How Foreign Scammers Use U.S. Banks to Fleece Americans
How Foreign Scammers Use U.S. Banks to Fleece Americans
by Cezary Podkul
June 25, 2025, 5 a.m. EDT
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ProPublica) Brian Maloney Jr. was flummoxed when he was served with a lawsuit against his familys business, Middlesex Truck and Coach, in January. Maloney and his father, also named Brian, run the operation, located in Boston, which boasts that it can repair anything from two axles to ten. A burly man in his mid-50s who wears short-sleeved polo shirts emblazoned with the company name, Maloney Jr. has been around his dads shop since he was 8. The garage briefly surfaced in the media in 2012 when then-presidential candidate Mitt Romney made a campaign stop there and the Boston Herald featured Maloney Sr. talking about how he had built the business from nothing in a neighborhood he described as having been a war zone.
Now Middlesex was being sued by a New Jersey man who claimed he had been defrauded of $133,565 in a cryptocurrency scheme. The suit claimed Middlesex controlled and maintained a bank account at Chase that had been used to collect the fraudulent payment. The purported victim wanted his money back.
None of this made any sense to Maloney Jr. His company did not have an account at Chase, and he barely knew what crypto was. For Gods sake, we fix trucks and still have AOL, he would later say.
....(snip)....
Middlesexs experience, as bizarre as it seems, is part of a global problem that plagues the banking industry. The account falsely opened in Middlesexs name, and many others like it, are way stations in a sophisticated multistep money laundering process that transports cash from U.S. scam victims to crime syndicate bosses in Asia. ................(more)
https://www.propublica.org/article/pig-butchering-scam-cybercrime-us-banks-money-laundering