Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Cybercrime
Cybercrime - Credit: KirillM / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Crime
Coinbase
Europol
fraud
crypto investment scam
crypto investment fraud
job-review fraud
Dutch police
Slachtofferhulp Nederland
Monday, 8 December 2025 - 07:45

Share this article:

Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window

Dutch police warn 300 people targeted in massive crypto investment and job-review fraud

Dutch police have warned 300 people nationwide that they were defrauded in large-scale cryptocurrency investment schemes and online job-review scams, following an international investigation by Coinbase and Europol.

Victims believed they were investing in crypto or earning money from at-home review work, but police say their funds were transferred to wallets controlled by criminals. The victims are receiving personal letters co-written by police and Slachtofferhulp Nederland, and a notice was posted on the police website Monday.

Coinbase, described by police as a legal crypto platform similar to a bank, flagged signs of fraud and shared customer data with Europol. Europol then passed the information to law enforcement agencies in multiple countries.

Police do not yet know how much money Dutch victims lost or the exact products they invested in. “We also do not know exactly what these people invested in,” said Yoanne Spoormans, a cyber specialist with Oost-Nederland police. “We do know that they were defrauded. They transfer money to wallets that are in the hands of criminals.” She explained that a wallet functions as a digital bank account for cryptocurrency.

Authorities are also seeing vacancy fraud targeting people working online from home, often writing reviews. “In the beginning, you really do receive money in your account, just like with investing,” Spoormans said. Soon afterward, victims are asked to deposit additional money themselves, “often with the promise that this will put you in a higher salary scale.” Police said many victims are young adults.

The chances of recovering the stolen funds are very low, Spoormans said. “It is funneled away through many foreign wallets.” Whether the perpetrators can be identified is unclear because these schemes often involve complex international networks. The immediate priority is to prevent further losses by stopping victims from sending money. “That must be done carefully because of the enormous impact. That is why we are working with Slachtofferhulp, which has the knowledge and expertise to support these people properly.”

Rebecca Smits of Slachtofferhulp Nederland described the emotional toll on victims. “People are enormously ashamed, feel guilty, and often do not even dare to talk about it.” She warned that victims also face the risk of being targeted again by so-called recovery companies. These firms promise to recover the money for a fee but often turn out to be scams themselves.

More like this

Image
Cybercrime
Police bust criminal network that scammed Dutch out of €25 million in fake investments
Image
Cybercrime
Amsterdam police take down site for trading in stolen data
Image
Counterfeit cash seized during an Europol operation involving 18 countries, February 2026.
Dutch authorities help block €1.2 billion in fake money in major Europol operation
Image
Condolence candles and flowers
Families ‘intensely saddened’ after fiery The Hague crash that killed three
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Health authorities see record number of tick bites during June heatwave
  • Dutch firefighters deploy to Spain to help fight wildfires, receive hands-on training
  • Amsterdam mayor honors murdered journalist De Vries: ‘We still miss what he stood for’
  • Children fall ill after eating cannabis-infused candy found near school
  • More explosive attacks nearly everywhere in the Netherlands despite Randstad decrease

Top stories

  • At least 911 more people died than usual during code red heatwave: RIVM
  • ASML hikes outlook for 2026 as AI keeps driving chip demand; €2.9 billion profit in Q2
  • Video: Amsterdam police raid Red Light District sites in human trafficking busts
  • Dutch estimate inflation significantly higher than it actually is
  • Court: Dutch Cabinet was allowed to ban U.S. takeover of DigiD firm Solvinity

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content