At the 2025 FINRA Annual Conference, regulators and industry professionals gathered to discuss how financial fraud schemes, especially those involving crypto, are evolving in scale and sophistication.

The session, titled “Mitigating Impacts of Fraud and Scams Targeting Customers,” featured Christine Kieffer, Senior Director of Investor Education at FINRA; Brooks Brown, Senior Director at FINRA’s High-Risk Registered Representative Unit; Tara Ambrose, Senior Financial Fraud Ombudsperson at the Minnesota Department of Commerce; and Bismarck Prado, Director of Fraud & Senior Investor Protection at Commonwealth Financial Network.

FINRA Panel Details Rise of AI-Driven Crypto Scams

Kieffer opened by noting the growing complexity of fraud threats and the increasing overlap between investment fraud and crypto scams. She cited FTC data showing $5.7 billion in 2024 investment fraud complaints.

“They can take complaints through the BBD Scam Tracker and across all age groups, investment and cryptocurrency scams is[are] in the top three,” she said.

Ambrose described how many frauds begin with tech support scams. Fake antivirus pop-ups prompt victims to call a number, leading to an elaborate ruse involving phony bank fraud agents. “They all seem to end at the government agencies, but they start sometimes at the popup,” she stated.

Prado detailed impersonation scams that manipulate victims through staged calls, allegedly from companies like Walmart or the FTC.

According to Prado, the fraudsters ask victims to stay on the phone, drive to Bitcoin ATMs, and deposit funds. The victims are also told not to tell anyone, while the scammers create urgency by claiming the victim’s identity is tied to criminal activity.

Brooks Brown emphasized how new tools are changing scam tactics. “You’re not seeing those punctuation errors,” he said, pointing to AI-generated phishing materials and deepfake videos. “Scheme techniques are just that much more effective because of the proliferation of the toolkits and AI applied on top of it.”

Member firms should be aware of an alleged large-scale data breach possibly affecting Oracle Cloud services at firms and third-party providers. FINRA recommends that firms review this information to assess any potential impact to their operations, as well as with third-party… pic.twitter.com/rvPR65ixQP

— FINRA (@FINRA) April 3, 2025

Preventing Fraud Requires Cross-Industry Response

Panelists emphasized that these scams are not limited to seniors. Ambrose noted that midlife professionals, entrepreneurs, and tech-savvy investors are often among the hardest hit.

“The biggest losses I’ve seen in my current role at my past firm involved cryptocurrency investments,” she said. “They already were sophisticated investors, and somehow they got convinced to move money out of a legitimate crypto wallet into a specialized trading platform that was fake. And so they were doing the trades. They thought they were earning money.”

To combat such threats, the panel recommended proactive strategies. Brown urged firms to utilize FINRA Rule 2165, which allows temporary holds on suspicious account activity.

He also pointed to the FINRA Securities Helpline for Seniors, which has helped recover over $9 million since its launch without opening formal investigations.

As fraud tactics become more technologically advanced, traditional safeguards are losing ground. Real-time interventions are now essential as scammers exploit tools like AI-generated personas and decentralized platforms to bypass institutional checks.

The panel stressed that financial crime prevention can no longer sit solely with compliance teams. It now requires coordination across fraud detection, client services, tech platforms, and even telecom providers.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

What role do telecom providers play in scam prevention?

Many frauds rely on real-time communication, such as phone calls and text messages. Telecom providers can help identify spoofed numbers, block known scam calls, and support law enforcement investigations.

How can mid-sized firms without advanced fraud teams respond effectively?

Smaller firms are encouraged to use “smart friction” tactics, such as additional verifications before crypto withdrawals, and provide clear client alerts. They can also partner with third-party monitoring services that flag unusual behavior.

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