Skip to main content

Cryptocurrency scammers posing as bank managers to defraud victims: RCMP

FILE - An advertisement of Bitcoin, one of the cryptocurrencies, is displayed on a building in Hong Kong, on Nov. 18, 2021. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung, File) FILE - An advertisement of Bitcoin, one of the cryptocurrencies, is displayed on a building in Hong Kong, on Nov. 18, 2021. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung, File)
Share

Mounties in Coquitlam are out with a warning after receiving multiple reports of a cryptocurrency scam last month.

In a news release, the detachment described the fraud and said victims in the city have already lost thousands of dollars. In an email to CTV News, police said they received two reports in a single week, with the amounts lost ranging between $10,000 and $25,000.

In each case, according to authorities, the scheme started with a phone call from someone posing as the manager of their bank. The victims were told their accounts had been "compromised" and told to withdraw their money and deposit it into a cryptocurrency machine as bait.

"A bank will never instruct you to withdraw money to convert it into cryptocurrency in any circumstance," said spokesperson Cpl. Alexa Hodgins.

"These tech-savvy fraudsters are sending their victims to cryptocurrency ATMs to make the transactions. The fraudsters stay on the phone to guide the victim’s through the process."

Hodgins also encourages anyone who has been a victim of this or any other scam not to be ashamed, and to report to their local police department.

"These types of frauds play on the victim’s emotions, and have nothing to do with the victim’s intelligence," she said.

More information form the BC RCMP on common Bitcoin scams can be found online.

CTVNews.ca Top Stories

A one-of-a-kind Royal Canadian Mint coin sells for more than $1.5M

A rare one-of-a-kind pure gold coin from the Royal Canadian Mint has sold for more than $1.5 million. The 99.99 per cent pure gold coin, named 'The Dance Screen (The Scream Too),' weighs a whopping 10 kilograms and surpassed the previous record for a coin offered at an auction in Canada.

Stay Connected