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Cryptocurrencies, tokens, NFTs, virtual "assets" frauds

Quarter of $1.1b scam losses in 2024 involved cryptocurrency; 1 victim lost $125m in fake interview​


Police said cryptocurrency losses accounted for about 24.3 per cent of total scam losses, a surge from the 6.8 per cent recorded the previous year.

Police said cryptocurrency losses accounted for around 25 per cent of total scam losses, a surge from the 6.8 per cent the previous year.

Feb 25, 2025, 03:00 PM

SINGAPORE – Almost a quarter of the $1.1 billion lost to scams in 2024 involved cryptocurrency, with one victim losing $125 million in cryptocurrency funds in a malware-enabled scam.

Police said the 36-year-old man clicked on a fake interview meeting link and was asked by scammers to run a script on his laptop, which turned out to be a malicious code that targeted his cryptocurrency wallet.

He realised he was scammed only after discovering cryptocurrency transactions that he had not authorised.

Police said cryptocurrency losses accounted for 24.3 per cent of total scam losses in 2024, a surge from the 6.8 per cent recorded the previous year.

In releasing the annual scam statistics on Feb 25, police said victims in four cases lost a total of $237.9 million in 2024.

Three of the cases involved cryptocurrency losses.

One of the victims lost $33.8 million after falling for a phishing scam. The loss accounted for more than half of the $59.4 million scammers stole in 8,552 phishing scam cases in 2024.

Police said the victim had chanced upon an advertisement offering lucrative rewards while browsing on a legitimate cryptocurrency wallet application.

The ad turned out to be a phishing scam, which redirected users to a third-party site resembling a legitimate company.


Police said the victim scanned a QR code on the site and keyed in cryptocurrency wallet login credentials.

Another victim who suffered cryptocurrency losses fell for a social media impersonation ruse.

The victim made cryptocurrency transfers while under the impression that he was communicating with a company director he thought he knew on Telegram. He lost more than $21 million.

His loss accounted for the bulk of the $26.4 million scammers took in 2024 through various social media impersonation ruses across 728 cases.

Police said the most common scam types for losses involving cryptocurrency were investment, job and phishing scams.

Victims aged 30 to 49 suffered the most losses in cryptocurrency.


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Commercial Affairs Department director David Chew said three groups of people may be targeted by scammers for cryptocurrency cases.

“First of them being digital natives who are supposed to know what to do but still fall prey to scams. Cryptocurrency is not very easily understood, even by the experts,” said Mr Chew.

The second group comprises individuals who fall prey to investment fraud after opening accounts with a cryptocurrency exchange.

“Once a victim opens an account and invests with their money, it disappears,” he said.

Cryptocurrency mules are the third group.

“We are seeing money move from bank accounts into cryptocurrency mule accounts and out.

“These are the people who are also caught under the new Corruption, Drug Trafficking and Other Serious Crimes (Confiscation of Benefits) Act amendments, who use their cryptocurrency accounts to buy fiat currency from unknown persons and transfer it to unknown wallets,” said Mr Chew.

The Act was amended in 2023 with new offences introduced to curb the facilitation of scams and the movement of criminal proceeds.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) said on Feb 25 that it has restricted marketing and advertising of cryptocurrency services in public areas and introduced consumer protection safeguards.

“MAS has been strongly cautioning against trading and investments in cryptocurrencies by the retail public, given their lack of intrinsic value, volatile prices and highly speculative nature, and has been conducting regular public education on this,” added its spokesman.

“The risks are even higher if members of the public are dealing with unregulated entities. They could well be fraudulent. Members of the public should always check whether entities they want to deal with are licensed by MAS.”
 

In 7 years, student from Choa Chu Kang went from gamer to alleged role in $320m crypto heist​

The US authorities say 22 of Lam's vehicles have yet to be located by law enforcement, including a white Lamborghini he had adorned with his name.

The US authorities say 22 of Lam's vehicles have yet to be located by law enforcement, including a white Lamborghini he had adorned with his name.

Mar 16, 2025

SINGAPORE – In just seven short years, Malone Lam Yu Xuan went from being a student in a secondary school in Choa Chu Kang to being dubbed crypto whizz-kid by some in the US in 2023.

Many who saw his spending spree were amazed a 19-year-old could afford large mansions, a fleet of expensive cars and luxury clothes.

In truth, Lam was living off the millions in crypto he stole from various investors, he later told investigators in the US.

This was before August 2024, when he allegedly got involved in the theft of Bitcoin valued at more than US$240 million (S$320 million), one of the largest cryptocurrency thefts in US history.

Legal documents obtained by The Straits Times showed that Lam, who turned 20 in 2024, had been living in the US on an expired tourist visa.

Documents filed in a US court showed the then teenager pocketed millions and spent some of the money on himself and his friends.

Among other things, he purchased and gifted a 2024 Mercedes SL and a 2023 Ferrari FS to Jeandiel Serrano.

A year later, Lam and Serrano ended up as co-accused in the Bitcoin theft, where they allegedly stole more than 4,100 bitcoins from a single victim between Aug 18 and 19, 2024.

Lam faces two indictments in the District of Columbia for conspiring to commit wire fraud, and for conspiracy to launder monetary instruments.

Each of the charges carries a maximum jail term of 20 years.

Singapore student​

Checks by ST showed Lam had enrolled in Unity Secondary School in Choa Chu Kang in 2017.

But he left soon after, later telling investigators in the US that he had dropped out of school when he was between 13 and 14 years old.

Lam was active online, especially in the gaming community.

He went by the moniker “Greavys” in Minecraft and also used “Anne Hathaway” and “Malone” on various gaming platforms including Discord.

Lam moved to the US in October 2023. He already knew Serrano, an American, by then.


They met online while playing Minecraft and gained notoriety within the community for allegedly looting or stealing other players’ accounts to sell for money.

The authorities there said Lam had travelled on a visa waiver programme, which allows residents of 42 countries, including Singapore, to enter the US for 90 days for business or leisure purposes.

His visa expired in January 2024, but he stayed on illegally. He spent time in Texas and Los Angeles and also travelled to Canada.

While in the US, the gamer from Singapore developed a taste for the “post and boast” lifestyle, a term describing young people who flaunt on social media their expensive cars and clothes, big parties and even larger mansions.

He claimed he was a crypto investor, court documents showed. But in reality, he got rich by hacking and stealing cryptocurrency.

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A screenshot of an Instagram reel showing Malone Lam purportedly having an extravagant party at a nightclub.

PHOTO: IAINTEVENTRIPPIN_/INSTAGRAM

US prosecutor Jonathan Stratton described Lam as a “sophisticated crypto fraudster” when the Singaporean was first produced in a district court in South Florida in September 2024.

In arguing against granting him bail, Mr Stratton said Lam presents two dangers.

“One is, he is obviously a sophisticated cryptocurrency fraudster. He executed one of the most significant cryptocurrency hacks in the country.

“He can do those kinds of hacking from anywhere, and there is no reasonable combination of conditions that pre-trial services can implement that will prevent his ability to further exploit crypto investors throughout the country,” he said.

The prosecutor added that Lam has an inclination to obstruct justice.

“The defendant was tipped off by his co-defendant’s girlfriend and immediately engaged in further criminal activity by deleting his Telegram account and obstructing justice in this investigation,” he said, adding that Lam’s ability to hide electronic evidence is significant.

After his arrest, Lam told investigators in the US that before the heist, he had made millions by engaging in various crypto scams. He said he used the stolen money to support his lifestyle.

Lam, Serrano and their accomplices allegedly hit the jackpot in August 2024, and later divided the stolen funds among themselves.

Lam amassed a fleet of 31 luxury vehicles – including a US$3.8 million Pagani Huayra, a US$1 million Lamborghini Revuelto, and custom Ferraris and Porsches.

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A photo from social media showing Malone Lam Yu Xuan and one of his luxury vehicles.

The US authorities say 22 of Lam’s vehicles have yet to be located by law enforcement, including a white Lamborghini he had adorned with his name.

He also rented multiple mansions in Miami, paying US$68,000 in monthly rent on one residence alone, and also acquired multiple luxury watches – one of which was purchased for US$1.8 million.

Prosecutors said that during this period, he became known in the Los Angeles nightclub scene because of the lavish bottle services he demanded.

He even gave handbags valued at tens of thousands of dollars to people he barely knew. Social media influencers created videos detailing how Lam had given them handbags from French fashion house Hermes.

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Some influencers have taken to social media to show the free Hermes bags they received from Malone Lam.

On Sept 11, 2024, influencer Skylar Harrison posted a video on TikTok detailing how she ran into Lam at a nightclub called Keys.

While in the club, someone from Lam’s entourage invited her to the section he was in, with the offer of a Hermes handbag.

She added that she witnessed Lam purchasing around US$100,000 worth of alcohol within 10 minutes of meeting her. She said Lam claimed to be the son of a Chinese billionaire.

Investigations revealed that he spent up to US$500,000 per night at nightclubs over the course of a few weeks and, on some occasions, tried to pay in cryptocurrency.

That flashy lifestyle and his vanity contributed to his downfall. Investigators were looking for Lam and they found his name on a banner in a club where he spent hundreds of thousands.

Court documents showed the authorities were watching him.

A prosecutor said government surveillance caught Lam spending hundreds of thousands of dollars in a night.

Lam’s spending spree was also rife on social media platforms, with multiple videos showing him – decked out in designer clothes and jewellery – partying.

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A receipt on social media from one of Malone Lam’s spending sprees.

No ties​

The game was up after investigators identified Serrano. He was arrested on Sept 18, 2024, at the Los Angeles International Airport, after he returned from a holiday in the Maldives with his girlfriend.

After she was interviewed, Serrano’s girlfriend tipped off Lam – who was already in Miami after travelling from Los Angeles on a private jet.

Investigators said the Singaporean was arrested as he tried to flee. He has been held in detention since his arrest.

Prosecutors said Lam is a flight risk.

He has substantial assets that have yet to be located, which they said provide him with the financial means to flee the jurisdiction.

In September 2024, a Florida judge said Lam seemed to have very little ties to anywhere except Singapore.

“He has lived in Texas, LA, Canada. Just a bit of a rolling stone. No ties to South Florida.

“No other job except his self-admitted job as a crypto investor for the last eight months – and we know what he was doing investing other people’s money, according to the indictment,” the judge said.

On March 7, Lam’s lawyer, Mr Scott Armstrong, filed a notice indicating the Singaporean’s intention to proceed to trial by jury.

In response to queries from ST, Mr Armstrong said: “Mr Lam is currently being held in Virginia pending his trial, which was set for October 2025.”

Lam is also intending to file other “legal attacks”, according to Mr Armstrong’s application.

This will include suppression motions that require the US government to produce meaningful discovery in the case against him.

The lawyer said Lam is also calling for the immediate production of search warrant affidavits and reports relevant to the searches executed in his case in order to prepare his defence.

In an earlier hearing, state prosecutors said that based on the amounts involved in the heist, Lam will likely face between 168 and 210 months’ jail.

At least US$100 million of the stolen Bitcoin remains unaccounted for.
 

CAD probing Tokenize Xchange operator; firm’s director charged with fraudulent trading​

The authorities also said that Tokenize Xchange CEO Hong Qi Yu was charged in court on July 31 with fraudulent trading under the same Act.

Tokenize Xchange CEO Hong Qi Yu was charged in court on July 31 with fraudulent trading.

Aug 01, 2025

SINGAPORE - The Singapore police are investigating the company operating cryptocurrency trading platform Tokenize Xchange, and the firm’s director has been charged in court with fraudulent trading.

In a joint statement on Aug 1, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) and the Singapore Police Force’s Commercial Affairs Department (CAD) said Amazing Tech – the operator of cryptocurrency platform Tokenize Xchange – along with its related entities, is under investigation for potential offences, including fraudulent trading under the Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution Act 2018.

The authorities also said that Hong Qi Yu, a director of Amazing Tech and the founder and chief executive of Tokenize Xchange, was charged in court on July 31 with fraudulent trading under the same Act.

The offence carries a maximum penalty of seven years’ imprisonment, a fine, or both.

Tokenize Xchange said on July 20 that it will shut down the business following an MAS decision not to grant it a licence to offer digital payment token services here. It was previously operating under an exemption.

The firm told The Straits Times then that its customers in Singapore can no longer buy or sell cryptocurrencies on its platform and may only transfer their cryptocurrency holdings to other exchanges, where they can convert them to cash and make withdrawals.

It said that users can continue to withdraw cash directly from the exchange based on the Singapore dollar value of each user’s portfolio, which includes both fiat and cryptocurrency holdings.

MAS said it received several customer complaints in mid-July about Amazing Tech over delays in processing withdrawals of monies and digital payment tokens.

The central bank said it asked the company to address these concerns and to return customers’ monies and tokens in an “orderly manner”, including by topping up any shortfalls in customer accounts.

Through its subsequent engagements with the firm, MAS said it found indications that Amazing Tech did not have sufficient assets to meet customer claims, and may not have segregated customer assets from its own.

It also found signs that the company may have made false representations to MAS about the segregation of customer assets when applying for a Major Payment Institution Licence. MAS then referred the matter to the CAD for investigation.

MAS added that Amazing Tech and its activities are not supervised or regulated by the authority.

Police said investigations are ongoing. ST has contacted Amazing Tech for comments.
 

Investors seek court-ordered judicial management of Tokenize Xchange operator amid police probe​

Hong Qi Yu, a director of Amazing Tech and the founder and chief executive of Tokenize Xchange, was charged in court on July 31 with fraudulent trading under the Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution Act 2018

Hong Qi Yu, a director of Amazing Tech, and the founder and chief executive of Tokenize Xchange, was charged in court on July 31 over fraudulent trading.

Aug 06, 2025

SINGAPORE – Seven cryptocurrency investors have applied to the High Court to place AmazingTech – the operator of embattled cryptocurrency platform Tokenize Xchange – under interim judicial management to protect their investments.

If their court application on Aug 5 is successful, the High Court can appoint professional managers to take over the day-to-day running of the company and audit its assets.

The Straits Times understands the seven customers have not been able to withdraw their deposits amounting to more than $4 million that are held by Tokenize Xchange.

Trading of cryptocurrencies on the platform currently remains suspended.

The High Court move by the seven investors comes as AmazingTech and its related entities are under investigation by the police for potential offences of fraudulent trading under the Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution Act.

Hong Qi Yu, a director of AmazingTech, and the founder and chief executive of Tokenize Xchange, was charged in court on July 31 over fraudulent trading under the same Act.

The seven investors are represented by lawyers Alfred Lim, Jaime Lye and Rasveen Kaur of law firm Meritus. They are asking the High Court to appoint Mr Cameron Lindsay Duncan, Mr David Dong-Won Kim and Mr Joshua Joseph Jeyaraj of corporate advisory and restructuring firm KordaMentha as the judicial managers of AmazingTech.

A court hearing has been set for Aug 21. The timeline for a judicial manager to be appointed by the High Court may take up to a few months.

Meanwhile, ST understands that another law firm – Dauntless Law Chambers – is assembling more than 100 customers, owed about $40 million by Tokenize Xchange, to file a class action lawsuit against Hong personally for fraud.


The Commercial Affairs Department and the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) said in a statement on Aug 1 that MAS had received several customer complaints against AmazingTech in mid-July about delays in withdrawing monies and digital payment tokens.

On July 20, Tokenize Xchange said it would shut down the business following MAS’ decision not to grant it a licence to offer digital payment token services here. It was previously operating under an exemption.

The company told ST then that its customers in Singapore can no longer buy or sell cryptocurrencies on its platform and may only transfer their cryptocurrency holdings to other exchanges, where they can convert them to cash and make withdrawals.

ST understands that withdrawals have been inconsistent, with many investors still unable to access their funds.

MAS said in its Aug 1 statement that it found indications that the firm may have made false representations about segregating customer assets when applying for a major payment institution licence.

It added that AmazingTech and its activities are not supervised or regulated by MAS and has since referred the case to the Commercial Affairs Department for investigation.

ST has contacted Hong for comments, while queries for AmazingTech were unanswered.
 

Do Kwon, crypto entrepreneur who caused 2022 market crash, pleads guilty to fraud​

FILE PHOTO: Police officers escort Terraform Labs co-founder Do Kwon after he served a sentence for document forgery, in Podgorica, Montenegro, March 23, 2024. REUTERS/Stevo Vasiljevic/File Photo

Do Kwon pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit commodities fraud, securities fraud and wire fraud, and one count of committing wire fraud.

Summary
  • Do Kwon pleaded guilty to two fraud counts: conspiracy to commit commodities, securities and wire fraud, and committing wire fraud.
  • Kwon agreed to forfeit over US$19 million and could face up to 25 years in prison, but the government will seek no more than 12 years.
  • Kwon admitted to misleading statements about luna and terraUSD, cryptocurrencies that crashed in 2022 after raising over U$200 million.
AI generated

Aug 13, 2025

SAN FRANCISCO – Do Kwon, a cryptocurrency entrepreneur who designed a pair of digital currencies that failed spectacularly in 2022, triggering a market meltdown, pleaded guilty on Aug 12 to two counts of fraud.

At a hearing in federal court in New York, Kwon pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit commodities fraud, securities fraud and wire fraud, and one count of committing wire fraud, according to court records.

Judge Paul A. Engelmayer agreed to the defendant’s plea, according to a spokesperson for the US attorney’s office in Manhattan.

Kwon agreed to forfeit more than US$19 million (S$24.4 million) in proceeds from his crypto dealings, Mr Nicholas Biase said.

If the judge decides to enforce the maximum penalty, Kwon could face 25 years in prison. But as part of the plea agreement, Mr Biase said, the government would not ask the judge for a sentence of more than 12 years.

Kwon, 33, who is a citizen of South Korea, also agreed to serve the first half of his sentence in the US before seeking a transfer to South Korea. Mr Sean Hecker, Kwon’s lawyer, said his client accepted responsibility “for making false and misleading statements” to people who bought his cryptocurrencies.

The pleas cap a spectacular fall from grace for Kwon, a trash-talking entrepreneur who created the cryptocurrencies Luna and TerraUSD and ran a crypto company, Terraform Labs. The company raised more than US$200 million from investment firms such as Lightspeed Venture Partners.

At one point, Luna’s total value ballooned to more than US$40 billion. NYTIMES
 

Crypto exchange Tokenize to shut down Singapore operations​

Tokenize Xchange founder and chief executive Hong Qi Yu declined to comment on why the firm was denied a licence by the MAS.

Tokenize Xchange founder and chief executive Hong Qi Yu declined to comment on why the company was denied a licence.

Jul 20, 2025

SINGAPORE – Cryptocurrency exchange Tokenize Xchange will cease its operations here from Sept 30, just over a year after raising US$11.5 million (S$14.8 million) in funding and announcing plans to ramp up hiring.

The Singapore-headquartered company said on July 20 that it will shut down the business following the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s (MAS) decision not to grant it a licence to offer digital payment token services here.

Tokenize was previously operating under an exemption.

It said it will move its operations to Labuan, a federal territory in Malaysia, where it is in the process of acquiring a company that holds a digital financial services licence issued by the Labuan Financial Services Authority. The deal is expected to close by Sept 30.

It will also seek regulatory approval from the Abu Dhabi Global Market, an international financial centre and free economic zone located in Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

Tokenize said all 15 of its employees in Singapore have been given notice and will leave the company by Sept 30. It is unclear at this point why Tokenize was not given a licence to continue operating here.

When contacted, Tokenize founder and chief executive Hong Qi Yu also declined to comment on why the company was denied a licence by the MAS.

But he told The Straits Times on July 20 that Labuan will allow Tokenize to operate under a “recognised regulatory framework tailored for cross-border digital asset services”.

“(Labuan) also offers greater flexibility, tax efficiency and access to international markets, supporting the platform’s global growth ambitions,” he said.

Tokenize said its Singapore customers can no longer buy or sell cryptocurrencies on its platform, and may only transfer their cryptocurrency holdings to other exchanges, where they can convert them to cash and make withdrawals.

But users can continue to withdraw cash directly from the exchange based on the Singapore dollar value of each user’s portfolio, which includes both fiat and cryptocurrency holdings. This value, viewable in users’ wallets, determines the withdrawal tier they are placed in under a phased schedule.

Users with portfolios below $10,000 have been able to withdraw the cash portion of their holdings and transfer their cryptocurrencies to other exchanges since July 17.

Those with portfolios between $10,000 and $99,999 may do so from Aug 1, while users with $100,000 and above can start from Sept 1. All withdrawals and transfers must be completed by Sept 30.

ST has contacted MAS for comment.

While Tokenize serves retail and institutional investors in Singapore and overseas – including Malaysia and Vietnam – its impending exit from the Republic comes after MAS said on June 6 that digital token service providers targeting only overseas customers must be licensed by June 30 or cease operations.

ST understands that the move has triggered an exodus of unlicensed cryptocurrency exchanges from Singapore. More than 500 staff – from management to junior levels across companies supporting the Republic’s fintech ecosystem – are expected to relocate to the UAE or Hong Kong, where regulators are thought to take a softer stance on digital assets.
 

Scam victims in Singapore lost $456m in first half of 2025 with almost 20,000 cases reported​

The $456.4 million lost was a drop from the $522.4 million lost during the same period in 2024.

The $456.4 million lost was a drop from the $522.4 million lost during the same period in 2024.


Summary
  • Singapore saw $456.4 million lost to scams in the first half of 2025, with almost 20,000 cases reported, although lower than the same period in 2024.
  • Investment scams and government official impersonation scams caused significant losses, with police warning of new insurance services scams which emerged in 2025.
  • Police issued restriction orders to banks to protect victims, investigated over 3,500 money mules and scammers, and urged the public not to become mules.
AI generated

Aug 30, 2025

SINGAPORE – Close to half a billion dollars were lost to scams in the first half of 2025, with almost 20,000 cases reported in Singapore.

The $456.4 million lost between January and June 2025 was a drop from the $522.4 million lost during the same period in 2024.

The police previously said victims lost over $385.6 million in the first six months of 2024, but this figure increased due to reclassification of cases.

In 2024, scam victims here lost $1.1 billion, a record high in a single year.

In releasing the mid-year scam statistics on Aug 30, the police highlighted the rise in the number of scam cases which saw losses of at least $100,000.

Around 1,000 victims lost more than $100,000 in the first half of 2025, up from around 700 during the same period in 2024.

Almost seven in 10 scam cases saw less than $5,000 in losses, while the median loss per case was around $1,500.

In 79 per cent of the cases, scammers did not gain control of the victims’ accounts but manipulated the latter into transferring money.

The police said cryptocurrency losses formed a considerable percentage of scam losses, accounting for more than $81 million in the first half of 2025.

“Scammers target cryptocurrency likely due to its irreversible transactions and limited traceability, making asset recovery virtually impossible, unlike traditional banking transactions,” noted the police.

As scams evolve, they warn of an insurance-service type which emerged in 2025.

A total of 791 insurance scam cases were reported during this period, with over $21 million lost.

The most common ruse victims fell prey to in the first six months of 2025 was phishing scams, with 3,779 cases reported. The amount lost jumped 134 per cent from $13 million in the first half of 2024 to $30.4 million in the first half of 2025.

The police said phishing scams mostly involved unauthorised card transactions where victims would unknowingly submit their card details and authentication codes to scammers to complete seemingly legitimate purchases.

Government official impersonation scams remain an area of concern, with the number of cases almost tripling from 589 in the first half of 2024 to 1,762 in the first half of 2025.


Such scams also saw the second-highest losses among all scam types, with $126.5 million lost. This was an 88 per cent increase from the $67.2 million lost during the same period in 2024.

The police warn of a rising trend where victims get pressured into withdrawing cash, purchasing gold bars and handing over these items to mules in person.

In some cases, victims were asked to bring their jewellery and luxury watches and surrender them to the mules for investigation purposes.

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While the number of investment scam cases fell almost 20 per cent to 2,698 in the first half of 2025, the amount lost was the highest among all scam types. More than $145 million was lost from January to June in 2025, an increase from the $131.5 million in the same period in 2024.

The police said more than a third of investment scam victims were aged 30 to 49.

Victims would come across investment opportunities through recommendations from online friends or were added into chat groups with others who had seemingly profited from these investments.

Once enticed by false testimonies, victims would hand money to the scammers.

Some scammers would tell victims to create new cryptocurrency wallets and link these to fraudulent investment sites.

Said the police: “In some cases, victims share their login credentials with scammers after trust is established, which allows the scammers to gain access and drain the funds from the wallet.”

Victims would only realise they had been scammed when they could not withdraw their earnings, despite transferring large sums for fees for the “investments”.

Six in 10 of all scam victims were aged below 50, with e-commerce scams being the most common ruse they fell for.

There were 3,237 cases of e-commerce scams in the first half of 2025, with losses amounting to over $7 million.

To better protect victims, the police are given powers under the Protection from Scams Act to control the bank accounts of those who refuse to believe they are being scammed despite evidence showing otherwise.

This allows the police to issue restriction orders to banks, which will limit the banking transactions of an individual’s accounts.

The police said two restriction orders were issued as at Aug 20, since the Act came into effect on July 1.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore is working with banks on a

Fast IDentity Online (Fido)-compliant hardware token

that must be inserted into a customer’s device to approve higher value internet banking payments and transfers.


Noting that measures like these will introduce more friction and could impact legitimate transactions, the police said: “While banks will do their best to minimise the inconvenience and give time for customers to get used to the new measures, there will be a need to prioritise security over convenience in the ongoing fight against scams.”

ScamShield Helpline: 1799
National helpline for mental well-being: 1771 (24 hours)/6669-1771 (via WhatsApp)

scamshield.gov.sg




The police warn that criminal syndicates continue to perpetrate scams by using mules in Singapore.

In the first half of 2025, more than 3,500 money mules and scammers suspected to be involved in scam cases involving losses of over $123 million were investigated.

Of these, more than 500 people have been charged in court.

The police said people should be wary “not to become a mule, whether deliberately for financial gain, or allow themselves to be inadvertently used”.

“This includes allowing scammers to use their payment accounts such as bank accounts to move criminal proceeds, to use their Singpass account, or to supply scammers with local SIM cards. Your payment accounts, Singpass account and SIM cards are for your own use only.”
 

Bitcoin erases year’s gain as crypto bear market deepens​

Just a little more than a month after reaching an all-time high, Bitcoin has erased the more than 30 per cent gain registered since the start of 2025 .

Just a little more than a month after reaching an all-time high, Bitcoin has erased the more than 30 per cent gain registered since the start of 2025.

Nov 17, 2025

Portland, Oregon - Just a little more than a month after reaching an all-time high, Bitcoin has erased the more than 30 per cent gain registered since the start of 2025 as the exuberance over the pro-crypto stance of the Trump administration fades.

The dominant cryptocurrency fell below US$93,714 on Nov 16, pushing the price beneath the closing level reached at the end of 2024, when financial markets were rallying following US President Donald Trump’s election victory.

Bitcoin soared to a record US$126,251 on Oct 6, only to begin tumbling four days later after unexpected comments on tariffs by Mr Trump sent markets into a tailspin worldwide.

“The general market is risk-off,” said Bitwise Asset Management chief investment officer Matthew Hougan. “Crypto was the canary in the coal mine for that, it was the first to flinch.”

Over the past month, many of the biggest buyers – from exchange-traded fund (ETF) allocators to corporate treasuries – have quietly stepped back, depriving the market of the flow-driven support that helped propel the token to records earlier in 2025.

At the same time, the recent cooling of high-flying technology stocks has led to a drop in overall risk appetite.

For much of the year, institutions were the backbone of Bitcoin’s legitimacy and its price.

ETFs as a cohort took in more than US$25 billion (S$32.5 billion), according to Bloomberg data, pushing assets as high as roughly US$169 billion.

Their steady allocation flows helped reframe the asset as a portfolio diversifier – a hedge against inflation, monetary debasement and political disarray. But that narrative – always tenuous – is fraying afresh, leaving the market exposed to something quieter but no less destabilising: disengagement.

One of the starkest examples of a buying strike in the digital asset community comes from billionaire Michael Saylor’s Strategy, the software firm turned Bitcoin hoarder.

Once the poster child for corporate treasury crypto plays, its stock is now flirting near parity to its Bitcoin stash – a sign that investors are no longer willing to pay a premium for Mr Saylor’s high-conviction leverage model.

Boom and bust cycles have been a constant since Bitcoin burst into the mainstream consciousness with a more than 13,000 per cent surge in 2017, only to be followed by a plunge of almost 75 per cent in 2018.

“The sentiment in crypto retail is pretty negative,” said Mr Hougan, who sees the current pullback as a buying opportunity. “They don’t want to live through another 50 per cent pullback. People are front-running that by stepping out of the market.”

Bitcoin has whipsawed investors through 2025, dropping to as low as US$74,400 in April as Mr Trump unveiled his tariffs, before rebounding to record highs ahead of the latest retreat.

The original digital asset accounts for almost 60 per cent of crypto’s roughly US$3.2 trillion in market value.

The market downturn has been even tougher on smaller, less liquid tokens that traders often gravitate towards because of their higher volatility and typical outperformance during rallies.

A MarketVector index tracking the bottom half of the largest 100 digital assets is down around 60 per cent in 2025.

“The markets are always an ebb and flow, and cyclicality in crypto is nothing new,” said Mr Chris Newhouse, director of research at Ergonia, a firm specialising in decentralised finance.

But “among friends, Telegram chats, and at conferences, the general sentiment I’ve received shows scepticism around capital deployment, and no natural bullish catalysts”. BLOOMBERG
 

Fear engulfs Bitcoin traders betting on free fall to US$80,000​

Bitcoin plunged below US$91,500 on Nov 17, deepening a sell-off that’s erased all of its gains for 2025.

Bitcoin plunged below US$91,500 on Nov 17, deepening a sell-off that’s erased all of its gains for 2025.

Nov 18, 2025

NEW YORK - Bitcoin is in free fall – and traders are positioning for more pain.

The world’s largest cryptocurrency plunged below US$91,500 on Nov 17, deepening a sell-off that’s erased all of its gains for 2025. In the options market, traders are making increasingly bearish wagers, on the conviction that the slide is far from over as deep-pocketed buyers beat a retreat.

The shift in sentiment has been swift and sharp. Demand for downside protection – particularly at the US$90,000, US$85,000 and US$80,000 levels – has surged. Protective options expiring later this month are seeing especially heavy activity, according to data from Coinbase-owned Deribit.

After riding Bitcoin to the highs just weeks ago, traders have snapped up more than US$740 million (S$964 million) worth of contracts betting on continued declines expiring in late November – far outpacing interest in bullish positions.

“The absence of conviction-based spot demand has become increasingly apparent as buyers who accumulated positions over the last six months now find themselves significantly underwater,” said Chris Newhouse, director of research at Ergonia, a firm specialising in decentralized finance.

The pain has been concentrated in companies known as digital-asset treasuries – firms that stockpiled large amounts of cryptocurrencies earlier in 2025 in an effort to become crypto-hoarding bets in the stock market. While Michael Saylor’s Strategy just bought another US$835 million worth of Bitcoin, some of his corporate peers are facing growing pressure to sell assets to protect their balance sheets.

That selling has created a psychological overhang: A market crowded with investors who are too deep in the red to buy more, but not yet ready to cut their losses.

A sentiment index compiled by data-analytics platform CoinMarketCap – tracking price momentum, volatility, derivatives, and more – indicates crypto participants are mired in a state of “extreme fear.”

Larger economic forces are weighing on sentiment, too. Traders are eyeing earnings from AI chip giant Nvidia on Nov 19 – a bellwether for tech and speculative risk – as well as shifting expectations for a possible interest-rate cut from the Federal Reserve in December. The S&P 500 fell more than 1 per cent on Nov 17, hitting sentiment for risk assets of all stripes.

“I think the Fed and AI bubble talk are two major headwinds for crypto and risk assets heading into the end of the year,” said Adam McCarthy, a research analyst at Kaiko. “The AI risk is likely compounding and affecting risk sentiment in crypto, adding that to the chatter from FOMC officials, you’re looking at a sustained downtrend for Bitcoin.”

Ethereum’s token, Ether, is proving especially vulnerable. The world’s second-largest cryptocurrency slumped to US$2,975, bringing its decline to 24 per cent since early October.

“Ether is very vulnerable to this theme as the biggest digital asset treasury firms are currently underwater on their positions,” said Greg Magadini, director of derivatives at Amberdata.

The broader market has been reeling since a sharp liquidation wave in early October erased about US$19 billion in digital assets. Open interest in crypto futures contracts has dropped, particularly in smaller tokens like Solana, where positioning has fallen by more than half, according to Coinglass data.

“That riskoff tone spills into crypto markets, where sentiment remains fragile – the latest drawdown reflects broader macro jitters rather than structural flaws,” said Thomas Perfumo, global economist at crypto exchange Kraken. BLOOMBERG
 

Ex-SAF captain admits breaking into home, took picture of crypto wallet access info, stole funds​

Teo Rong Xuan used his ill-gotten gains to buy luxury watches as well as settle his gambling expenses and mortgage payments.

Teo Rong Xuan used his ill-gotten gains to buy luxury watches as well as settle his gambling expenses and mortgage payments.

Summary
  • SAF Captain Teo Rong Xuan stole 1.7 million USDT from a man after breaking into the latter's home.
  • Teo pleaded guilty to housebreaking, misusing a computer system, and dealing with ill-gotten gains.
  • He will be sentenced in November.
AI generated

Oct 01, 2025

SINGAPORE – A Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) regular broke into a man’s condominium home in 2022 and made off with information linked to the latter’s cryptocurrency wallet.

Teo Rong Xuan, who left the SAF in 2023, later used the information – a “seed phrase” made up of words and serial numbers – to access the man’s cryptocurrency wallet and stole 1.7 million USDT.

A seed phrase is a collection of words that can be used to access an individual’s cryptocurrency wallet.

According to court documents, the amount of USDT he stole was worth the same amount in US dollars – US$1.7 million (S$2.2 million).

Teo, who was a captain with the Naval Diving Unit at the time of the offences, used his ill-gotten gains to buy luxury watches as well as settle his gambling expenses and mortgage payments.

On Oct 1, Teo, 34, who did not make any restitution to the victim, pleaded guilty to one count each of housebreaking and misusing a computer system. He also pleaded guilty to multiple counts of dealing with the ill-gotten gains.

Responding to queries from The Straits Times, the Ministry of Defence (Mindef) said that he was discharged from the SAF.

A Mindef spokesperson added: “The SAF holds its service personnel to high standards of discipline and integrity. Service personnel who commit offences will be dealt with in accordance with the law.”

Deputy Public Prosecutor (DPP) Jonathan Tan told the court that Teo, also known as Rex, joined the diving unit in 2010.

In June 2022, he met the victim, a 30-year-old Chinese national, through a mutual friend identified as “Zee” in court documents.

The court heard that the victim had a “cold wallet” – a cryptocurrency wallet that was not connected to the internet.

The DPP said that the man’s cold wallet was a “Ledger Nano X” hardware device that physically resembled a thumb drive or security token.

After buying the cold wallet, the victim registered it on an official mobile application, which generated 24 English words, each with a serial number.

He then wrote the seed phrase – made up of the words and serial numbers – on a piece of paper which he kept at home.

He later deposited around 1.7 million USDT into his cold wallet on Dec 14, 2022.

Four days later, he invited Teo and Zee to his home to watch a football match.

Teo arrived at around 10.30pm and about 30 minutes later, Zee sent a message to their WhatsApp group, stating that he was at a lift lobby near the victim’s unit.

Teo then asked the victim for his condominium access card to fetch Zee, and the victim complied.

Teo did not return the card and on Dec 31 that year, the trio made plans to meet at the Marina Bay area at 9pm to welcome the new year.

Before they met, Teo, who found out that the victim had left his condominium, went to the property and used the card to enter the unit.

He entered the man’s bedroom, found the paper containing the seed phrase, snapped a picture of it and left. After that, he went to the Marina Bay area to meet the victim and Zee.

Teo was at home on Jan 1, 2023, when he connected his own Ledger device to his desktop computer, keyed in the victim’s seed phrase and accessed the latter’s cold wallet. He then transferred the 1.7 million USDT to his own cryptocurrency wallet.

The DPP said that Teo transferred around 100,000 USDT of his ill-gotten gains to an illegal gambling website.

Later, he used around 500,000 USDT for cryptocurrency transactions, mostly involving an illegal gambling website.

He also converted around 1.1 million USDT to US dollars, and transferred the money to his bank account. Teo then used his ill-gotten gains to settle multiple payments.

On March 23, 2023, the victim realised that somebody had withdrawn the 1.7million USDT earlier that year.

He alerted the police and engaged blockchain security company SlowMist to assist in tracing his missing USDT. SlowMist later told him that some fees were traced to Teo’s cryptocurrency wallet.

The victim confronted Teo, who came clean about what he had done.

Teo also told the victim that he committed the offence as he had suffered “huge monetary losses” after a company called FTX Trading, that operated a cryptocurrency exchange and hedge fund, collapsed in 2022.

Teo, who is represented by lawyer Gino Hardial Singh, was charged in court in 2023. He is expected to be sentenced on Nov 14.
 

The crypto industry’s $36.6 billion in ‘dirty money’​

Even as the crypto industry gains mainstream acceptance, at least S$36.6 billion tied to illicit activity has flowed into crypto exchanges over the past two years.

Even as the crypto industry gains mainstream acceptance, at least $36.6 billion tied to illicit activity has flowed into crypto exchanges over the past two years.

Nov 24, 2025

NEW YORK - US President Donald Trump has started his own cryptocurrency business and vowed to make the US the world’s “crypto capital”.

Crypto companies have declared themselves safe and secure.

And a procession of major industries, from Wall Street banks to online retailers, have experimented with digital coins.

But even as the crypto industry gains mainstream acceptance, at least US$28 billion (S$36.6 billion) tied to illicit activity has flowed into crypto exchanges over the past two years, according to an examination by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ), The New York Times and 36 other news organisations around the world.

The money came from hackers, thieves and extortionists.

It was traced to cyber criminals in North Korea and scammers whose schemes stretched from Minnesota to Myanmar.

Over and over, the analysis showed, these groups have moved money onto the world’s largest exchanges, which are online marketplaces where people can convert US dollars or euros into Bitcoin, Ether and other digital coins.

Among the recipients of this “dirty money” was Binance, the world’s biggest crypto exchange, which participated in a US$2 billion business deal with Mr Trump’s crypto firm in May.

The money also flowed into at least eight other prominent exchanges, including OKX, a global platform with a growing footprint in the US, according to the analysis.

“Law enforcement can’t cope with the overwhelming amount of illicit activity in the space,” said Ms Julia Hardy, a co-founder of zeroShadow, a crypto investigations firm. “It can’t go on like this.”

The early days of digital currencies were dominated by thieves and drug dealers, who were attracted by the speed and anonymity of crypto, which make it a useful vehicle for money laundering.

Bitcoin, the most popular virtual currency, underpinned dark web markets where merchants sold narcotics and other outlawed substances, leading to overdose deaths and criminal charges.

Since then, the crypto industry has grown exponentially and become professionalised, with billions of dollars a day in legitimate transactions.

The largest exchanges have pledged to crack down on criminals who use crypto to move funds.

Binance pleaded guilty to money laundering violations in 2023 and agreed to pay a US$4.3 billion penalty to the US government after processing transactions for terrorist groups including Hamas and al-Qaeda.

In 2024, it declared that the crypto industry was “an extremely unwelcoming place to bad actors”.

At the same time, Mr Trump has made crypto a cornerstone of his family business and ended a regulatory clampdown on the industry.

Shortly before the 2024 election, he and his sons founded World Liberty Financial, a crypto start-up that is poised to generate tens of millions of dollars a year from the business deal involving Binance.

In October, Mr Trump granted a pardon to Mr Zhao Changpeng, Binance’s founder, who had served a four-month term in prison after the company’s plea agreement.

The Trump administration has also weakened law enforcement’s ability to prosecute crypto crime.

In April, the Justice Department dismantled a crypto enforcement team, explaining that prosecutors should target terrorists and drug traffickers who use crypto, while eschewing cases against “the platforms that these enterprises utilise to conduct their illegal activities”.

The analysis by the Times and its colleagues provides only a partial window into illicit funds on exchanges, because many criminal accounts have not been publicly identified.

But it is one of the first systematic efforts to trace this money on specific platforms, which are rarely singled out by the analytics firms that collect the most comprehensive data.

Whether the exchanges have broken the law is a nuanced question.

Companies that process dirty money may still be fulfilling their legal responsibilities – by hiring compliance staff to root out fraud, for example.

But in the US, crypto firms have been prosecuted under the Bank Secrecy Act for failing to create robust internal systems to prevent money laundering.

The analysis relied partly on aggregate data that was assembled by Chainalysis, an analytics firm, and that did not identify specific exchanges.

The Times and the ICIJ also used public records and consulted with forensic experts to identify crypto accounts tied to criminals.

Crypto transactions are recorded on a public ledger, allowing the movement of funds to be traced to individual exchanges.

The findings included:

– Since Binance’s guilty plea, the exchange has received more than US$400 million in deposits from Huione Group, a Cambodian operation that the Treasury Department has flagged for criminal activity. An additional US$900 million flowed into Binance deposit accounts in 2025 from a platform that North Korean hackers were using to launder stolen funds.

– OKX received more than US$220 million in deposits from Huione in the five months after OKX struck a US$504 million settlement with the US government in February for violating a money transmission law.

– Crypto exchanges worldwide received at least US$4 billion linked to scams in 2024, according to data from Chainalysis. The Times and the journalist consortium interviewed two dozen victims of crypto scams whose stolen funds ended up on Binance, OKX and other large exchanges including Bybit and HTX.

– More than US$500 million flowed into Binance, OKX and Bybit in 2024 from “crypto-to-cash desks”, which allow people to trade digital coins for actual bills. Many of these businesses operate from offices or storefronts, serving various types of customers – and offering a convenient avenue for criminals who want to convert digital currencies into cash.

Ms Heloiza Canassa, a Binance spokeswoman, said that “security and compliance stand as utmost pillars” of the company’s operations and that it had responded to more than 240,000 law enforcement requests since its founding in 2017, including 65,000 in 2024.

Ms Linda Lacewell, OKX’s chief legal officer, said the company worked with law enforcement “to help stop fraud and other illicit activity” and invested heavily in compliance, transaction monitoring and fraud detection tools.

HTX representatives did not respond to requests for comment, and a Bybit spokesperson said the company enforced “a strict zero-tolerance policy towards financial crime”.

A White House spokesperson declined to comment, while a representative for World Liberty said the firm viewed Binance as a marketplace for its coins and not as a business partner.

What happens after dirty money reaches an exchange can be difficult to determine; at that point, the money trail is hidden from view.

Exchanges may catch illegal activity fast enough to freeze the funds or turn them over to law enforcement.

But dirty money that goes undetected can benefit an exchange by generating trading fees, typically a small percentage of the transaction.

“If they kick criminal actors off the platform, then that’s a big revenue source that they lose,” said Professor John Griffin, a crypto expert at the University of Texas, Austin. “They have an incentive to allow this activity to continue.”

The Binance connection​

Huione Group has an extensive reach in Cambodia.

A financial conglomerate, it offers banking, payment and insurance services.

Customers use its QR codes to buy groceries and pay restaurant bills.

Those offerings conceal a more sinister enterprise.

For years, Huione has also run a vast digital marketplace that one expert has described as “Amazon for criminals”, where online merchants sell stolen personal data, tech support for scammers and money-laundering services.

The company has moved money for North Korean hackers and scam networks throughout South-east Asia, according to law enforcement.

In May, the Treasury Department moved to ban Huione from the US banking system, calling it a “critical node” for cyberheists and investment scams targeting Americans.

Throughout, Huione has maintained financial ties with Binance and OKX.

In a Chinese-language financial report in 2024, Huione published several of its crypto wallet addresses, long strings of letters and numbers that identify accounts on the public ledger of digital currency transactions.

An analysis of those wallets found that more than US$400 million flowed from Huione onto Binance’s platform from July 2024 to July 2025.

Over five months in 2025, OKX received more than US$220 million in deposits from the Huione wallets.

The flows continued even after the Treasury Department’s announcement on May 1.

The wallets deposited at least US$77 million into Binance over the next 2½ months and US$161 million into OKX, according to the journalist consortium’s analysis.

Binance and OKX previously had a record of flouting financial rules, leading to their criminal settlements with the US government. Both have promised to clean up their acts.

Ms Lacewell of OKX said that even before May, the company had applied “enhanced transaction monitoring” to one of the wallet addresses identified in Huione’s report.

The company “paused all interactions between OKX wallets and Huione” in October, she said.

Binance’s Ms Canassa said in a statement that the exchange could not block or reverse incoming transactions. But once suspicious deposits land on the platform, Binance reacts appropriately, she said.

“The true measures of compliance for a crypto exchange are the steps it takes to identify and react to suspicious deposits,” she said. “It is in these areas that Binance is an industry leader.”

Still, the Huione deposits continued for months. And those deposits were far from the only suspicious funds to flow into Binance after its US settlement.

In February, a North Korean hacking syndicate called the Lazarus Group stole US$1.5 billion of crypto from the Bybit exchange, which is based in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. It was the largest hack in crypto history.

Within days, the North Koreans routed the stolen funds to a crypto service that lets people swap one digital currency for another. They were converting Ether into Bitcoin, the most valuable cryptocurrency.

All of the Ether would eventually have to end up somewhere.

Over the same period when the North Koreans made the swaps, five Binance deposit accounts received an unusual spike of US$900 million in Ether from the same swapping service, according to ChainArgos, a crypto tracking firm.

The funds that entered Binance may not have belonged to the North Koreans anymore. But in effect, the exchange was on the other end of a series of transactions in which the thieves laundered hundreds of millions of dollars in crypto, said Mr Jonathan Reiter, chief executive of ChainArgos.

Given the timing, the stolen ether was “the only conceivable source for these outflows”, Mr Reiter said, and should have been flagged as dirty money.

“Binance should have caught these,” he said. “Even a bad – maybe even defective – screening tool would spot that.”

Ms Canassa did not directly address the flow of Ether.

Binance “maintains a comprehensive, multilayered compliance programme and security framework”, she said.

Smoke and mirrors​

In 2024, a father in Minnesota stumbled into an investment opportunity.

He started trading crypto at the direction of a family-run financial firm with offices in Seattle and Los Angeles.

Then his money vanished. He had lost US$1.5 million to a scammer.

“My family and I were left financially shattered and emotionally broken,” he wrote to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in March. He asked not to be identified to protect his privacy.

No one has recovered the stolen money.

But more than US$500,000 ended up in major exchanges, including Binance, according to an analysis by a crypto data firm the victim hired.

These schemes have become one of the crypto industry’s biggest scourges, draining the accounts of elderly investors, lonely singles and even the president of a Kansas bank.

Crypto investment fraud cost victims US$5.8 billion in 2024, according to the FBI.

Some of the most common scams are known as “pig butchering”, a rough translation of a Chinese expression that refers to the fattening of an animal for slaughter.

Many fraudsters feign romantic interest, flirting with their targets for days or weeks before encouraging them to invest in fraudulent schemes.

Crypto exchanges can be useful in this process. They are convenient “off-ramps” – a way to convert ill-gotten crypto into cash.

Often the perpetrators are impossible to identify. But in the Minnesota case, Binance provided a rare window into its internal systems.

Before opening an account for a customer, crypto exchanges are supposed to request detailed personal information, a process called “know your customer”, or KYC, which is designed to prevent fraud.

In response to a subpoena from police in Minnesota, Binance shared files revealing information on two accounts that local investigators had linked to the pig-butchering case.

The first customer had moved more than US$7 million over a few months in 2023 and 2024.

A photo in the file showed a woman standing in front of a corrugated metal wall and listed a home address in a Chinese village.

A second Binance file listed the name of a 24-year-old woman with a home address in rural Myanmar.

Over nine months ending in mid-2024, the customer moved more than US$2 million, over 1,000 times the average annual salary in Myanmar.

Ms Erin West, a former prosecutor who runs a non-profit dedicated to stopping scams, said the women appeared to be “money mules” whose personal data may have been harvested by scammers to create fake accounts on Binance.

“There’s nothing that appears legitimate about this in any way,” said Ms West, who reviewed the files for the Times and the ICIJ. “We see this all the time.”

Binance declined to comment on the case.

Law enforcement often stands little chance of tracking down thieves thousands of kilometres away.

Ms Carrissa Weber, 58, a resident of the Canadian province of Alberta, lost more than US$25,000 in 2025 to a scammer who posed as a start-up manager and encouraged her to invest in crypto.

It was her life savings.

Ms Weber reached out to Canadian police but has not recovered the funds.

“My case is sitting in a filing cabinet, and no one’s doing anything with it,” she said.

An analysis of Ms Weber’s transaction records showed that the money she lost had ended up in a handful of crypto wallets.

All of them channeled funds into OKX. Two deposit accounts that received that money had been under scrutiny by the exchange since in 2024 for exhibiting “suspicious characteristics”, said Ms Lacewell of OKX.

OKX did not freeze the accounts until October, six months after Ms Weber was scammed.

Crypto for cash​

At the back of a deli in Kyiv, Ukraine, past shelves lined with snacks and sodas, an electronic buzzer offered access to a door labelled “Currency Exchange”.

Inside the back room was a business dedicated to converting crypto into cash.

A cash-counting machine was perched on a desk, next to an old-school plastic calculator and a cardboard box filled with rubber bands for binding stacks of bills.

These crypto-to-cash storefronts, dotted throughout Asia and Eastern Europe, are a new frontier in global money laundering, crypto and law enforcement experts said.

Anyone can walk into these businesses and, often without presenting any personal information, exchange large quantities of cryptocurrency for US dollars, euros or another traditional currency.

In 2024, crypto-to-cash desks in Hong Kong processed more than US$2.5 billion in transactions, according to Crystal Intelligence, a crypto analytics firm.

“These can enable an almost endless volume of financial crime,” said Mr Richard Sanders, a crypto tracer who has studied the cash desks.

Many crypto-to-cash businesses rely on major exchanges.

Binance, OKX and Bybit received a total of US$531 million from the currency desks in 2024, according to data from Crystal.

While not everyone using these services is a criminal, the anonymous nature of the transactions lends itself to money laundering and other types of illicit finance.

“A lot of the ones that we’ve come across don’t require any identity documents,” said Mr Nick Smart, Crystal’s chief intelligence officer. “You can put almost as much as you want in any of them.”

One afternoon in July, a reporter sent US$1,200 in cryptocurrency to the cash desk in the Kyiv deli, after arranging the transaction on the Telegram chat app.

Within minutes, a man in the back room handed over a stack of bills wrapped in a thick rubber band.

He did not offer a receipt, and the Telegram chat was promptly deleted.

The desk did not respond to a request for comment.

Over several weeks in 2025, the ICIJ gathered crypto wallet addresses used by more than a dozen of these storefronts in Ukraine, Poland, Canada and the United Arab Emirates.

Most of them received funds from the major exchanges, according to transaction records.

That suggests that customers looking to convert digital currencies into cash withdrew funds from their accounts before sending the money to the desks for conversion.

On the 41st floor of a glass office tower in Dubai, the reporter observed a customer at one cash operation change US$6,000 in crypto for a wad of Emirati bills. An analysis of the service’s crypto address showed that it had received more than US$2 million over two weeks in September.

The total included US$303,000 sent from Binance. NYTIMES
 
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