
Taipei City has experienced three cryptocurrency-related robberies within just four days. The Taipei Criminal Investigation Corps analyzed and found that criminal groups commonly use tactics such as “fee-free currency exchange” and “quick withdrawals” to contact victims via social media platforms like Facebook, LINE, and Telegram, luring them into face-to-face exchanges of USDT before committing robberies. Authorities urge the public to conduct cryptocurrency transactions through legitimate domestic exchanges and avoid participating in private deals.
Although police investigations show no direct connection among the three cases, the suspects involved are generally young, with some even minors. Law enforcement assesses that the mastermind behind these crimes may be employing a manipulation structure similar to scam groups, exploiting minors’ lighter criminal penalties and easier control to instruct them to carry out the robberies directly, thereby dispersing legal responsibility.
According to the Criminal Investigation Corps, these crimes typically follow this operational pattern:
Step 1 (Social Media Contact): Using phrases like “fee-free currency exchange,” “quick withdrawals,” and “high-yield investments,” they reach potential victims across platforms such as Facebook, LINE, and Telegram.
Step 2 (Trust Building): Under the guise of “internal projects,” “confidential transactions,” or “exclusive exchange for regular customers,” they emphasize avoiding financial institution tracking or tax authorities’ attention.
Step 3 (Face-to-Face Inducement): They require victims to bring cash to a designated location, deliberately bypassing official trading platforms’ identity verification and regulatory procedures.
Step 4 (Violence or Fraud to Obtain Money): During face-to-face exchanges, they commit robbery through violence; some methods involve demanding payments under various pretexts before allowing withdrawals.
Some offenders even target victims who wish to avoid leaving a financial trail, promoting “no trace” transactions to lower their alertness by exploiting victims’ desire to evade regulation.
In addition to physical robberies, online communities are also manipulated with misleading information. Some illegal crypto traders use AI tools to generate大量 fake accounts, spreading false messages about legitimate exchanges, claiming that using legal platforms will result in heavy taxes or high fees, and even rumors that Taiwan’s legal exchanges are experiencing deposit and withdrawal issues.
These accounts often direct users to illegal cash exchange groups, attempting to funnel unaware victims into unregulated private trading channels, exposing them to large cash face-to-face transactions with strangers without protection.
Taiwan’s Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC) has issued licenses for legitimate Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs) and prohibits illegal traders from engaging in cash transactions, ensuring that cryptocurrency buying and selling are compliant and traceable.
Authorities emphasize that trading through authorized VASP platforms not only provides regulatory protection and traceability of funds but also offers dispute resolution channels. Private face-to-face transactions pose safety risks and make legal recourse difficult for victims.
Q: What is the common criminal pattern in these three cryptocurrency robbery cases in Taipei?
All three cases follow the process of “online talk to lure → private face-to-face exchange → violence or theft,” with offenders attracting victims through offers like “fee-free exchange” and “quick withdrawals,” then demanding cash at designated locations to commit robbery or withdrawal fraud.
Q: Why do offenders target individuals trying to evade regulation?
Victims seeking “no trace” private transactions are more likely to accept such deals due to lower suspicion. After being robbed, they may hesitate to report out of fear of exposure for violating regulations, reducing the legal risks for offenders.
Q: How can I distinguish legitimate crypto trading platforms from illegal traders?
Legitimate exchanges hold FSC-issued VASP licenses, have clear identity verification (KYC) procedures, and fund flows are traceable. They will never request face-to-face cash transactions. If someone emphasizes “fee-free,” “quick withdrawals,” or “no trace,” it should be regarded as a high-risk warning.