Wyoming residents lose over $4.6 million to cryptocurrency ATM scams in major cities

Scammers have stolen more than $4.6 million from residents in Wyoming's three largest cities—Cheyenne, Gillette, and Sheridan—primarily via cryptocurrency ATMs, with $3 million lost in Gillette alone. Operating often from abroad, fraudsters target older victims using familiar tactics like impersonating authorities. Law enforcement reports highlight the untraceable nature of these machines, while education campaigns and proposed regulations seek to stem losses.

Crypto ATM scams have cost Wyoming residents over $4.6 million in Cheyenne, Gillette, and Sheridan, with approximately 45 such machines statewide, including 11 in Cheyenne, according to AARP estimates. These devices allow quick cash-to-crypto conversions sent to scammer-controlled wallets overseas, often in countries like Nigeria or Jamaica, making recovery nearly impossible.

In Gillette and Campbell County, losses exceeded $3 million in 2025, with police handling 75 to 100 cases annually, per Detective Alan Stuber. He described the evolution: “You get a call, they make threats... It used to be gift cards, but now it is these machines.” One notable case involved an $800,000 romance scam, complete with mailed gold bars and a scammer traveling to Wyoming.

Cheyenne Police Sgt. Kevin Malatesta noted at least $600,000 lost in 2025, with scams unfolding over weeks or years. “This has become a newer method... to get money from people in scams,” he said, emphasizing the lack of oversight compared to gift cards. Police documented 50 cases over 16 months ending August 2025.

In Sheridan, Officer Liz Shafer reported $1.5 million in unretrievable losses over two years ending fall 2025 across 15 cases. “Scammers use these methods because that money cannot be retrieved,” she said. Local police lack jurisdiction over foreign wallets, and the FBI prioritizes cases above $100,000.

Nationally, the FBI logged over 11,000 crypto ATM scam reports in 2024, totaling $246 million. Similar issues led attorneys general in Iowa and Washington, D.C., to sue operators, alleging over 90% fraudulent transactions. AARP Wyoming's Tom Lacock noted underreporting due to embarrassment or pessimism about recovery: “These are professional thieves.”

To fight back, Campbell County Republican Rep. Ken Clouston plans legislation requiring crypto ATMs to secure state banking licenses, impose transaction limits, and display warnings. Stuber shared details at an AARP webinar for legislators. Authorities urge reporting to www.ic3.gov or reportfraud.ftc.gov and promote public education, though recoveries remain rare.

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Illustration of a woman falling victim to a crypto ATM scam in Washington D.C., with a warning sign in the background, for a news article on prosecutors' alert.
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Prosecutors warn of crypto ATM scam in Washington

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A woman in Washington, D.C., claims she lost thousands in a cryptocurrency scam involving ATMs. The city's top prosecutor accuses an ATM provider of enabling the fraud, where victims are tricked into buying bitcoin to supposedly protect their money. California regulators have also cracked down on similar kiosk operators for overcharging consumers.

In 2025, residents of Gillette and Campbell County in Wyoming lost more than $3 million to scams involving cryptocurrency ATMs, according to local police. Gillette Police Detective Alan Stuber reported 75 to 100 cases handled by his department and the Campbell County Sheriff's Office over the past year. The revelations came during an AARP Wyoming webinar ahead of the state's legislative session.

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Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes has warned residents about a rise in cryptocurrency ATM scams, which cost victims more than $170 million last year. She launched a new fraud complaint form to help those affected report incidents quickly. The scams typically involve fraudsters directing people to deposit cash into bitcoin kiosks found at everyday locations like gas stations.

Building on similar efforts in other Nebraska cities like Lincoln, Grand Island has enforced a new ordinance requiring cryptocurrency kiosks and ATMs to display fraud warning signs, protecting residents from scams. Effective since November 20, it includes $500 daily penalties and features collaboration with AARP volunteers.

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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.

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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European authorities have arrested nine suspects in a multinational operation targeting a cryptocurrency investment fraud network that stole at least €600 million from victims. The late October sweep involved agencies from several countries and resulted in the seizure of cash, cryptocurrency, and luxury items. Victims were lured through deceptive online tactics but could not recover their funds.

 

 

 

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