Sec charges crypto firms in $14 million WhatsApp scam

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has sued several cryptocurrency companies for allegedly defrauding retail investors out of more than $14 million through fake WhatsApp investment groups and bogus trading platforms. The scheme, which ran from January 2024 to January 2025, used social media ads, deepfake videos, and AI-generated tips to lure victims. Regulators say the operators, based in China, Malaysia, and Hong Kong, misappropriated funds sent to overseas accounts.

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filed a 29-page complaint on Monday in Colorado District Court against Morocoin Tech, Berge Blockchain Technology, Cirkor, AI Wealth, Lane Wealth, AI Investment Education Foundation, and Zenith Asset Tech Foundation. These entities, registered in Washington or Colorado, operated unregistered "investment clubs" on WhatsApp, enticing users via social media advertisements featuring deepfake videos of prominent financial professionals.

From January 2024 to January 2025, the groups posed as advisory services run by fake financial experts and professors, sharing AI-generated investment tips and manipulated screenshots of successful trades. Members were directed to deposit funds into the three purported crypto trading platforms, which mimicked legitimate interfaces with real-time prices and account balances but conducted no actual trading.

Investors funded accounts using fiat currency wired to designated banks or couriers, or by transferring crypto to unhosted wallets controlled by the platforms. The scammers offered fake "security token offerings" (STOs), such as tokens from a nonexistent company called NeuralNet, promoted for brain-computer interface technology. One conspirator described these as "akin to IPOs in the stock primary market" and hyped their potential to "transcend humanity into space."

When victims attempted withdrawals, operators demanded advance fees, which were never refunded. The $14 million stolen was laundered through blockchain transfers and at least 27 domestic U.S. bank accounts, ultimately reaching accounts in China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, and held by individuals in Southeast Asia, including Burmese and Chinese nationals. Specific losses included one investor wiring over $1 million to China and Hong Kong, and another sending $1.4 million to Indonesia. At least one victim reported $156,000 in losses to local police.

"This matter highlights an all-too-common form of investment scam that is being used to target U.S. retail investors with devastating consequences," said Laura D’Allaird, chief of the SEC’s Cyber and Emerging Technologies Unit. The SEC is seeking a cease-and-desist order, disgorgement of ill-gotten gains, civil penalties, and a jury trial. Complaints about the firms had previously reached regulators in Washington and Arkansas, and the companies' websites have since been removed.

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Illustration of crypto crime surge: hackers using AI to steal $17B in scams per Chainalysis report, with charts, bitcoins, and law enforcement seizures.
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Chainalysis 2026 Report: $17 Billion in 2025 Crypto Scams Amid Surging AI Fraud and Hacks

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The Chainalysis 2026 Crypto Crime Report, published January 13, 2026, reveals at least $14 billion stolen in 2025 scams—projected to reach $17 billion—driven by a 1,400% surge in AI-boosted impersonation tactics, amid broader losses including $4 billion from hacks per PeckShield and $154 billion in total illicit volumes linked to nation-state actors.

In this ongoing series on the SEC $14M Crypto Scam Charges, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on December 19, 2025, charged seven entities with defrauding investors of over $14 million via fake WhatsApp groups, social media ads featuring deepfakes, AI-generated tips, and bogus trading platforms. No real trading occurred, and funds were laundered overseas. The agency also issued an investor alert on social media scams.

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A 78-year-old textile businessman in Delhi lost Rs 18.80 crore through a fake investment app promoted via a WhatsApp group. This marks the second-largest cyber fraud case in Delhi, beginning in July 2024 and uncovered in October. The victim reported it to police in November 2024, leading investigators to a Chinese syndicate based in Cambodia.

A cryptocurrency investor lost over $282 million in Bitcoin and Litecoin after scammers impersonated Trezor support to steal a recovery seed phrase. The theft, revealed on January 16, 2026, by investigator ZachXBT, involved 1,459 Bitcoin and 2.05 million Litecoin stolen on January 10. The attacker laundered funds through Thorchain and converted them to Monero, causing the privacy coin's price to surge 36%.

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A former customer service agent at Coinbase has been arrested in India in connection with a major security breach. The incident, disclosed in May, involved hackers bribing support staff to access sensitive customer data and demanding a $20 million ransom. Coinbase estimates remediation costs could reach $400 million.

Chen Zhi, chair of the Prince Group, has been arrested in Cambodia and deported to China amid accusations of orchestrating forced labour scam operations that stole billions in cryptocurrency. The arrest follows recent actions by US authorities seizing assets linked to him. This development is expected to disrupt large-scale pig butchering scams in Southeast Asia.

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한국 세관 당국은 월요일 국제 범죄 조직이 무허가 외환 거래를 통해 약 1500억 원(1억 170만 달러) 상당의 암호화폐를 세탁한 혐의를 적발했다고 발표했다. 세 명의 중국 국적자들이 외환거래법 위반 혐의로 검찰에 송치됐다. 이들은 2021년 9월부터 작년 6월까지 국내외 암호화폐 계좌와 한국 은행 계좌를 이용해 자금을 세탁한 것으로 알려졌다.

 

 

 

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