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Warns Arizonans of Investment Scams on Meta Platforms

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Summary

Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes issued a consumer alert warning Arizonans about fraudulent investment schemes on Meta platforms including Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. The alert describes pump and dump scams, confidence scams, and cryptocurrency fraud using deepfake technology and unauthorized celebrity endorsements to lure victims. The AG urges victims to report fraud at azag.gov/consumer.

What changed

The Arizona Attorney General issued a consumer alert describing how scammers use Meta platforms to perpetrate investment fraud through pump and dump schemes, confidence scams, and cryptocurrency fraud. The alert explains a three-step process: bait ads featuring unauthorized celebrity endorsements, shifting conversations to encrypted platforms like WhatsApp, and funneling victims into group chats with false testimonials before coercing large investments.

Social media platforms like Meta face potential regulatory scrutiny for facilitating fraudulent advertisements, while Arizona investors should verify all social media investment opportunities through licensed professionals and report suspected fraud immediately to the AG's office.

What to do next

  1. Scrutinize social media investment advertisements before investing
  2. Report suspected investment scams to the Arizona AG at azag.gov/consumer
  3. Verify legitimacy of investment opportunities through licensed broker-dealers

Archived snapshot

Apr 9, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

CONSUMER ALERT: Attorney General Mayes Warns Arizonans of Investment Scams on Meta Platforms

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

PHOENIX – Attorney General Mayes today issued a consumer alert to warn Arizonans about the prevalence of fraudulent investment schemes proliferating across Meta platforms, including on Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. Scammers are increasingly using deceptive advertisements and "deepfake" technology to lure investors into high-stakes scams to defraud them of their savings. These scams include "pump and dump" scams, confidence scams, and fraudulent cryptocurrency schemes that take advantage of victims to extract as much money from them as possible.

Attorney General Mayes is providing tips for Arizonans to protect themselves from scams and urging every investor to carefully scrutinize social media investment advertisements before investing.

Most reputable broker-dealers and investment advisors do not post specific investment advice on social media platforms. Attorney General Mayes encourages anyone who may have been a victim of these types of scams to report it at www.azag.gov/consumer.

"These scammers deliberately target our most vulnerable communities, using trusted faces and false promises to rob Arizonans of their money,' said Attorney General Mayes. "Meta must do more to protect users on its platforms. If you believe you have been a victim of consumer fraud, report it to my office immediately."
AG Mayes was one of 42 state and territorial attorneys general who sent a letter to Meta last year urging the company to take action against these scam ads.

How Pump and Dump Social Media Scams Work

In a pump and dump scheme, victims are lured into investment groups and convinced to invest in cryptocurrencies or low-priced stocks. The scammers advertise, hype, and recommend buying the stocks or cryptocurrencies, increasing their prices, and then sell when the price is high, while the victims lose their money. Pump and dump schemes typically follow a three-step process:

  1. The Bait: Scam ads appear on Facebook or Instagram featuring recognizable figures, like Cathie Wood (Ark Invest), Joe Kernen (CNBC), or Kevin O'Leary (Shark Tank), without their permission. Other ads may feature less well-known financial advisors, also without their permission, especially those trusted by members of specific cultural or geographic communities. The ads often promise exclusive "insider" memberships or "guaranteed" high-return investment tips.
  2. The Shift: Once a user clicks the ad, they are pressured to move the conversation to WhatsApp or other encrypted platforms such as Telegram. This allows scammers to operate away from platform moderators.
  3. The Hook: Victims are funneled into group chats where they receive so-called "expert" advice and false testimonials. Eventually, victims are coerced into buying stocks or crypto, with the initial fraudulent tips sometimes appearing successful and generating a profit. Victims are convinced to invest large amounts in a stock or cryptocurrency, which then goes up in price and which the scammers sell off at this inflated price, leaving the victims to lose their money once the price plummets. News

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
AZ AG
Published
April 8th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Technology companies Consumers Investors
Industry sector
5112 Software & Technology
Activity scope
Investment fraud prevention Social media advertising oversight Consumer scam reporting
Geographic scope
US-AZ US-AZ

Taxonomy

Primary area
Consumer Protection
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Securities Cryptocurrency & Digital Assets

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