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Aussie regulator to shut 95 ‘hydra’ firms linked to crypto, romance scams

Australia’s corporate watchdog has been given the nod to shut down 95 “hydra” companies that it suspects engaged in crypto investment and romance scams, known as “pig butchering.”

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission’s application to wind up the companies was approved by the Federal Court of Australia on just and equitable grounds after ASIC found that most of the companies had been incorporated with false information.

Many of these companies were set up purporting to provide “genuine services” but were instead believed to be scamming their victims, ASIC Deputy Chair Sarah Court said in an April 8 statement.

“There appears to be a common pattern of scam activity in the nature of ‘pig butchering,’” Justice Angus Stewart said in an April 4 court ruling after looking at 48 “Reviews of Misconduct” from 17 companies accused of facilitating romance scams. The judgment was made on March 21.

Aussie regulator to shut 95 ‘hydra’ firms linked to crypto, romance scams

Source: Rocky Perrotta

Pig butchering scams involve scammers building fake relationships with victims to win their trust before convincing them to invest in a fraudulent crypto or financial scheme.

The securities regulator also suspects that much of the scam activity is coming from Southeast Asia.

Insolvency and restructuring advisers Catherine Conneely and Thomas Birch of Cor Cordis have been appointed as joint liquidators of the 95 companies.

Related: Australian regulator’s ‘blitz’ hits crypto exchanges, money remitters

Nearly 1,500 claims by “investors” had been received by the provisional liquidators, amounting to total claims of over $35.8 million, according to the court order.

The claimants are based in 14 countries, including Australia, the US, Cameroon, Ghana, India, Nepal, the Philippines and France.

The provisional liquidators found that only three of the 95 firms had assets to their name and recommended that the other 92 companies be wound up and immediately deregistered.

ASIC shutting down scam websites

ASIC said it has been removing around 130 scam websites each week of late, bringing its total to over 10,000 sites, which have included over 7,200 fake investment platform scams and 1,564 phishing scams.

“However, these scams are like hydras: you shut down one and two more take its place. That’s why we’re warning consumers that the threat of scams and identity fraud remains high. We remind consumers to be vigilant,” Court said.

Australia’s National Anti-Scam Centre recently reported a 26% fall in scam losses to $2 billion in 2024, while the number of scam reports also fell by 17.8% to 494,732.

Magazine: Financial nihilism in crypto is over — It’s time to dream big again

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US seizes 145 domains, crypto linked to BidenCash dark web market

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US seizes 145 domains, crypto linked to BidenCash dark web market

US seizes 145 domains, crypto linked to BidenCash dark web market

US authorities seized 145 domains and crypto linked to BidenCash, a dark web market accused of selling millions of stolen credit cards.

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California advances bill on unclaimed crypto and merchant payments

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California advances bill on unclaimed crypto and merchant payments

California advances bill on unclaimed crypto and merchant payments

The bill has seen contention online, but Satoshi Action Fund’s Eric Peterson says it updates the state’s unclaimed property laws so crypto doesn’t get liquidated.

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Andy Burnham: ‘Nigel Farage could become PM – this is how Labour can stop him’

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Andy Burnham: 'Nigel Farage could become PM - this is how Labour can stop him'

Nigel Farage could be the next prime minister – but Labour could beat him by connecting with voters more, Greater Manchester’s Labour mayor has told Sky News.

Andy Burnham, talking to Beth Rigby on the Electoral Dysfunction podcast, said the Reform UK leader winning the next election “is in the realms of possibility”.

“But we’ve got to make sure that it doesn’t become a reality,” he said.

“I don’t ever demonstrate complacency as a politician, I will always say it like it is.

“He’s connected with people, maybe not everybody, but he’s connected.”

Asked if he thinks Labour are not connecting with voters at the moment, he said he does not think his party is speaking enough about “working class ambition”.

Mr Burnham said there are “hundreds of thousands” of people in Greater Manchester who are being “held back by their housing situation”.

More on Andy Burnham

He said previous generations would have had council housing to “propel them to do amazing things” and if the government can follow up with its promise to build 1.5 million homes “they will really connect with people”.

The mayor said his party has not “spoken properly for quite some time now” to young people and their parents who want alternatives to the university route.

He said Labour has only seemed to care “in some people’s minds” about the university route, which “leaves a disconnect”.

To really come up strong against Mr Farage, Mr Burnham said Labour have “got to really speak to that working class ambition”.

He added: “I think Starmer has got to respond to the changing world that we’re in.”

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