A retired attorney in New York received a LinkedIn connection request from an attractive, well-educated woman who appeared to work in finance. They began messaging. Over 75 days, she became a trusted presence in his life — smart, caring, supportive. She also happened to have insider knowledge about a cryptocurrency trading platform that was generating extraordinary returns.
He invested. He watched his "balance" grow. When he tried to withdraw, there were fees. Then taxes. Then unexpected charges. Every dollar he sent to resolve them vanished. By the time he realized what had happened, he had lost $468,000.
This is not an unusual story. Romance scams cost Americans $1.14 billion in 2024 alone, according to the Federal Trade Commission — and the most sophisticated version of this fraud, known as "pig butchering," extracted an estimated $75.3 billion globally between 2020 and 2024.
What "Pig Butchering" Means — and Why the Name Matters
The term "pig butchering" comes from the Chinese phrase shā zhū pán — the practice of fattening a pig before slaughter. In fraud terms, the "fattening" is the weeks or months a scammer spends building genuine emotional trust with a victim before the financial exploitation begins.
Traditional romance scams ask for money relatively quickly — a sick child, a stranded traveler, an emergency. Pig butchering is different. The scammer often waits months before money is ever mentioned. The "relationship" — whether romantic, platonic, or professional — is cultivated patiently and carefully. The victim is never pushed. They are led.
The Four Phases of a Pig Butchering Scam
Why Older Americans Are Specifically Targeted
Pig butchering scammers are methodical researchers. They favor targets who are widowed, divorced, or recently bereaved — individuals who may be experiencing social isolation and are genuinely open to new connection. Social media provides a detailed map: a recent post about a spouse's death, a comment about loneliness, a profile that mentions being recently retired or newly single.
They also favor people with visible financial stability — home ownership, professional backgrounds, retirement savings visible through real estate records or investment group memberships. The $468,000 loss described above is not the ceiling. Documented cases show losses of $1 million, $2 million, and more from single victims.
A study from the University of Texas estimated total global losses to pig butchering scams at $75.3 billion between January 2020 and 2024. Because these crimes are significantly underreported — many victims are too embarrassed to come forward — the real number is almost certainly far higher.
The Investment Platform Is Always Fake
The cryptocurrency or forex trading platform recommended by the scammer is always fraudulent. It is built to look exactly like a real financial platform — professional design, live-seeming price charts, a customer support chat, and a "balance" that grows visibly as you watch. But none of the money you deposit is being invested in anything. It sits in an account controlled by the scam operation.
The "profits" you see on screen are numbers the scammers set. They deliberately show high returns early to encourage larger deposits. When you try to withdraw, you are told there is a 20% tax, a verification fee, a compliance deposit, or a withdrawal minimum. Every requirement is invented. Every payment to resolve it goes directly to the scammers.
Warning Signs at Every Stage
Red flags to recognize this pattern
- ⚠ Contact begins with an unsolicited "wrong number" message or unexpected social media connection
- ⚠ The person is unusually attentive and communicates with you very consistently — sometimes multiple times per day
- ⚠ They claim to live or work overseas and can never meet in person, always citing work travel, military deployment, or medical situations
- ⚠ After weeks of conversation, they mention a trading platform, investment opportunity, or cryptocurrency app that is "generating strong returns"
- ⚠ They offer to help you set up a small account and show you the returns growing in real time
- ⚠ When you try to withdraw, there are unexpected fees, taxes, or verification requirements
- ⚠ The person becomes more urgent and emotional when you express doubt — pleading, crying, or claiming the problem will resolve if you just send a little more
What to Do If You Think You're Being Targeted
- Do a reverse image search. Right-click any photo the person has shared and search Google Images or TinEye. Scammers routinely steal photos from strangers' social media profiles. If the photo appears on multiple accounts under different names, it's stolen.
- Never send money to someone you have not met in person, regardless of how long you have been communicating and regardless of how well you feel you know them.
- Verify any investment platform independently. Before depositing anything, search the platform name plus the word "scam" or "reviews" online. Check the SEC's investor.gov and FINRA BrokerCheck for registered firms. If it doesn't appear, it isn't legitimate.
- Tell someone. Describe the situation to a trusted friend, family member, or financial advisor. Scammers rely on secrecy. A fresh perspective almost always catches what emotional involvement prevents you from seeing.
- If you've already sent money: Contact your bank or transfer service immediately. File a complaint with the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov and the FBI at ic3.gov. Call the AARP Fraud Watch Network at 877-908-3360 for guidance specific to your situation.
There is no shame in this. These operations are run by large, sophisticated criminal organizations — sometimes employing hundreds of people in overseas call centers. The psychological manipulation is engineered by professionals who study human behavior. Falling for this scam reflects the skill of the people running it, not a failure of judgment on your part.
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