Romance & Investment Scammers
Breaking Hearts, Wrecking Lives.

Social media and dating apps have become Ground Zero for romance and get-rich-quick scammers.

Scammers steal images from real, innocent people, often military officers, CEOs and first responders, to create fake profiles.

People whose identities have been stolen and used in romance and investment scams struggle to get social media platforms to remove them.

Criminal networks in Ghana, Nigeria & Southeast Asia run call centers and Facebook Groups where scammers organize and trade information.

Victims of these scams often lose hundreds of thousands of dollars, and many also end up suffering severe emotional consequences.

Our members Advocating Against Romance Scammers (AARS) provide information about how to spot scammers online.

Beware of charming strangers who ‘like’ you online.

Hunting the Vulnerable

Hunting the Vulnerable  Scammers seek out people who have just lost a partner or who may be elderly.

Building Trust & Intimacy

Building Trust & Intimacy  Scammers build the relationship for months before asking for money.

$739M in Reported Losses

$739M in Reported Losses 
By 19,000+ Americans to the FBI’s cyber crime tip line in 2022 alone.

Identified organized crime groups in West Africa, two of them known as the Yahoo Boys and the Sakawa Boys, run call centers that perpetuate romance scams at scale.

Meet Kathy and Bryan: Fighting to Protect the Innocent

Kathy Waters tracked down the real Bryan Denny after a scammer that stole his pictures used Bryan’s identity to scam one of her friends.

Together, they founded Advocating Against Romance Scammers (AARS), which is dedicated to helping people spot scammers, and to change the laws around this new age crime.

Bryan’s images are one of the top four male identities used in romance scams, and he has been contacted by hundreds of women who believed they were in a relationship with him. 

Kathy and Bryan have traveled to Menlo Park to try and convince Meta Inc to block accounts using Bryan’s pictures (the company refused, incredibly citing privacy reasons).

They have also briefed dozens of lawmakers, the FBI and other law enforcement, and they’re fighting to get the laws reformed both to protect scam victims, and help identity theft victims get their lives back.

DOWNLoaD THE Romance Scams Fact Sheet

It’s free to download a pdf copy, but please consider making a $10 donation towards our research.

Advocating for you on X (Twitter):

Advocating for you on Tik Tok:

ACCO Reports

Your Power, Our People, The World’s Defense, in More Ways Than One: A Look at Reporting Fake Profiles

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Community Substandards: Capturing the Empty Promises of Big Tech’s Safety Against Online Romance Scams

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'HOW TO' CRIME'
Illicit Actors are Training Newbies on Social Media

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Media Coverage