San Diego Union-Tribune

CRYPTO SCAMS ARE ON THE RISE, DRAINING MORE THAN $1B

Losses last year were almost 60 times than in 2018

- BY TORY NEWMYER Newmyer writes for The Washington Post.

Americans have lost more than $1 billion to cryptocurr­ency scams since the start of last year, as criminals exploit rising popular interest in scoring quick digital riches, according to a new analysis by the Federal Trade Commission.

Crypto-based con jobs now account for a fourth of all dollars lost to such fraud, taking in more than 46,000 people from the beginning of 2021 through March, the report found. The losses in crypto last year were almost 60 times what they were in 2018.

And those numbers likely represent only a fraction of the total losses, since most of the crimes go unreported, according to Emma Fletcher, the FTC senior data researcher who wrote the report.

Investment scams promising swift and easy paydays account for the bulk of the crypto fraud, totaling $575 million in losses. Fraudsters frequently lure victims on social media, then show their investment­s making fake gains. In some cases, the FTC found, investors successful­ly complete “test” withdrawal­s, convincing them the arrangemen­t is sound and encouragin­g them to plow in more money that they are then unable to recover.

“Given that investment scams are really driving this, it’s very important for people to understand that any promises of huge returns, or that your investment­s can be quickly multiplied, are obviously a scam,” Fletcher said. “No return on a crypto investment is guaranteed.”

So-called romance scams — in which thieves posing as potential love interests ensnare people on dating apps or social networks, then convince them to invest in fraudulent crypto schemes — cost victims another $185 million, according to the report. A single such scam last year likely took in more than 5,000 victims and made off with more than $66 million, a Washington Post investigat­ion found.

People between 20 and 49 were more than three times as likely as older cohorts to be taken in by crypto grift, the FTC found. And crypto scams made up 35 percent of the fraud suffered by people in their 30s.

Crypto’s lack of federal oversight has helped make it a magnet for criminals. “There’s no bank or other centralize­d authority to flag suspicious transactio­ns and attempt to stop fraud before it happens,” the FTC’s report said. Plus, “crypto transfers can’t be reversed — once the money’s gone, there’s no getting it back.”

Fletcher said potential crypto investors, in addition to being wary of promises of big returns or enticement­s from dating app matches, should steer clear of pitches on social media. “Even when it’s somebody who may very well be their friend, the account could have been hacked,” she said.

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