European authorities have shut down a crypto-fraud ring that had amassed more than €100 million (approximately $107 million) by duping individuals across the continent.
Eurojust, the European Union Agency for Criminal Justice Cooperation, coordinated the operation this week. Authorities in Spain, Portugal, Italy, Romania, and Bulgaria carried out simultaneous raids, arresting five suspects—including the alleged ringleader—while freezing assets and searching multiple premises.
Victims of the scheme were spread across Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and other countries, and were lured into investing through professional-looking online platforms that promised extraordinary returns. According to Eurojust, the fraud had operated for years, incorporating elaborate money-laundering networks to disguise illicit gains.
The case revealed the highly technical playbook that scammers increasingly deploy. Fraudulent websites mimicked the interfaces of legitimate financial services, complete with fake dashboards displaying fabricated account balances, real-time trading graphs, and customer support channels.
To build trust, some victims were subjected to sham know-your-customer (KYC) procedures, including uploading IDs and personal information, giving the platforms a veneer of regulatory compliance. In reality, funds deposited were never invested but were siphoned into layered laundering chains, often routed through multiple exchanges, mixers, and shell companies to obfuscate their origin.
Eurojust investigators noted that the group maintained a network of accounts across different jurisdictions, using fast-moving transfers to frustrate tracing efforts.
During the action day, national investigators coordinated to freeze bank accounts, seize digital infrastructure, and preserve forensic evidence from servers and devices. Authorities said that international cooperation was key, since the infrastructure supporting the fraud was dispersed across several countries. The coordinated seizures were designed not just to capture assets but also to map out the wider ecosystem of accomplices and enablers behind the operation.
Crypto-Fraud on the Rise
The takedown comes against the backdrop of an alarming rise in cryptocurrency-related fraud worldwide. In the United States, the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center reported that crypto fraud losses in 2023 had climbed to $5.6 billion, a 45% increase over the previous year, based on nearly 70,000 complaints.
Read: Massive Spike in Crypto Fraud: FBI Reports Over $5.6 Billion Losses in 2023
One year later, losses surged again to $9.3 billion in 2024, representing a 66% year-on-year jump. The steep growth showed how fraudsters were capitalizing on public enthusiasm for digital assets and the lack of robust safeguards in many investment channels.
Europe has faced a parallel surge. Belgium’s Financial Services and Markets Authority disclosed that in the second half of 2024 alone, reported fraud losses reached €15.9 million, with nearly €12.5 million tied to bogus crypto-trading platforms.
Eurojust itself has been pulled into several major investigations over the past two years, including a 2023 operation targeting fraudulent call centers in Ukraine and Georgia that defrauded thousands of victims across 20 countries. Those cases, like the most recent takedown, relied heavily on cross-border coordination and swift asset freezes to prevent funds from vanishing into untraceable crypto wallets.
Several factors explain why crypto fraud has scaled so rapidly. The irreversible nature of blockchain transactions means victims have little recourse once their funds are transferred. Fraudulent platforms often deploy convincing user interfaces, engineered to instill confidence through professional branding, real-time trading data simulations, and customer support scripts.
The use of fake KYC steps, while giving a sense of legitimacy, also enabled fraudsters to harvest sensitive personal data for secondary exploitation. Meanwhile, laundering tactics such as “smurfing” transactions into smaller sums, routing through mixers, and leveraging lightly regulated exchanges allowed scammers to convert illicit gains into fiat currencies with relative ease.
With crypto investment scams doubling in the United States in just one year and European regulators issuing repeated warnings, cryptocurrency fraud has become a defining cybercrime of the decade. The dismantling of this €100M scheme adds urgency to ongoing debates over stricter oversight of crypto exchanges, stronger consumer protections, and more aggressive international policing.
While the latest takedown marked a victory, experts agree that fraudsters will continue to exploit the trust gap between emerging technologies and investors eager for quick returns.