FBI & Police Impersonation Scams
Americans lost $12.5 billion to fraud in 2024, according to the FTC.
In government impersonation scams, criminals pose as law enforcement to extort money, resulting in losses of $798 million in 2025 alone, according to the FBI.
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How It Works
Red Flags
- Receiving an unsolicited call from someone claiming to be with the FBI or police who threatens you with arrest.
- The caller demands immediate payment to avoid legal consequences or to clear up a supposed warrant.
- You are instructed to pay using gift cards, cryptocurrency, a wire transfer, or by mailing cash.
- The caller uses an aggressive, urgent tone and pressures you to act immediately without talking to anyone else.
- The caller ID displays the name and number of a real law enforcement agency, a common tactic known as 'spoofing'.
- They ask you to confirm personal information like your Social Security number or bank details over the phone to 'verify' your identity.
What to Do If Targeted
- Hang up the phone immediately. Do not engage with the caller, even if they have your personal information.
- Never provide personal or financial information, such as your Social Security number or bank account details, to an unsolicited caller.
- Do not make any payment. Real law enforcement agencies will never demand payment over the phone via gift cards, wire transfers, or cryptocurrency.
- Verify the claim independently. Look up the official phone number for the agency the caller claims to represent and call them directly to ask if they contacted you.
- Block the phone number to prevent further contact from the scammers.
- Report the impersonation attempt 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 nation's primary consumer protection agency.
- FBI IC3 — Report the incident to the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), which tracks cyber-enabled crime.
- 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
- Losses from government impersonation scams surged to $798 million in 2025, a significant increase from $406 million in 2024. — FBI IC3 2026 Report
- The number of reported government impersonation complaints nearly doubled from 17,367 in 2024 to 32,424 in 2025. — FBI IC3 2026 Report
- In 2023, consumers reported losing $618 million to government impersonation scams across all payment methods. — FTC June 2024 Data
- The median loss for victims who paid government impersonation scammers with cash in the first quarter of 2024 was $14,740. — FTC June 2024 Data
- Combined losses for business and government impersonation scams topped $1.1 billion in 2023, more than three times the amount reported in 2020. — FTC Data Spotlight April 2024
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