What is
pig butchering?
Pig butchering is a theft that relies on the trust of the victim that occurs over a long period of time, involves a fake identity by the scammer, initial contact by the scammer, an increase of investment in the scam by the victim, and a sudden escape by the scammer.
pig butchering
a sub-type of the "long con" confidence game
Pig Butchering is a new twist on an old type of confidence game. Pig butchering is a type of “long con.” A long con is a confidence game involving multiple stages over a long period of time. The initial stages are designed to gain the victim’s trust. Middle stages involve increasing the profitability of the scam. The last stages include theft and escape. Characteristics of a long con include:
- Complexity: Long con scams are elaborate. They are planned out well in advance. They often involve a team of thieves with specialized individual roles.
- Long Time Period: Long cons take time to complete. The time period will depend upon how long it takes the scam to be completed. This may entail, days, months, even years to unfold.
- Trust: Con artists perpetrating a long con rely upon the potential victim lowering their defenses. The victim is known as the “mark” in the business. The mark/victim voluntarily lowers their defenses based upon their trust of the thief.
- Illusion of Control: Trust is frequently inadequate for a long con artist to complete the scam. Remaining skepticism is addressed by created a mirage that the victim remains in control to address feelings of risk.
- A Created Stage: Long con scams nearly always involve a setting that has been created to bolster that their scam is a reality. This “stage” may include props, sets, fake offices, fake websites, extra actors, and scripted lines.
- Bypassing Small Profits: Long con artists intentionally and overtly turn down opportunities to profit small amounts. Such gestures are contrived to bolster trust, a feeling of security, and lower the mark’s defenses.
- A Contrived Emotion of Security: Long con scams have the goal of enticing the target victim into feeling the emotion of security. A long con depends upon its victim voluntarily allowing the theft because they feel no risk.
pig butchering
as a farming reference
Pig butchering is a name taken from farming. It is typical for a pig farmer to fatten a pig before killing it. Over a period of several months, the farmer feeds the pig a high fat diet to increase its fat percentage. In addition, the fattened pig is kept in a low stress environment to keep cortisol and epinephrine hormone levels low to maximize meat quality.
Young “suckling” pigs are butchered at six to eight months of age for their high quality tender meat. Older pigs of two years or older yield much more meat, but have higher myoglobin and intramuscular fat, yielding a larger quantity of darker, lower quality meat. Time matters when it comes to pig butchering, whether at a farm or through a crypto scam.
The process of human pig butchering scam victims is analogous.
where did
pig butchering scams originally come from?
“Pig butchering” originated in China. The Chinese term is “shu zhu pan.” Its translation means “killing pig plate.” The first Chinese pig butchering scams started in 2016 as a regional crime perpetrated on same-sex dating sites. It was an effective scam.
Pig Butchering expanded in type to opposite sex dating sites, then to gambling operations, then through multiple scam types. Pig butchering scams also expanded in location. They spread from China to Sihanoukville, Cambodia, to the Philippines, then to Thailand, then globally.
Pig butchering scams are perpetrated in different flavors. The type of scam will relate to a combination of (1) how the victim’s trust is gained, and (2) how possession of the victim’s assets is gained. The types of pig butchering scams include:
- Investment scams
- Romance/Confidence – Catfishing Scams
- Fake Crypto Trading Website Scams
- Fake Liquidity Provider Scams
- Fake Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs)
- Lottery / Sweepstakes / Inheritance
- Simulated Gambling
- Fake Gaming App – Play to Earn
- Simulated Arbitrage
- Personal Data Breach / Phishing for confidential information
- SIM Swap
- Tech-Support scams
- BEC Business Email Compromise
- Government impersonation
- Identity Theft
- The fake Bait and Switch Investor
- Real Estate scam
- Ransomware
- Malware
- BOTnet
- Extortion
- Harassment / Stalking
- Fake crypto scam recovery efforts
- Non-Payment, Non-Delivery
- Overpayment scam
- Copyright / Counterfeit scam
What are the types
of pig butchering scams?
What are the worst
pig butchering scams?
Romance based pig butchering scams rank number one (#1) by a sizeable margin as measured by average payout. The list of the top scams is as follows:
- 1. Romance Average = $4,593.00
- 2. NFT scams Average = $4,095.00
- 3. Giveaway Average = $1,113.00
- 4. Impersonation Average = $948.00
- 5. Charity Average = $904.00
- 6. Phishing Average = $750.00
- 7. Extorsion Average = $750.00
- 8. Investment Average = $413.00
- Unsolicited contact: Be wary of unexpected messages from unknown numbers or social media accounts. Also, be careful on dating apps to verify that the contact is a real person.
- Too-good-to-be-true investments: Claims of guaranteed high returns with little or no risk are red flags. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
- Pressure to invest quickly: Legitimate opportunities rarely require rushed decisions.
- Romantic interest from strangers: Be cautious of online suitors who quickly profess strong feelings and then ask for money.
- Requests for personal information: Don’t share sensitive data like bank details with unverified individuals.
Warning signs
of a pig butchering
- Unregistered investment platforms: Check if investment websites or apps are registered with official regulators.
- Difficulty withdrawing funds: Be suspicious if you can’t easily cash out your supposed investment returns.
- Inconsistent or vague details: Watch out for contradictory information or a lack of concrete specifics about the supposed investment.
- Promises of easy riches: Be skeptical of anyone claiming that you can get rich quick with minimal effort.
- Persistent attempts to isolate you: It’s a red flag if scammers try to monopolize your attention and cut you off from loved ones.
what are the stages
of a pig butchering scam?
There are four general stages of a pig butchering scam. The goal is to lure the victim into voluntarily giving up an increasingly large amount of their assets. Pig butchering stages include:
- 1. Trust Creation: Scammers start slowly and avoid any indication of a profit motive. The goal of stage one is gaining the victim’s trust so as to lower the victim’s guard. This is done by offering helpful advice, indicating romantic interest, fostering friendship, and giving other value.
- 2. The Lure: Once trust is established, the potential victim is introduced to an enticing offer. Whatever the offer may be, it will have two components. First, it will seem innocent, trustworthy, and profitable. Second, the offer will involve the victim giving up control of assets.
- 3. Money Release: Stage three has the pig butchering victim transferring control of assets. This may be a transfer to the scammer, personally. Often the transfer is to a “trusted” third party. Cryptocurrency is often used as a means of transfer. The victim at this point will believe they can reverse the transaction. In some instances, small “test” withdrawal transactions are allowed. The critical attribute of the Money Release stage is the permanent loss of custody of the majority of the victim’s released assets.
- 4. The Fattening: The victim will ostensibly see their “investments” rise in value during this stage. Efforts will be made to increase trust in the investment. Efforts will be made to isolate the victim, causing them to mistrust sources other than the scammer. Key to this stage is the acceleration of the amount of investment.
- 5. The Vanishing: The scammers exit when they conclude they have extracted as much of the assets of the victim they can get. Communication channels are normally cut. Websites are abandoned. Funds are tumbled, mixed, divided, filtered through many transactions channels to hide their final destination. The goal of Stage Four Vanishing is escape with no means of redress for the pig butchering victim.
THE RELEASE OF FUNDS SCAM – ADDING SALT TO A WOUND
Pig Butchering After Scams:
A tip off and nuance of the pig butchering scam is the demand for additional money for the release of scammed funds. These money demands are for taxes, fees, costs, early withdrawal penalties, and other excuses. The tipoff is that money must be paid to release money, which is nearly never the case in legitimate businesses.
More rarely, “after” scammers pose as recovery specialists, who ask for money up front to recover assets, then disappear.
WHAT MEANS OF COMMUNICATION ARE USED FOR PIG BUTCHERING SCAMS?
There are common communications for pig butchering scammers. The channels are chosen by ease of entry, lack of confirmation of identity, and ease of escape. These channels include:
Text messages
Dating apps, like Tinder, Bumble, Hinge, and OkCupid
Social media platforms like Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram, WeChat, Telegram, Snapchat, and Pinterest
VOIP chat apps like WhatsApp, KrispCall, 8×8, OpenPhone, GoogleVoice, and RingEx
Email applications like Gmail, Outlook, Yahoo, AOL, Canary Mail, and Zimbra
The largest number of pig butchering scams come from the following nations:
- North Korea
- Russia
- Myanmar (Myanmarese town, Myawaddy, Cambodia)
- Iran
from where
do the scams originate?
Other “hot spots” for crypto crime include:
- United States
- United Kingdom
- Japan
- Hong Kong
- Canada
- British Virgin Islands (BVI)
- Seychelles
- South Korea
- Singapore
- Vanuatu
- Poland
- New Zealand
- Italy
- Marshall Islands
- Switzerland
There are major players within the cryptocurrency criminal industry. These individuals and organizations are the most sophisticated players. They also comprise the largest recipients of crypto-based criminal activity.
who are the "big players?"
among cyber criminals
Crypto criminal enterprises include:
- Kimsuky espionage: North Korea
- io mixer: Netherlands, Finland, Russia
- Ekaterina Zhdanova money laundering: Russia
- MSB Buy Cash terrorism financing: Gaza
- Fentanyl Drug Producers: China
- Sinaloa Cartel drug trafficking and money laundering: Mexico
- Trickbot affiliates ransomware: Russia
- John Desmond Hanafin, and Affiliates sanctions evasion: Dubai/Russia
- Mikhail Matveev ransomware: Russia
- DPRK money laundering: China
- Genesis Market fraud and stolen PII: Russia
- Trickbot malware: Russia
- Igor Vladimirovich Zimenkov arms dealing: Russia
WHAT CIVIL LAWS ARE BEING BROKEN BY PIG BUTCHERING SCAMMERS?
- Conversion to Chattels
- Trespass to Chattels
- Conversion of Real Property
- Trespass to land (realty)
- Intentional Misrepresentation
- Fraud
- Interference with contractual relations
- Breach of Warranty of Title to Personalty
- Breach of Implied Warranty of Fitness for a Particular Purpose
- Breach of Implied Warranty of Merchantability
- Intentional infliction of emotional distress
- Negligent infliction of emotional distress
- Misappropriation
- Breach of contract
- Nuisance
- Seduction
- Malpractice
- Quantum Meruit
- Negligence Per Se
- Res Ipsa Loquitur
- Conspiracy
- Replevin
- Trover
WHAT CRIMINAL LAWS ARE BEING BROKEN BY PIG BUTCHERING SCAMMERS?
can crypto scammers
be prosecuted?
Over sixty thousand crypto scam crimes are reported in the United States, alone, every year. From that large number, only a very few cases are brought against cyber criminals.
Consider how few cases are attempted among the top ten countries:
- 30 cases in North Korea
- 15 cases in the United States
- 8 cases in Russia
- 9 cases in China
- 13 cases in the United Kingdom
- 6 cases in Japan
- 5 case in Hong Kong
- 5 cases in Canada
- 3 cases in the British Virgin Islands
- 4 cases in the Seychelles
Of those few filings, virtually no cyber criminals are convicted or serve any time in prison. There are a number of reasons for the paltry number of criminal convictions of crypto scammers. Those reasons include the inability of identifying the culprit, the fact that the vast majority of criminals are foreign nationals from countries without an extradition treaty, and the diffusion of culpability across multiple members of criminal gangs. Intent to commit a crime is also an issue, surprisingly. Many times, the person committing the crime is being held against their will and is being forced by a criminal gang.
There have been no published cases involving “pig butchering” in any U.S. court as of the date of this publication. This search includes:
- State appeals courts
- State Supreme courts
- Federal district courts
- Federal appeals courts
- The United States Supreme Court
pig butchering scams
in the courtroom
The lack of appearance of pig butchering cases is United States Courts is indicative of their international nature, the lack of an effective means of gaining jurisdiction over the criminals, the ability to enforce any judgment against scammers, and the high economic costs of bringing lawsuit.
There is a small group of crypto scam recovery lawyers working to achieve justice using the legal system presently. Whether these efforts will ultimately succeed, expand, fail, or contract is unknown.
CAN STOLEN CRYPTO FROM A PIG BUTCHERING SCAM BE RECOVERED?
Crypto stolen by pig butchering scammers can only be recovered in rare cases. It is common for victims to believe they merely need to file a police report, or disclose to the FBI, and their crypto will be returned. This is not the case.
what must be done?
to recover from a pig butchering scam
There is hope for the some to recover their scammed crypto. The precise method of recovery is kept secret by crypto recovery lawyers to reduce the likelihood that scammers will adapt their methods to further evade culpability.
Do you represent a crypto loss that qualifies for a recovery effort?
Contact us if you have been scammed out of more than $200,000 in crypto.
Your losses may be recoverable.
Trial lawyer Matt Hamilton graduated from the University of Missouri in 1995 with Science degrees in Logistics, Marketing, and Business Administration. Juris Doctor, 1999.
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