Money Mule Recruitment Scams
Americans lost $12.5 billion to fraud in 2024, according to the FTC.
Money mule scams recruit individuals, sometimes unknowingly, to launder stolen money for criminals, contributing to the $16.6 billion in losses reported to the FBI from internet crimes in 2024.
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How It Works
Red Flags
- You receive an unsolicited job offer that promises high pay for minimal effort, with a vague or nonexistent job description.
- The "employer" or online romantic partner asks you to use your personal bank account or open a new one to receive and transfer money.
- Communications from the recruiter are poorly written, contain grammatical errors, and exclusively use free web-based email services (like Gmail or Outlook).
- You are told to keep a portion of the money you transfer as payment or commission.
- The person you've only met online asks you to receive money and forward it to individuals you do not know.
- The job duties involve nothing more than receiving and sending money or packages.
- You are asked to purchase large amounts of cryptocurrency or gift cards with the funds you receive.
What to Do If Targeted
- Immediately stop all communication with the person who recruited you.
- Do not transfer any more money or packages. Keep any funds you have already received in your account.
- Notify your bank or financial institution immediately and explain that you believe you have been targeted in a money mule scam.
- Preserve all communications, including emails, text messages, and receipts, as evidence for law enforcement.
- Report the incident to the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) at ic3.gov.
- File a report with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) at reportfraud.ftc.gov.
How to Report It
- FBI IC3 — Report internet-enabled crime, including money mule activity, to the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center.
- FTC — File a fraud report with the Federal Trade Commission, which shares information with law enforcement agencies.
- 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
- The FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) received 859,532 complaints in 2024 with reported losses exceeding $16.6 billion, a 33% increase from 2023. — FBI IC3 2024 Internet Crime Report
- Consumers reported losing more than $12.5 billion to fraud in 2024, a 25% increase over the prior year, with 38% of people who reported a fraud saying they lost money. — FTC 2025
- Business Email Compromise (BEC) scams, which heavily rely on money mules to move funds, resulted in nearly $2.8 billion in losses from 21,442 complaints in 2024. — FBI IC3 2024 Internet Crime Report
- In 2024, the top payment methods by reported fraud losses were bank transfers ($2.09 billion) and cryptocurrency ($1.42 billion), both common methods used by money mules. — FTC Consumer Sentinel Network Data Book 2024
- Losses from job and employment agency scams, a primary method for recruiting money mules, grew from $90 million to $501 million between 2020 and 2024. — FTC 2025
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