The FBI released the information below:
As scammers
increasingly use pressure tactics and artificial intelligence to defraud
Americans out of their hard-earned money, the FBI is reminding everyone to
protect themselves and their families from fraud this holiday season.
"If you
feel pressured to act fast, pay money, or turn over personal information—take a
beat. Stop and assess if what you're being told is real. Talk to your families.
Protect each other from scams," said FBI Director Kash Patel.
"Scammers are banking on the fact that you'll feel too embarrassed to come
forward and report the crime to the FBI. Don't let them win."
The FBI
specifically encourages Americans to talk to their loved ones about not sharing
sensitive information with people they have met only online or over the phone.
They also should not send money, gift cards, cryptocurrency, or other assets.
Cyber-enabled
fraud dominates the scam landscape, accelerated by artificial intelligence
(AI). In the first seven months of 2025, AI accounted for more than 9,000
complaints to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), and those AI
complaints spanned all types of scams. Fraudsters use technology to create fake
social media profiles, voice clones, identification documents, and videos with
believable depictions of public figures or even loved ones. Fraudulent or
suspicious activity can be reported to the FBI at ic3.gov.
Tipsters should include information such as:
- identifying
information about the person or company which contacted them
- methods of
communication used, to include websites, emails, and phone numbers
- financial
transaction information, such as the date, type of payment, amount,
account numbers involved, the name and address of the receiving financial
institution, and receiving cryptocurrency addresses
- description of the
interaction with the fraudster
The IC3 received 535,314 complaints reporting $13.7 billion in losses last year, an average loss of $25,700 per victim. Between 2020 and 2024, a total of $50.5 billion in losses were reported to IC3. People over 60 suffered the most losses and submitted the most complaints. Victims over 60 who need assistance filing an IC3 complaint can contact the DOJ Elder Justice Hotline, 1-833-FRAUD-11 (833-372-8311). Learn more about scam prevention at fbi.gov/takeabeat.
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