introduced the Foreign Robocall Elimination Act, which would direct the FCC to establish a task force combining federal agencies and private sector experts to combat international robocalls targeting Americans. The task force must deliver a report within 360 days with recommendations on identifying source countries, quantifying identity theft losses, encouraging foreign adoption of caller ID authentication, and evaluating stronger criminal penalties. The bill has support from AARP and USTelecom, with AARP noting that older Americans are disproportionately targeted by robocall scams resulting in financial loss and identity theft.
yahoo.com · 2025-12-08
Rep. David Valadao introduced the bipartisan Romance Scam Prevention Act in response to a surge in romance fraud, which scammers use to steal personal information, money, and assets from victims who believe they are in genuine relationships. One victim, Jackie Crenshaw, lost over $1 million after being deceived by a scammer posing as "Brandon Miller," ultimately resulting in a $57,000 IRS bill and preventing her from retiring; AARP reported receiving 100,000 fraud calls in 2024. The proposed legislation would require dating sites to track scammers and notify victims in an effort to combat the growing problem.
fox13seattle.com · 2025-12-08
Scammers in Snohomish County, Washington are conducting increasingly sophisticated fraud by impersonating federal judges, FBI agents, and county sheriff's deputies through forged documents sent via text and email, falsely claiming recipients have outstanding arrest warrants and demanding thousands of dollars in Bitcoin or mobile app payments. The Snohomish County Sheriff's Office reports at least 100 complaints monthly, with many victims—particularly elderly residents—losing significant sums before recognizing the scam. Authorities emphasize that legitimate law enforcement never requests payment digitally, serves warrants via email, or accepts cryptocurrency, and advise victims to hang up immediately and report such contact to local police.
southernmarylandchronicle.com · 2025-12-08
Federal Trade Commission data reveals a more than four-fold increase since 2020 in reports from adults 60 and older losing $10,000 or more to impersonation scams, with combined losses exceeding $100,000 jumping from $55 million in 2020 to $445 million in 2024. Common tactics include fraudsters posing as government officials, banks, or tech companies to convince victims to transfer funds via cryptocurrency, gift cards, or courier delivery under false pretenses of account protection or legal issues. The FTC reported $12.5 billion in total scam losses nationally in 2024, with older adults accounting for $2.3 billion an
cutoday.info · 2025-12-08
Reports of high-value impersonation scams targeting adults 60 and over have surged dramatically since 2020, with losses exceeding $100,000 increasing eight-fold from $55 million in 2020 to $445 million in 2024, according to FTC analysis. Scammers impersonating government agencies, banks, or tech companies (including fake FTC agents) trick victims into transferring money by claiming urgent security threats or suspicious account activity, when the funds are actually stolen. The three primary deception tactics involve falsely claiming someone is using the victim's accounts, that their personal information is being used for crimes, or that their computer has security problems.
mychesco.com · 2025-12-08
The Federal Trade Commission reported that losses to sophisticated impersonation scams among Americans aged 60 and over have skyrocketed eightfold since 2020, with losses exceeding $100,000 rising from $55 million in 2020 to $445 million in 2024. Scammers impersonate banks, government agencies, and tech companies to create false urgency and trick victims into transferring funds, with some older adults losing their entire life savings. The FTC recommends consumers never transfer money based on unsolicited requests, independently verify suspicious calls by hanging up and calling official numbers, and use call-blocking tools to prevent fraudulent contact.
rosen.senate.gov · 2025-12-08
Senator Jacky Rosen (D-NV) co-introduced the Stop the Scammers Act, which aims to restore Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) funding that was cut in a Republican budget bill and establish whistleblower rewards for reporting financial wrongdoing. The bill seeks to reinstate consumer protections against fraud and abusive practices by financial institutions, particularly to protect Nevada residents who are frequently targeted by online scams.
home.treasury.gov · 2025-12-08
The U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned four Mexican individuals and 13 companies linked to CJNG's timeshare fraud operation in Puerto Vallarta, which has been targeting elderly American timeshare owners since approximately 2012. CJNG, a designated terrorist organization, uses call centers staffed with English-speaking telemarketers to perpetrate complex scams that can last years and result in victims losing their life savings, while generating significant alternative revenue for the cartel's violent operations. Treasury officials warned current and prospective timeshare owners in Mexico to be cautious of unsolicited offers and conduct due diligence before engaging in purchases.
cleveland.com · 2025-12-08
The Federal Trade Commission warned renters during peak moving season to avoid online rental listing scams, which often feature non-existent properties advertised at attractive prices to solicit upfront payments before victims discover the fraud. Red flags include payment demands via wire transfer, gift cards, cryptocurrency, or money transfer services, as well as hidden fees buried in fine print; the FTC recommends verifying properties in person, researching landlords online, and using secure, traceable payment methods only after confirming lease legitimacy.
Crypto Investment Scam Scam Awareness Cryptocurrency Gift Cards Money Order / Western Union
newsbreak.com · 2025-12-08
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The article discusses a surge in impersonation scams targeting seniors, where scammers pose as government agencies or trusted businesses (like Amazon) to convince victims to transfer money for "protection," ultimately stealing it. The FTC reports a nearly 200% increase in reports of older Americans losing up to $10,000 since 2020, with a 400% increase in losses exceeding $100,000, and younger Americans are increasingly affected. The piece provides protective advice including being wary of money transfer requests, refusing demands for gift cards or cryptocurrency transfers, and hanging up to independently verify caller claims.
Lottery/Prize Scam Government Impersonation Law Enforcement Impersonation Bank Impersonation Phishing Cryptocurrency Crypto ATM Wire Transfer Gift Cards Check/Cashier's Check
hayspost.com · 2025-12-08
Scammers posing as banks, government agencies, and businesses are increasingly targeting retirees by creating fake crises around account fraud, identity theft, or computer security to pressure victims into transferring money. According to a new FTC report, reported losses from business and government impostor scams among adults 60+ have surged dramatically, with losses exceeding $100,000 increasing nearly sevenfold between 2020 and 2024, with many victims losing tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars. The FTC advises never transferring money in response to unsolicited calls or messages, verifying requests through independently confirmed contact information, and remembering that legitimate government agencies never demand immediate money transfers
newsbreak.com · 2025-12-08
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Andrea Estell Cochran, a 51-year-old from Houston, was arrested and charged with federal bank fraud after using fake passports to impersonate account holders and withdraw approximately $11,000 from multiple Washington state banks in 2024, with similar attempts in Maine; she faces up to 30 years in prison and state charges across multiple Washington counties. Additionally, a VPNPro study reveals that seniors aged 60 and over across all U.S. states lost substantial sums to fraud in 2022, with per-victim losses ranging from $13,118 to $30,150 depending on the state, highlighting seniors as prime targets for scammers
newsbreak.com · 2025-12-08
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Andrea Estell Cochran, a 51-year-old from Houston, was arrested and charged with federal bank fraud after using forged passports to impersonate account holders and withdraw approximately $11,000 from multiple banks across Washington state and Maine in 2024. She faces up to 30 years in federal prison plus additional state charges, with a plea deal hearing scheduled for August 28, 2025. A separate study by VPNPro found that seniors aged 60 and older across all U.S. states lost significant sums to fraud in 2022, with losses ranging from approximately $3 million to $31 million per state, highlighting the widesprea
kpq.com · 2025-12-08
Andrea Estell Cochran, a 51-year-old from Houston, accepted a plea deal for a multi-state bank fraud scheme in which she used fake passports to impersonate account holders and withdraw thousands of dollars from banks across Washington and Maine between May and August 2024. She faces federal charges including bank fraud, identity theft, and false use of a passport, with potential sentences up to 30 years, plus additional state charges in multiple Washington counties. Her plea hearing is scheduled for August 28, with specific agreement details pending release.
fox28spokane.com · 2025-12-08
This article does not involve elder fraud, scams, or elder abuse. It describes a domestic violence incident and armed standoff in Spokane, Washington, which falls outside the scope of the Elderus fraud research database. This content is not relevant for summarization.
noozhawk.com · 2025-12-08
Jonathan Tudor, a 64-year-old West Hollywood man, was arrested in July and is facing 78 criminal charges including elder theft, securities fraud, grand theft, money laundering, and forgery after defrauding 38 victims out of approximately $500,000. Tudor posed as a BMW luxury car executive and investment advisor, promising high-end vehicles and doubled investment returns that never materialized; detectives recovered over $250,000 in luxury goods from his home and found no evidence the vehicles existed. The scam victimized people across California, New York, and Washington dating back to 2023, with Tudor allegedly using funds from new victims to pay smaller returns to earlier victims in
justice.gov · 2025-12-08
**Summary:** Dr. Gary Grajales-Reyes, an assistant professor at Washington University School of Medicine, pleaded guilty to embezzling $412,000 by submitting false requisition requests for computer equipment that he then sold on eBay and Amazon for personal use. Over his scheme, Grajales-Reyes submitted 73 fraudulent requisitions for approximately 761 computer parts, which the university purchased and paid for before the equipment was diverted. He faces sentencing on December 4 with potential penalties of up to 20 years in prison and $250,000 in fines for the three counts of wire fraud.
wjhg.com · 2025-12-08
The Washington County Sheriff's Office held a press conference to alert seniors about recent scam incidents in the area, with Sheriff Kevin Crews warning that scammers specifically target older adults. The article emphasizes the need for seniors to remain vigilant against fraud, though specific scam details, victim counts, or financial losses are not provided.
justice.gov · 2025-12-08
The Justice Department filed a civil forfeiture complaint against $868,247 in Tether cryptocurrency that was allegedly stolen through investment scams operated by the LME Crypto Group, which impersonated the London Metal Exchange and defrauded at least four victims across DC, Texas, Illinois, and Florida between September 2022 and February 2025. The scheme involved criminals establishing trust through misdirected text messages, then directing victims to fake investment platforms that displayed false profits before locking victims out of their accounts and stealing their funds, with one victim losing $1.3 million and another losing $30,000. The FBI recovered and is forfeiting the laundered cryptocurrency funds that were transferred through
nbcwashington.com · 2025-12-07
I appreciate you providing this content, but this appears to be just the navigation menu and header structure of an NBC4 Washington webpage, not an actual article about elder fraud or scams. To provide an accurate summary for the Elderus database, I would need the actual article text with: - A headline describing the fraud/scam incident - The body content explaining what occurred - Details about victims, amounts, and outcomes Could you please share the actual article content you'd like summarized?
foxbaltimore.com · 2025-12-07
A Baltimore mother lost $900 to a squeegee worker scam at a busy intersection when she allowed him to clean her windshield and subsequently gave him access to her phone to send payment via Cash App, which he manipulated to transfer $900 instead of a smaller tip. After the scammer disappeared, Cash App determined they could not prove fraud occurred, leaving the victim without recourse despite reporting the incident to Baltimore Police. The incident highlights a resurgent scam targeting drivers at busy intersections using mobile payment apps.
Cash Payment App
wusa9.com · 2025-12-07
The D.C. Attorney General sued Athena Bitcoin ATMs after one victim lost nearly $100,000 in a week to crypto ATM scams, with 93% of all D.C. deposits linked to fraud. Scammers used phone calls impersonating government or bank officials to pressure elderly victims into depositing money into crypto ATMs, which cannot be recovered, while Athena profited from undisclosed fees up to 26% and failed to stop fraudulent transactions despite knowing about them. The investigation found a median loss of $8,000 per scam transaction, with the company accused of violating consumer protection and elder abuse laws.
home.treasury.gov · 2025-12-07
In 2024, Americans lost over $10 billion to Southeast Asia-based cyber scams operated by transnational criminal organizations, representing a 66 percent increase from the prior year. The U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned 19 scam centers across Burma and Cambodia that used forced labor, debt bondage, and violence to coerce workers into conducting romance and virtual currency investment scams targeting American victims. These operations typically lure victims with promises of romantic relationships or investment opportunities, then steal funds deposited on fraudulent platforms designed to mimic legitimate investment sites.
wcyb.com · 2025-12-07
The Washington County Virginia Sheriff's Office warned of a property listing scam in which fraudsters use accurate owner information (name, address, tax ID) to contact realtors and illegally list real properties, particularly farmland, for sale. Local realtors have successfully prevented many attempts by verifying details with actual property owners, and authorities recommend that individuals verify all transaction details and report suspected scams to law enforcement.
financialservices.house.gov · 2025-12-07
A congressional Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee hearing examined the escalating threat of financial fraud to American consumers, with particular concern for seniors and vulnerable populations. In 2024, there were 2.6 million reported fraud cases resulting in $12.5 billion in losses, involving schemes such as check fraud, romance scams, voice cloning, and AI-driven impersonation targeting grandparents. Federal lawmakers and banking industry representatives discussed the sophistication of criminal operations, many operating overseas, and called for improved federal agency coordination and consumer outreach to combat these growing threats.
hagerty.senate.gov · 2025-12-07
Senators Bill Hagerty (R-TN) and Ruben Gallego (D-AZ) reintroduced the Financial Exploitation Prevention Act, bipartisan legislation designed to equip the financial industry with tools to detect and prevent financial exploitation of seniors and vulnerable individuals with disabilities. The bill would require the SEC to report on recommendations for combating senior financial exploitation and would permit investment companies and mutual funds to delay redemption requests suspected to result from exploitation. Approximately one in five senior investors currently fall victim to financial fraud, losing an estimated $2.9 billion annually in reported cases.
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.
financialservices.house.gov · 2025-12-07
Subcommittee Chairman Dan Meuser announced a House Financial Services Committee hearing focused on examining financial fraud affecting American consumers, noting that the FTC reported 2.6 million fraud cases in 2024 with over $12 billion in losses—a 25% increase from 2023. Meuser highlighted that seniors experience the most devastating financial losses from scams while young adults are especially vulnerable, and emphasized the need for coordinated efforts across government, financial institutions, technology platforms, and telecom companies to combat various fraud schemes including romance scams, identity theft, and check fraud. The hearing aimed to strengthen consumer education, promote best practices, and improve fraud prevention while the Trump Administration pursued related efforts
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.
Crypto Investment Scam General Elder Fraud Scam Awareness Cryptocurrency Crypto ATM Check/Cashier's Check
gallego.senate.gov · 2025-12-07
Senators Ruben Gallego (D-AZ) and Bill Hagerty (R-TN) introduced the Financial Exploitation Prevention Act to provide financial institutions with tools to combat fraud targeting seniors and vulnerable populations. The legislation would require the SEC to report recommendations for combating senior exploitation and permit investment companies and mutual funds to delay redemption requests suspected to result from financial exploitation. Approximately one in five senior investors currently fall victim to financial fraud, losing an estimated $2.9 billion annually in reported cases.
10tv.com · 2025-12-07
This article is not about elder fraud, scams, or elder abuse. It reports on the death of conservative political activist Charlie Kirk, who was fatally shot on September 10 while speaking at Utah Valley University during a Turning Point USA event. A 22-year-old suspect was arrested and faces seven counts in connection with the shooting. This is a news story about a violent crime and memorial service, not an elder fraud case.
thecharlottepost.com · 2025-12-07
At a JPMorganChase-sponsored panel during the 2025 NABJ convention in Cleveland, financial and cybersecurity experts educated journalists about evolving fraud and scam tactics, noting that in 2024 the FTC received complaints totaling $12.5 billion in losses, with one in three Americans experiencing a scam in the past year. The panel distinguished between fraud (illegal account access) and scams (manipulation to extract personal information), and highlighted emerging threats including AI-generated impersonations that use social media information to create convincing fake communications from loved ones. Key prevention strategies include verifying sources, using two-factor authentication, and consulting trusted contacts before responding to suspicious requests.
morningstar.com · 2025-12-07
A 2025 report finds that scams cost Americans $64 billion in losses, with 77% of U.S. adults encountering scams daily and 70% reporting being scammed in the past year, averaging $1,086.70 per victim. While 82% of scam victims reported incidents to banks or payment services, only 44% recovered at least some funds, and 57% saw no action taken by platforms despite reporting, revealing significant gaps in institutional response and victim recovery support.
finance.yahoo.com · 2025-12-07
A 2025 survey by Iris and the Global Anti-Scam Alliance found that 77% of Americans encountered scams in the past 12 months (averaging daily exposure), with 70% reporting actual victimization and over 20% losing an average of $1,086.70. Despite 82% of scam victims reporting incidents to banks or payment services, only 44% recovered at least some funds, and platforms took discernible action on just 43% of reported scams, revealing a significant gap in institutional support and victim recovery.
kpug1170.com · 2025-12-07
**Summary:** Scam callers in Skagit County, Washington falsely claimed to be sheriff's deputies, telling residents they had bench warrants for missing jury duty in attempts to extract personal information. Authorities advised recipients to hang up, provide no information, and contact the Sheriff's Office directly to verify such claims.
mybellinghamnow.com · 2025-12-07
Scam callers in Skagit County, Washington were impersonating sheriff's deputies and falsely claiming targets had bench warrants for missing jury duty to extract personal information. The Skagit County Sheriff's Office advised residents to hang up on such calls and contact the Sheriff's Office directly rather than providing any personal information to callers.
nclc.org · 2025-12-07
Consumers lose $158 billion annually to fraud affecting approximately 57,000 new victims daily, according to a National Task Force on Fraud and Scam Prevention report. The report recommends that financial institutions, telecom companies, social media platforms, and tech companies implement stronger protections and accountability measures, while advocating for Congress to close consumer protection gaps, strengthen the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, and hold VoIP providers accountable for facilitating scam calls and texts on their networks.
cornyn.senate.gov · 2025-12-07
Senators Cornyn and Shaheen introduced the SCAM Act to counter transnational criminal organizations operating cyber scam compounds, primarily based in Southeast Asia and affiliated with China, that traffic victims and force them into committing fraud against Americans. The organizations defrauded Americans of approximately $14 billion in 2024, and the legislation proposes a comprehensive strategy including sanctions authority, an inter-agency task force, and international law enforcement cooperation to hold these criminal operations accountable.
fox5dc.com · 2025-12-07
Chase Bank warns customers of escalating scams where fraudsters impersonate bank staff and law enforcement to pressure victims into withdrawing cash or transferring funds to fake "safe accounts" or couriers, with caller ID spoofing making these schemes increasingly convincing. Nearly half of Chase-reported scams originate on social media platforms through fake listings, phony job/rental offers, and romance schemes, with scammers exploiting irreversible payment methods like Zelle and wire transfers. Chase advises customers to verify callers independently, avoid sharing banking credentials, use secure payment channels, and report suspicious activity to the FTC and the bank immediately.
Romance Scam Crypto Investment Scam Investment Fraud Law Enforcement Impersonation Bank Impersonation Cryptocurrency Wire Transfer Gift Cards Cash Payment App Check/Cashier's Check
malaymail.com · 2025-12-07
Employment scams have surged over 1,000% from May through July, with fraudsters using sophisticated tactics including fake job listings, impersonated recruiters, and AI-generated content to deceive job seekers. Nicole Becker, a 37-year-old from Oregon, fell victim to an elaborate two-week scam involving a fake sportswear company that requested she purchase equipment for reimbursement—a common tactic that cost victims an average of $1,471 per scam, totaling $12 billion in losses last year. The FTC warns that a tight labor market combined with generative AI has made these schemes harder to detect, particularly targeting vulnerable first-time
stimson.org · 2025-12-07
Southeast Asia faces a rapidly escalating scam epidemic, with 79% of adults exposed to scams in the past year and global scam losses exceeding $1 trillion annually, threatening the region's digital economy projected to reach $1 trillion in five years. Scammers are leveraging advanced technologies like AI, instant payments, and encrypted messaging to conduct sophisticated cross-border fraud schemes including fake job offers, romance scams, and investment fraud. The article recommends that governments, companies, and civil society organizations collaborate through strengthened institutions, cross-border data-sharing, regional working groups, and partnerships to combat this transnational criminal activity.
fox13news.com · 2025-12-07
During a government shutdown, scammers exploited public confusion about federal benefits by impersonating government officials and contractors via unsolicited calls, emails, and texts, targeting millions of Americans relying on Social Security, Medicare, and SNAP. Consumer protection officials warned the public to avoid sending money via wire transfer, gift cards, or cryptocurrency, and to ignore any demands for payment, as legitimate government agencies never contact people this way. Those believing they were scammed were advised to contact local police, their banks, and file a complaint with the FBI's Crime Complaint Center.
Government Impersonation Phishing Scam Awareness Cryptocurrency Wire Transfer Gift Cards