Crypto recovery in the US
is a multi-agency process.
US crypto-fraud victims face a more complex regulatory landscape than most jurisdictions: the FBI's IC3 portal, the FTC's Sentinel database, the SEC, the CFTC, and your state-level financial regulator all have overlapping interest. Effective recovery in the US requires filing in the right places in the right order, AND coordinated civil or criminal action where the fraud trail lands inside US jurisdiction. CryptoLeek operates with US counsel across multiple federal districts.
The agencies your case touches.
FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center
The primary federal reporting channel for crypto fraud. IC3 reports feed into FBI investigations and Joint Criminal Task Force operations. File even for losses under $10,000 — IC3 uses aggregated reports to identify patterns and operators.
Visit warning list →Federal Trade Commission
The FTC Sentinel database is shared with 3,000+ law-enforcement agencies. Filing here triggers consumer-protection responses and adds your case to the aggregate.
Visit warning list →Securities and Exchange Commission
For fraudulent investment platforms that offered securities-like returns (most fake-trading scams qualify), the SEC has enforcement authority.
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
For fraudulent crypto futures, derivatives, or leveraged trading platforms — the CFTC has been increasingly active in crypto enforcement.
What to do in the first 24 hours.
- 01
File an IC3 report immediately
ic3.gov takes about 30 minutes. The report goes to the FBI and is searchable by US Joint Criminal Task Force investigators. Do this even if your loss seems small — patterns aggregate.
- 02
File an FTC ReportFraud submission
reportfraud.ftc.gov. Feeds the Sentinel database that 3,000+ agencies search.
- 03
Notify your bank or card issuer immediately
Federal law (Reg E for debit, Reg Z for credit) gives you formal dispute rights that close after 60 days for unauthorised charges. Even for cards used to buy crypto, the trail back through Coinbase / Kraken / Robinhood is often actionable.
- 04
File a state Attorney General complaint
Most state AGs have a consumer-protection division that takes crypto-fraud complaints and refers them to the SEC, CFTC, or US Attorney as appropriate.
What we see most in the United States.
- ● Investment-platform scams using fake "registered investment advisor" claims — easily verified against SEC IAPD
- ● CFTC-violation patterns: fake leveraged crypto futures targeting retail accounts
- ● Romance-to-investment ("pig butchering") with US-based mules receiving wire transfers before crypto conversion
- ● Recovery scams cold-calling IC3 filers within weeks of their original report (the FBI explicitly warns about this)
Our footprint in the US market.
For US victims, CryptoLeek operates with bar-licensed counsel in major federal districts including SDNY, EDNY, NDCA, and DDC. We have direct compliance contacts at Coinbase, Kraken, Robinhood, Cash App, and the major fiat on-ramps. We coordinate with the FBI and US Attorney's offices where criminal referrals are warranted, and we work with your state AG's consumer-protection division for additional escalation pressure.
Questions US victims ask us most.
Will the FBI investigate my crypto-fraud case? +
Can I use a chargeback to recover crypto fraud? +
How does US civil action for crypto recovery work? +
Lost crypto in the United States?
The free 24-hour case review tells you what's recoverable.
We give you an honest yes/no/conditional verdict within one business day, with the specific recovery path mapped to your jurisdiction. The assessment is free; if we accept the case, the investigation retainer is quoted in writing before any work begins.