The enticement of a cryptocurrency jackpot mixed with professed true love proved to be a costly combination for a Twin Cities man who kept his wife in the dark about the siphoning of their savings.
Police say the Eden Prairie resident was cheated out of more than $9 million over an increasingly costly half-year span when someone he connected with on LinkedIn reeled him in with promises of quick riches and a plea for him to abandon his wife and run off together.
"No one in the office has heard of a crypto fraud case as big," John Stiles, spokesman for Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, said of how the monetary loss ranks among their cryptocurrency scam investigations. "In fact, their eyes popped when I told them the amount."
The slippery-slope disappearance of the couple's money is detailed in a search warrant affidavit that an Eden Prairie police detective filed in Hennepin County District Court asking permission for him to scrutinize the man's financial dealings from Dec. 21 to June 8, when the last of the wire transactions was made.
The supposed investments the man believed would yield big cryptocurrency returns went from routinely topping $100,000 to $2.1 million in a single transaction in the scheme's waning days, the filing disclosed.
The damage, according the detective, who specializes in cryptocurrency and romance scams: $9.2 million in 21 transactions.
In the simplest terms, cryptocurrency is unregulated digital money, which is usually named by the company offering it. You buy a certain amount and your transaction is recorded in a digital ledger, which down the line is used to make sure you have enough of a balance to cover your transaction.
Here's how Eden Prairie police say in the search warrant affidavit the scam played out: