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Her name, she said, was Jessie. Dennis Jones, 82, met her on Facebook. The divorced, beloved grandfather and father had chatted online with Jessie for months, and he felt close to her, even though they’d never met. On a family vacation, he revealed to his son and daughter that he was exploring a major cryptocurrency investment opportunity. But the investment, and the friendship, were frauds. Jones invested his life savings — and Jessie still pressed him for more money. He was financially ruined. Soon after, a distraught Jones ended his life.
“There wasn’t enough [money left] even to pay for his headstone,” Jones’s daughter Laura said on a recent episode of the AARP podcast The Perfect Scam.
This story isn’t unusual, unfortunately. Jones was the victim of a financial grooming scam, often known as pig butchering. It’s typically an overseas-based fraud where scammers connect with you online, form a relationship, then lure you into bogus cryptocurrency investments. The criminal may take weeks or months to establish trust — grooming the victim — and finding commonalities (“You’re a widow? I lost my spouse as well… “), before eventually mentioning that they’ve recently made a lot of money on a certain investment platform. Maybe you’d be interested in giving it a try?
“Pig butchering” comes from “shā zhū pán,” a Chinese mob term that means fattening a pig before slaughter. Given the term’s crudeness, AARP refers to it as “financial grooming.” INTERPOL calls it “romance baiting.” And it's a serious, growing problem.
A global criminal enterprise
Losses to investment scams, fueled largely by financial grooming, rose from $3.31 billion in 2022 to $4.57 billion in 2023, according to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3). They can be devastating. In September 2024, for instance, an Illinois widower had nearly $1 million stolen from her in a financial grooming scam, she told a local news station. That same month, a North Carolina man revealed that he'd lost $750,000.
“My inbox is flooded with emails,” says Erin West, a former deputy district attorney in Santa Clara County, California, who spent five years focusing on battling financial grooming (or pig butchering) and, in some cases, managing to get the stolen money back to victims. She’s since founded a nonprofit called Operation Shamrock, dedicated to preventing these scams. “I hear from [victims] even though [Operation Shamrock] is not a reporting platform. By the time they get to me, they’re desperate, and nobody has helped them.”
Victims on all sides
These scams began in 2019 in countries such as Myanmar and Cambodia, when the Chinese mafia converted casinos into scam centers, says Kathy Stokes, director of fraud prevention for the AARP Fraud Watch Network. The fraud then expanded during the pandemic. And the scam victims aren’t the only victims: “The people forced to run these scams are being enslaved,” says Stokes, referring to the slave encampments holding workers who have been lured by employment scams to compounds where their passports are stolen, and may be beaten or tortured if they fail to meet scam quotas, according to anti-trafficking organization Destiny Rescue.
In 2023, at least 120,000 people in Myanmar and 100,000 in Cambodia were “forced to execute lucrative online scams,” the United Nations reported. That number has likely increased as scam centers have expanded to countries such as the Philippines and the United Arab Emirates. In a May 2024 report, the U.S. Institute of Peace estimated that 300,000 people are working in scam centers, a number it noted was probably conservative. (Find out more about human trafficking and scams on this episode of AARP's The Perfect Scam.)
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