Scammers have already hit more than 700 crypto wallets — some holding over a million dollars in stablecoins — with a phishing scheme disguised as a federal law enforcement action.
The operation targets users of the Tron blockchain. Criminals mint a token with the FBI’s name attached, then airdrop it into wallets with a message warning recipients that their accounts are flagged for investigation.
From there, victims are told to complete an anti-money laundering check on an outside website or face a full freeze of their funds.
The FBI’s New York Field Office confirmed the scam Thursday and warned users not to click, visit, or share any personal data connected to the token. “Do not provide any identifying information to any website associated with such a token,” the office posted on X.
No email. No phone call. The threat arrives directly inside the wallet — a newer tactic that gives the fraud an air of legitimacy it doesn’t deserve.
Sending tokens on Tron costs almost nothing. That makes it practical to flood thousands of wallets with almost zero upfront cost.
The network also handles a large volume of USDT transfers, drawing in holders of significant value. Last year, a joint effort by Tether, TRM Labs, and the Tron network froze over $100 million in assets tied to illicit activity.
A January 2026 report from TRM Labs identified Tron as a preferred tool for sanctions evasion linked to Iran. TRON DAO has since brought in Blockaid’s security tools to screen for malicious tokens before users interact with them.
The fake FBI token was created about eight days before authorities went public with the warning. By then, it had already landed in 728 wallets, according to Tronscan data.
The Numbers Behind A Worsening ProblemThe FBI token is one piece of a much larger surge in crypto-based fraud. According to Chainalysis’s 2026 Crypto Crime Report, scams and fraud pulled in at least $14 billion in on-chain funds during 2025, with the actual figure likely topping $17 billion.
Impersonation attacks — the category this scheme falls into — climbed 1,400% compared to the previous year. The FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center recorded $9.3 billion in cryptocurrency fraud losses for 2024, a 66% jump from 2023.
Reports also indicate that signature phishing losses spiked over 200% in January 2026 versus the prior month, even as the total number of victims dropped — a sign that attackers are shifting focus to fewer, wealthier targets.
Anyone who has already interacted with the token or provided information to a linked site is urged by the FBI to file a report at ic3.gov.
Featured image from Pexels, chart from TradingView


