Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Impersonation Scam
Americans lost $12.5 billion to fraud in 2024, according to the FTC.
In Customs and Border Protection (CBP) impersonation scams, criminals pose as CBP officers to steal money and personal information, part of a larger government impersonation scheme that resulted in $618 million in reported losses in 2023.
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How It Works
Red Flags
- Receiving an unsolicited call, text, or email from someone claiming to be from CBP.
- The caller threatens you with arrest or other legal action if you do not comply with their demands immediately.
- You are asked to pay a fee or fine using gift cards, cryptocurrency, or a wire transfer.
- The person asks for personal information like your Social Security number, bank account number, or passwords.
- The caller ID shows a government agency's name or number; this can be faked through a technique called spoofing.
- The caller provides a real agent's name or badge number found online to seem credible.
- You are pressured to act quickly and told not to speak to anyone else about the situation.
What to Do If Targeted
- Hang up the phone immediately. Do not respond to any texts or emails.
- Never provide personal or financial information to an unsolicited caller.
- Do not make any payment. Government agencies like CBP will never demand payment via phone using gift cards, wire transfers, or cryptocurrency.
- Block the phone number to prevent further contact.
- Independently verify the claims by looking up the official phone number for CBP and calling them directly. Do not use any contact information provided by the potential scammer.
- Report the incident to the appropriate authorities to help them track and stop these criminals.
How to Report It
- FTC — File a fraud report with the Federal Trade Commission, the primary agency for collecting scam reports.
- FBI IC3 — Report the incident to the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3).
- FCC — File a complaint about phone scams, robocalls, or unwanted calls with the Federal Communications Commission.
- AARP Fraud Helpline — Call 877-908-3360 for free support from trained fraud specialists. Available to anyone, not just AARP members.
Key Statistics
- Consumers reported losing $618 million to government impersonation scams in 2023, up from $497 million in 2022. — FTC 2024
- The FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) recorded nearly 32,500 government impersonation complaints in 2025, with associated losses of approximately $800 million. — FBI IC3 2026
- In the first quarter of 2024 alone, consumers reported losing $20 million in cash to government impersonation scams. — FTC 2024
- The median loss for victims who paid cash to government impersonators in the first three months of 2024 was $14,740. — FTC 2024
- The FTC received nearly 160,000 reports of government impersonation scams in 2023. — FTC 2024
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