Journal-Advocate (Sterling)

Coloradans scammed out of $187.6M in ‘23, FBI finds

- By Judith Kohler jkohler@denverpost.com

Scammers fleeced Coloradans out of a total of $187.6 million in 2023, according to a new report by the FBI’S Internet Crime Complaint Center.

Altogether, 11,475 people across the state reported being victimized, making Colorado seventh in the nation for the number of reports per capita. The number of complaints in Colorado in 2023 was 195.2 per capita.

Washington, D.C., led the country with 555.1 complaints per capita.

While the number of Coloradans suffering losses last year was down from the 11,683 in 2022, the overall financial hit was up from the $178.3 reported that year.

The scams that netted the most money in Colorado in 2023 were investment fraud at $60 million; business email compromise at $57 million; and tech support schemes at $23 million.

Nationally, the FBI’S Internet Crime Complaint Center fielded more than 880,000 complaints with potential losses exceeding $12.5 billion. Complaints rose nearly 10% from 2022 and losses jumped 22%.

Swindles involving cryptocurr­ency are a major driver behind investment fraud, said Brian Blauser, a supervisor­y special agent with the FBI in Colorado. He said he talked to a local individual Monday who had lost $3.4 million in cryptocurr­ency-related fraud.

“It’s staggering and the loss amounts associated with the investment fraud category as a whole are a staggering $4.5 billion nationwide,” Blauser said.

Scammers will use social media and text messages to lure people into investment ploys.

“The bad guys or the scammers will reach out and try to develop some kind of rapport or relationsh­ip with you,” Blauser said. “They’re really hoping for

somebody to respond to them and then they’re just trying to further engage with you.”

The fraudsters will likely set up a website showing that a person is making great gains from their investment­s in things like digital currency, Blauser said.

Precaution­s people can take include contacting banks or other financial institutio­ns directly rather than through phone numbers in emails that are seeking money or action of some kind.

“Criminals continue to develop new tricks to defraud people, so think twice before clicking on a link and report suspicious activity to law enforcemen­t,” FBI Denver Special Agent in Charge Mark Michalek said in a statement.

 ?? CLIFF GRASSMICK — BOULDER DAILY CAMERA ?? A scam alert warning sign at the Boulder County Sheriff’s Office building at 5600Flatir­on Parkway on Jan. 25.
CLIFF GRASSMICK — BOULDER DAILY CAMERA A scam alert warning sign at the Boulder County Sheriff’s Office building at 5600Flatir­on Parkway on Jan. 25.

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