NYC retirees to join other groups for rally to protect federal Medicare benefits
January 9 |
Brooklyn Eagle Staff
Attorney General Letitia James. Photo: Mary Altaffer/AP
NATIONWIDE — NEW YORK ATTORNEY GENERAL LETITIA JAMES FROZE $2.2 MILLION in cryptocurrency stolen by scammers. On Thursday, Jan. 9, James filed a lawsuit against a group of scammers who offered fake employment opportunities outside the state. James is suing to recover cryptocurrency valued at $2.2 million that was stolen from victims in the remote job scam. Her office, together with the U.S. Secret Service and the Queens County District Attorney’s Office, found that scammers sent text messages claiming to help find remote jobs and tricked New Yorkers into depositing hundreds of thousands of dollars in cryptocurrency accounts. The scammers promised financial compensation if they opened a cryptocurrency account, deposited cryptocurrency and began reviewing products on fake websites that replicated legitimate brands. James aims to recover the frozen cryptocurrency for defrauded victims, requiring the scammers to pay penalties, restitution and damages, as well as ceasing the scam grift.
The Office of the Attorney General found that scammers required their victims to maintain a cryptocurrency account equal to or greater than the price of the products they were reviewing, assuring the victims that were not purchasing the products but rather that the account balances would help “legitimize” the data they were generating. The scammers also falsely promised their victims that the original payments would be reimbursed with commission.
✰✰✰
Pokémon is a wondrous world where fantastical creatures can make the impossible into reality. There are dozens of amazing jobs where trainers can live out the
There is a vast mix of stories across the front pages of the Sunday papers. The Sunday Telegraph leads on the news that Chancellor Rachel Reeves is "launching a
Topline President-elect Donald Trump on Saturday named several new staff members for his second administration, including Katharine MacGregor as the Deputy Secr
President Joe Biden, left, greets Acting Secretary of Labor Julie Su as he arrives to speak at the ... [+] Department of Labor in Washington, Monday, Dec. 16, 2