Sarah matched with “Michael” on a dating app. For two months, they chatted daily about their lives. Michael occasionally mentioned his crypto investments. When Sarah expressed interest, he helped her set up an account on what seemed like a legitimate exchange.
Over four months, Sarah made 12 separate bank transfers from her Barclays account, totaling £75,000 of her life savings. Each time, she used the bank’s app to send money to accounts Michael provided, using references he specified. When she finally tried to withdraw, the website disappeared, as did Michael.
After losing £10,000 to a crypto scam, Emma received an email from “Crypto Recovery Solutions” claiming they specialized in retrieving funds from fraudulent exchanges. They showed her “evidence” they had found her money and needed £2,000 via bank transfer to “initiate recovery proceedings.”
Emma, desperate to recover her losses, made the payment from her Santander account. The “recovery specialists” then claimed they needed an additional £3,000 for “release fees.” After sending this second payment, all contact ceased. Emma had now lost £15,000 in total.
If you’ve fallen victim to a cryptocurrency scam involving bank transfers:
At APP Claims, we specialize in helping victims of APP fraud reclaim their money, even when banks have initially rejected reimbursement requests:
All on a No Win, No Fee basis.
Cryptocurrency scams are devastating, but you don’t have to face the aftermath alone. Contact APP Claims today to start your recovery journey and fight for the reimbursement you deserve.
This information is regularly updated as new crypto scam variants emerge. Last updated: April 2025.