U.S. prosecutors are warning that romance scams increasingly involve cryptocurrency fraud, often orchestrated by organized crime networks. These “pig butchering” schemes involve scammers building trust over weeks before pushing fake crypto investments. Authorities note a pattern of moving conversations to encrypted apps like WhatsApp and fraudulent platforms that show fake profits. The Justice Department has seized hundreds of millions in crypto linked to these scams, which are frequently connected to sprawling compound operations in Southeast Asia.
U.S. prosecutors have issued an alert warning the public about romance scams that frequently lead to cryptocurrency fraud. These schemes often involve scammers shifting conversations to encrypted apps before pushing for crypto payments or investments.
Analysts warn the frauds use slow trust-building, sometimes allowing small withdrawals to bait larger deposits. “Unlike traditional scams, which execute quickly, these schemes exploit both emotional and financial vulnerabilities,” said senior analyst Balazs Faluvegi.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Ohio stated that red flags include requests to move off dating platforms and payment demands via crypto. These cases often intersect with “pig butchering” schemes, long-form frauds combining emotional grooming with fake crypto investment platforms.
Faluvegi, an analyst from BrokerChooser, explained that scammers let victims withdraw small initial ‘profits’ to encourage larger investments. “When you attempt to withdraw bigger amounts, they suddenly create obstacles like taxes, fees, or system errors, blocking access to your funds,” he said.
In one noted case, a widow lost nearly $1 million in a crypto pig-butchering scam. The Justice Department last year moved to seize $225 million in Tether‘s USDT stablecoin, the largest crypto forfeiture ever tied to this fraud.
U.S. officials link these frauds to Southeast Asian crime networks laundering stolen crypto through specialized channels. Sprawling scam compounds in Myanmar and Cambodia, run by organized crime networks, have turned pig-butchering into a multibillion-dollar enterprise.
The DOJ has acted to shut down domains linked to a major compound in Myanmar. Chinese authorities have sentenced multiple compound kingpins to death for operations tied to over $1.4 billion in fraud.

