Here's a nightmare scenario: you're being scammed so convincingly that when actual police officers show up to stop you, you think they're part of the scam.
That's exactly what happened to a 71-year-old woman in Westlake last month. She stood at a Marathon convenience store, methodically feeding cash into a Bitcoin ATM while talking on her phone. A store employee noticed something was wrong. Police arrived. Everyone tried to intervene.
Police body camera footage captured an officer's urgent warning: "We deal with this all the time, stop what you're doing, I'm telling you, stop. If somebody tells you to do this, you are being scammed."
She kept going anyway. The person on the phone, posing as a bank fraud investigator, had done their job too well.
The Elaborate Setup
The scam started with a pop-up message on her computer claiming a virus infection. From there, the scammer escalated quickly, telling the woman that illegal material had been planted on her computer and that her life savings were at risk of theft. The solution? Transfer money to a crypto machine immediately.
According to Fox 8, the scammer manipulated the woman into attempting to deposit $18,000 into the crypto ATM. She finally stopped after losing $5,500.
What Happens Next
There's a small silver lining: law enforcement managed to freeze the scammer's crypto wallet using advanced technology. Whether the victim will actually recover her lost funds remains unclear.
This incident highlights the escalating problem of cryptocurrency scams targeting vulnerable people. As crypto becomes more mainstream, these schemes are multiplying. The technology that makes digital currency convenient also makes it perfect for scammers—irreversible transactions, minimal oversight, and victims who don't fully understand what they're doing until it's too late.