emotional manipulation at the heart of rising crypto atm hoaxes
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Scammers overwhelm victims with fake alerts, “refund” mistakes, staged transfers, phony government IDs, and impersonated bank staff.
One Florida woman lost $250,000 to a scammer pretending to be Jason Momoa. Another elderly victim paid $130,000 after being fooled by a fake Wells Fargo employee — and died months later.
Experts say scammers exploit truth bias, keeping victims isolated so the scammer becomes “the only source of information entering their brain.” -
Scammers rely on panic and pressure — emotional triggers make victims act fast.

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Crypto ATMs are becoming tools for psychological fraud rather than convenience.

