
The US Secret Service, UK National Crime Agency, and Canadian authorities have partnered to disrupt fraudulent schemes related to crypto, raise awareness of scams, and recover stolen funds.
In a Monday notice, law enforcement agencies from the three countries â including Canadaâs Ontario Provincial Police and the Ontario Securities Commission â said that they had launched âOperation Atlantic,â focusing on identifying people at risk of losing or those who had already lost crypto through âapproval phishingâ schemes.
âApproval phishing and investment scams cost victims millions in financial loss each year,â said Brent Daniels, deputy assistant director for the US Secret Serviceâs Office of Field Operations. The agencies said they hope to identify and disrupt these scams in near real-time.
According to blockchain analytics platform Chainalysis, approval phishing scams involve âthe scammer trick[ing] the user into signing a malicious blockchain transaction that gives the scammerâs address approval to spend specific tokens inside the victimâs wallet, allowing the scammer to then drain the victimâs address of those tokens at will.â
According to the Ontario Securities Commission, Operation Atlantic built upon the commissionâs Project Atlas. The operation was launched in 2024 by the Ontario Provincial Police with the US Secret Service and targeted crypto fraud networks.Â
The initiative will also work with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the City of London Police, the US Attorneyâs Office for the District of Columbia and the UKâs Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).
Related: SEC drops case against BitClout founder with prejudice
Are different phishing scams on the rise?
Phishing scams usually involve different methods, seemingly from legitimate sources, that trick users into giving fraudsters access to their crypto wallets. According to crypto intelligence platform Nominisâ monthly report, phishing attacks increased sharply in February, but the amount stolen in crypto-related scams and exploits overall fell to $49 million from $385 million in January.
Chainalysis launched Operation Spincaster in 2024, targeting âapproval phishingâ scams, which it reported had resulted in $2.7 billion in crypto stolen between May 2021 and July 2024.
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