You Won’t Believe What Scammers Are Doing With Fake Crypto Tokens 🕵️‍♂️💸

It’s hard to believe that somewhere in the mysterious underbelly of the internet-that place where cats wear bow ties and cryptocurrency makes sense to absolutely nobody-fake tokens are busy multiplying like rabbits at a carrot festival. CoinMarketCap, whose job it is to track the world’s wildest currencies and not, in fact, create them, has issued enough warnings this year to qualify for sainthood or at least a frequent flyer card for Emergency Outrage.

SCAM ALERT: CoinMarketCap does NOT have a Token/Coin. If you see a promotion for CMC-Tokens, it is a Fake/Scam!

– CoinMarketCap (@CoinMarketCap) September 10, 2025

Apparently, posting warnings on social media is the new knocking on doors and shouting, “The end is nigh!” CoinMarketCap repeated their scam-alert so many times, new cryptonauts assumed it was part of the onboarding ritual.

The situation got so dire that the team clarified-even for those still trying to find their WiFi password-that CoinMarketCap would never call you. Not because they don’t care, but because they don’t actually own a phone number. So, if you get a call from someone saying they’re selling you “exclusive CMC-tokens,” congratulations! You have reached peak scammer magnetism. 🥇

Scammers Running Amok (Now Featuring ATMs)

The industry is now beset by scammers using not just fake tokens but actual machines. Athena Bitcoin, for example, set up crypto ATMs and apparently, the only thing flowing through them was chutzpah and… well, fraudulent deposits. DC Attorney General Brian Schwalb was so unimpressed he filed a lawsuit, revealing Athena collected hidden fees so high-26%-that even airport exchange desks would blush.

Schwalb noted Athena’s machines were being used by scammers, who, unlike your average villain, didn’t wear capes or twirl mustaches but did excel at ignoring red flags the size of Nebraska.

International Scammer Olympics: America Takes the Lead

Meanwhile, in the great tradition of international intrigue, the U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned 19 individuals and entities who apparently thought, “What if we built a scam empire so notorious even Bond villains would be jealous?” These folks allegedly relied on forced labor, violence, and generally the kind of behavior that gets you banned from polite society-if polite society ever finds Myanmar and Cambodia on a map.

OFAC even singled out Shwe Kokko as a crime hub, which proves organized crime is far more organized than anyone else in crypto.

All this goes to show, before you send your hard-earned money to someone promising triple returns on “official tokens,” maybe take a moment to check they didn’t just invent them on the back of a cocktail napkin. When it comes to crypto scams, sometimes the only thing going up is your blood pressure. 🚀😬

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2025-09-10 19:43