Artificial intelligence is fueling a surge in cryptocurrency-related fraud schemes that have cost Americans tens of billions of dollars, according to federal investigators. The IRS Criminal Investigation unit and FBI have issued warnings about the growing sophistication of AI-enabled scams, which increasingly target vulnerable individuals through social media and messaging applications.
One documented case involved a retiree who lost her entire life savings after being drawn into a fake crypto investment opportunity initiated through a messaging app. The victim was gradually manipulated into transferring funds across multiple crypto wallets controlled by scammers. IRS Criminal Investigation agents in New York reconstructed the fraud and found that stolen funds were then consolidated and moved through exchanges to obscure their origin. This pattern is described by investigators as increasingly common in so-called “pig butchering” schemes.
The use of artificial intelligence tools, including automated message generation and behavioral targeting, has made it easier for criminals to maintain long-term contact with victims while appearing legitimate. IRS investigators report a sharp rise in cases where AI tools are used to craft convincing scripts, impersonate customer service agents, and tailor messages based on scraped personal data. According to comments from IRS Criminal Investigation leadership cited in reporting by CBS News, these tools are often distributed through dark web marketplaces, enabling even relatively inexperienced criminals to deploy sophisticated fraud campaigns.
Cyber-enabled crime cost Americans nearly $21 billion in 2025 alone, with more than half of reported losses tied to cryptocurrency transactions, according to the FBI’s Internet Crime Report released in April 2026 and reviewed by FBI National Press Office data. FBI officials stated that investment fraud and impersonation schemes remain among the most frequently reported cybercrimes, with artificial intelligence increasingly being used to scale them.
The Internal Revenue Service has expanded its use of blockchain tracing tools to follow illicit cryptocurrency flows across wallets and exchanges. U.S. investigators warn that the challenge extends beyond scam sophistication to the speed at which fraud tactics evolve. IRS cyber specialists have described a constant cycle of adaptation, where enforcement teams track evolving fraud patterns while criminal groups rapidly switch tools and platforms to evade detection.
Cybersecurity researchers and law enforcement officials have long warned that cryptocurrency’s pseudonymous nature makes it attractive for laundering stolen funds. A 2022 analysis of financial crime trends by CBS News highlighted how digital assets have become a preferred tool for money laundering and cross-border fraud due to the difficulty of traditional oversight mechanisms adapting to blockchain transactions. Science Focus magazine has reported on the rise of AI-generated voice cloning and deepfake impersonation used in financial scams targeting individuals and businesses, showing how scammers increasingly use realistic audio or video impersonations of family members or officials to pressure victims into urgent payments.
Authorities have urged the public to treat unsolicited investment opportunities with caution, particularly those involving cryptocurrency transfers initiated through social media or messaging apps. They stress that legitimate financial institutions do not require users to move funds into external wallets or third-party crypto accounts to access returns or bonuses.