The Albemarle County Police Department, Virginia State Police, and FBI are alerting residents to a surge in cryptocurrency scams targeting the elderly. From January 1 to February 28, 2025, 29 cases were reported in Albemarle County, with nine victims losing $240,000 total. Officials stress early reporting to improve recovery chances.
In Albemarle County, Virginia, law enforcement agencies have noted a sharp rise in cryptocurrency-related fraud. Between January 1 and February 28, 2025, authorities recorded 29 cases, marking an increase from the previous year. Specifically, 11 cases emerged since the start of 2025, representing a 175% rise compared to the same period in 2024, including eight incidents in February alone. These scams disproportionately affect older adults, leading to significant financial harm.
ACPD Detective Marcus Baggett highlighted the personal toll, stating, “We have elderly folks who worked their entire careers to be retired, and after these types of losses, they may find themselves living with elderly parents. Not where they plan to be in their retirement.”
Nationwide trends mirror local patterns. FBI Intelligence Analyst Heather Harris referenced the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) 2024 report, which documented $9.3 billion in losses from cybercrimes, up 66% from 2023. Those over 60 suffered $2.8 billion in damages.
Scammers often initiate contact through investment promises or impersonate entities like government agencies, banks, or tech support to instill urgency. Harris explained, “The fraudsters do this on purpose. And so now they have the control.” Victims are then instructed to use Bitcoin ATMs—found in stores and gas stations—to send funds via QR codes to scammers' wallets. The transfer occurs instantly, often to overseas recipients.
“By the time they walk out of that establishment—that convenience store, the grocery store, it is likely that the fraudster has the money,” Harris noted. Tracing funds is possible but challenging as money quickly shifts wallets or currencies. First Sergeant Adam Kulpa of Virginia State Police’s High-Tech Crimes Division urged prompt reporting: “If we can get somebody to report it within 48 hours, we like to say the chances are so much more successful. But the longer we wait, the more difficult it is.”
Providing details like phone numbers, wallet addresses, ATM receipts, or email headers aids investigations. Harris added, “The more information we have, the better that we can do at our job, which is to keep everyone safe.” She also clarified that legitimate organizations never demand cryptocurrency payments, advising residents to inform family members.