Crypto recovery in South Africa:
FSCA, SARB, and the Hawks.
South African crypto-fraud victims work within a regulatory environment shaped by the Mirror Trading International collapse — the FSCA now licenses Crypto Asset Service Providers, SARB oversees foreign-exchange controls, and the Hawks (Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation) handle serious commercial crime. Recovery for South African victims depends on whether the scam used a local CASP licensee, whether ZAR was off-ramped through a regulated bank, and whether the operation is run from inside SA or from abroad.
The agencies your case touches.
Financial Sector Conduct Authority
Licenses Crypto Asset Service Providers (CASPs) since 2023 and publishes a warning list of unauthorised operators. Any platform claiming to be FSCA-licensed should appear on the official register; if not listed, file a warning request with the FSCA.
Visit warning list →South African Reserve Bank
Regulates exchange-control rules and oversees how banks treat crypto-related transactions. Useful when stolen funds were moved through ZAR rails before off-ramping; SARB can freeze accounts suspected of exchange-control violations.
Visit warning list →Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation
Specialised SAPS unit handling serious commercial crime. Crypto-fraud cases above approximately R1M typically qualify; the Hawks coordinate with international agencies when funds crossed borders.
Visit warning list →National Consumer Commission
Consumer-protection authority. Useful for filings against South-Africa-targeted scams that do not yet meet the criminal threshold but harm SA consumers at scale.
Visit warning list →Financial Intelligence Centre
AML supervisor. Banks and CASPs file Suspicious Transaction Reports with the FIC; a strong on-chain evidence pack often triggers FIC engagement with the receiving institution.
Visit warning list →What to do in the first 24 hours.
- 01
File a SAPS case at your local police station first
You need a case number (CAS number) before any other action — banks, FSCA, and the Hawks all require it. Visit any SAPS station; ask specifically for a case to be opened under fraud or commercial crime.
- 02
Lodge a complaint with the FSCA
Use the FSCA online complaint form. If the perpetrator claimed FSCA licensing, attach screenshots — false licensing claims are a serious regulatory offence and accelerate the FSCA response.
- 03
Contact your bank's fraud team within 24 hours
If ZAR was sent via EFT, FNB / Standard Bank / ABSA / Nedbank / Capitec fraud teams can attempt to recall transfers within a short window. Have the SAPS CAS number ready when calling.
- 04
Screenshot everything, then stop interacting
Many South African scams operate via WhatsApp groups and Telegram channels that are routinely purged when investigations begin. Capture all evidence — chat logs, transaction screenshots, group member lists, voice notes — before any further contact.
What we see most in South Africa.
- ● Post-MTI recovery scams targeting Mirror Trading International victims, often claiming to be liquidators or former employees
- ● "FSCA-licensed" forex/crypto brokers that are NOT on the FSCA register — verify the FSP number against the official register
- ● Telegram and WhatsApp pump-and-dump groups targeting ZAR-pair traders, with paid "VIP" signal channels that disappear after collapse
- ● Romance/pig-butchering scams targeting South African expats and skilled migrants in the UK, Australia, and the Middle East
- ● Fake "investment seminar" recruitment driving South Africans into offshore Ponzi schemes via WhatsApp invitations
- ● Bitcoin ATM coercion scams — victims pressured by phone calls claiming to be SARS, the Hawks, or banks to deposit cash to ATMs
Our footprint in the South African market.
CryptoLeek works with South African victims through admitted attorneys for civil-recovery and Anton Piller orders, direct compliance liaison with the SA-licensed Crypto Asset Service Providers (Luno, VALR, Altcoin Trader), and coordinated escalation through the FSCA and Hawks for cases meeting the criminal threshold. We do not maintain offices in South Africa — all engagement is remote, in writing, with no upfront fees and a flat investigation retainer quoted only if we accept the case.
Questions South African victims ask us most.
Mirror Trading International collapsed years ago. Is recovery still possible? +
My bank refuses to recall the transfer. What now? +
Can the Hawks actually recover crypto? +
What about FSCA-licensed exchanges — are they safer? +
Lost crypto in South Africa?
We can help you recover it.
We give you an honest yes/no/conditional verdict within one business day, with the specific recovery path mapped to South Africa's regulators and the exchanges holding the stolen funds. Assessment is free; if we accept the case, the investigation retainer is quoted in writing before any work begins. No upfront fees, no false guarantees.