What if the scammer was actually the person who bought the Bitcoin at the ATM? That's a non-zero possibility. Buy $X worth, claim you were scammed, get your $X back but you also control the wallet you sent the coin to.
mensetmanusman · 9h ago
Police are getting told by folks that they were scammed by bitcoin. This is how the police respond to general complaints?
southernplaces7 · 9h ago
Nope, but it is sometimes how police respond to tips where they can quickly snatch up some sweet, sweet immediate cash for that "confiscated proceeds of crime" trove that many departments have.
It's a win-win overall: look like you're actually being tough on crime while getting away with theft. A quick look at the long history of asset forfeiture laws in the U.S is loaded with related examples.
I assure you that they almost universally wouldn't be so pro-active if you complained about your stolen car.
ashoeafoot · 9h ago
Might end as rico to provide infrastructure for scamers ?
Nursie · 4h ago
It sounds to me like bitcoin ATM operators should hold clients' funds for some time to allow for recovery in the case of fraud. But of course we know that they would have very little business if they did that. Crypto enthusiasts never use them anyway because their rates are terrible, the only real use-case for these machines is scams and money laundering.
In some countries (the UK is one) there is no such thing as a legal bitcoin ATM. Australia appears to be trying to tighten up some of the law in this area too, and it looks like a $5k transaction limit came in. Frankly I think they should be removed everywhere.
In the cases in the article … I mean in some respects the ATM is holding the proceeds of crime right there. It’s an interesting conundrum and it strikes me I don’t know the answer to this - if I was to steal $1k physical money out of your pocket and use it to buy stuff in a shop, and I can’t be traced, would the shop owner have to return the money? With goods they certainly would.
creatonez · 9h ago
Boo hoo. Get out of the industry of scamming people entirely. The scam warning on the screen currently doesn't mention that cryptocurrency itself is a scam -- maybe it should?
AngryData · 9h ago
That is no way justifies cops extra judicially breaking into ATM machines to seize the cash. Imagine if someone filed a criminal complaint about something a bank did and when the cops got a search warrant for the case they drive up to the outside ATM or go to the bank vault, break into it by force using power tools, seized all the cash inside, and then told the bank they have to file a case with the state in order to prove the money is legitimate and they own it instead of the state because some disgruntled person claimed they got scammed.
creatonez · 7h ago
It justifies banning the machines entirely. Won't have to go through this whole ordeal again if common sense is applied. At best they provide far too easy access to a ludicrously dangerous financial instrument, at worst they are money deletion machines and a perfect vehicle for scams.
southernplaces7 · 9h ago
And here comes the obligatory "crypto scam, bad" troglodyte who can't say or think of anything about cryptocurrency with the least bit of nuance for how laws, basic financial definitions or practical use cases work.
Why not specify how people using their own money to set up an ATM that dispenses cash for crypto to those willing to exchange one or the other with their OWN money is a scam. Bitcoin itself is also a scam you say? Pray tell, how? By existing as a decentralized cryptographic system of fungible units that the market in general ascribes shifting value to and people happen to be able to exchange? Well shit, that sounds similar to many things that most of the world uses for economic exchange. They're all scams too?
Why not at least argue something semi-coherent?
Larrikin · 7h ago
By having no use in the real world despite people trying to force it on the world. An entire country tried it out and reverted back.
robocat · 46m ago
If the bar is set at "no use in the real world", there's a crapload of things that would be canceled in the world.
It's a win-win overall: look like you're actually being tough on crime while getting away with theft. A quick look at the long history of asset forfeiture laws in the U.S is loaded with related examples.
I assure you that they almost universally wouldn't be so pro-active if you complained about your stolen car.
In some countries (the UK is one) there is no such thing as a legal bitcoin ATM. Australia appears to be trying to tighten up some of the law in this area too, and it looks like a $5k transaction limit came in. Frankly I think they should be removed everywhere.
In the cases in the article … I mean in some respects the ATM is holding the proceeds of crime right there. It’s an interesting conundrum and it strikes me I don’t know the answer to this - if I was to steal $1k physical money out of your pocket and use it to buy stuff in a shop, and I can’t be traced, would the shop owner have to return the money? With goods they certainly would.
Why not specify how people using their own money to set up an ATM that dispenses cash for crypto to those willing to exchange one or the other with their OWN money is a scam. Bitcoin itself is also a scam you say? Pray tell, how? By existing as a decentralized cryptographic system of fungible units that the market in general ascribes shifting value to and people happen to be able to exchange? Well shit, that sounds similar to many things that most of the world uses for economic exchange. They're all scams too?
Why not at least argue something semi-coherent?
Use is irrelevant.