Senior is out $34, 000 from cryptocurrency scam in Kelowna, B.C.

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A 77-year-old Lynda Krauza decided she wanted to get into the cryptocurrency market after seeing an ad for bitcoin.

Krauza gained interest in cryptocurrency when her husband has been in and out of Kelowna’s hospital, and she could use the money.

Krauza said “My kids have helped me tremendously, and I just wanted to be able to pay them back.” It all started in June, when Krauza entered her email and phone number into a bitcoin website.

Krauza said she started out by investing $250 at first and said it didn’t take long for the phone calls to start rolling in.

Krauza said “it snowballed from there.” She was soon e-transferring $3,000 lump sum payments from her bank to a supposed bitcoin account.

“These people walked her through every step and gave her ideas to do things and go to the bank and get an increase on (credit),” said Colleen Greer, Krauza’s daughter. “And they got into her iPad with any desk and then they could see everything, so they knew exactly how much money she had.”

Her daughter became suspicious after she noticed Krauza was receiving several calls a day, roughly around two dozen calls a day.

Greer said “And so we started writing down the numbers of who’s calling, but she had a name for every one of those people that called her.”

The elaborate scam even has a supposed banking portal with two-factor authentication showing a fake balance, Krauza said.

Greer agreed and said it looked real “It does look real when you look at the websites.”

After she realized something was going on, Greer answered her mom’s phone and demanded a withdrawal. That would be the fraudsters final phone call to Krauza.

Once Krauza realized this was a scam, she tracked the phone numbers and emails of people she was speaking with, but they’ve now all been blocked.

The senior estimates she’s out $34,000.

“It’s all I had. They even took my pension cheque,” Krauza said. “Some people treat people worse than animals.”

“They’ll take every last cent you have.”

Krauza contacted the bank and said their fraud department is looking into the matter. She’s hoping at least some of the money can be recovered.

RCMP confirmed they are investigating.

Const. Solana Paré said in an email “unfortunately, it is a very common scam that occurs not only here in Kelowna, but all over Canada and affects individuals of all ages.”.

Const. Solana Paré states that bitcoin is dangerous because the transfer is virtually untraceable and provides fraudsters with protection and anonymitiy from their victims.

“Scammers can access the coins from anywhere in the world which further hampers their prosecution, even if they could be identified,” Paré added. This article was originally sourced by Global News.