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← Fraud Defense
Defense19 min2026-06-25

Romance Investment Scams (Pig Butchering)

How pig-butchering scams build months of trust through dating apps, social media, or wrong-number messages before steering victims into fake investments, and how to spot and recover from them.

romance scampig butcheringdating appscryptoorganized crime

Contents

  1. 01Introduction
  2. 02I. The Structure: Four Stages
  3. Stage 1: Contact
  4. Stage 2: Trust-building (grooming)
  5. Stage 3: The investment pitch
  6. Stage 4: Extraction
  7. 03II. How the Fake Platform Works
  8. 04III. Common Variations
  9. Variation A: Crypto (USDT) yield
  10. Variation B: FX or futures "winning signals"
  11. Variation C: Wrong-number opener
  12. Variation D: Prize or airdrop
  13. 05IV. Why It Works, and Where It Breaks
  14. Why it works
  15. Where it breaks (the break point, seen from the victim's side)
  16. 06V. The Victim's Psychology: Blame the Tactic, Not the Person
  17. 07VI. How to Spot It
  18. A one-move habit that protects you
  19. 08VII. If You Are Already a Victim or Have Deposited
  20. 1. Stop any further deposit immediately
  21. 2. Preserve the evidence
  22. 3. See whether the transfer can be stopped
  23. 4. Consult an official channel
  24. 5. Beware of secondary scams
  25. 09VIII. Protecting Others: Watching Out for Family and Older Relatives
  26. 10Conclusion

Introduction

Someone you met on a dating app. A stranger who texted "wrong number, sorry" and stayed to chat. A kind, attentive person who became close to you fast on social media.

Over weeks or months, that person becomes something like a partner or a best friend. Then, one day, they say it:

"Actually, I know a good investment opportunity."

This is the entry point of the romance investment scam, known in English as "pig butchering".

You are made to trust through small early withdrawals, fattened up, then slaughtered in one stroke. Losses run into the tens of billions of dollars worldwide, and the person on the other end is often a trafficking victim forced into the work.

This article breaks the scam down stage by stage, then shows how to spot it and what to do if you are already caught in it.

One thing first. Falling for this does not make you foolish. It means your capacity to trust, one of the healthiest parts of being human, was turned against you.

How to Read

Figure 1 (full flow): Eight stages laid out left to right on one horizontal timeline. (1) Contact (dating app, social media, wrong-number text). (2) Trust-building (daily messages, romance or friendship). (3) The investment pitch. (4) Steered to a private app or URL. (5) A small withdrawal is allowed to succeed (the bait). (6) Pushed toward a large deposit. (7) Withdrawal blocked plus demands for tax or deposit fees. (8) Contact cut, scammer vanishes. Color stages 1 to 5 in green (the performance of trust) and 6 to 8 in red (extraction). At the border between 5 and 6, mark a note: this is where fattening ends and butchering begins.View live on TradingView →

I. The Structure: Four Stages

This scam is not improvised. It runs from a clear script, in four broad stages.

Stage 1: Contact

There are three main entry routes:

: A like or a message on a dating app or social platform. : A wrong-number text on LINE or SMS ("Is this Mr. Tanaka?", "Sorry, wrong number") that turns into conversation. : A friendly approach inside an investing or side-hustle online community.

The profile photo usually shows someone attractive, well-off, and busy in a respected profession (doctor, military officer, trader, executive posted overseas). These photos are stolen from other people's social media.

Stage 2: Trust-building (grooming)

This is the stage they invest the most time in, often weeks to months.

They text good morning and good night every day and listen closely to your work, your worries, your family. Sometimes they cultivate romance; sometimes they pose as a successful business mentor or a like-minded friend.

In this stage, money never comes up. Some even pre-empt suspicion with "I never want you to think this is about money".

Stage 3: The investment pitch

Once trust is deep enough, the investment surfaces, framed as a natural extension of the relationship.

"My uncle works in finance and gives me special tips." "This is the exchange where I grew my own money." "I want you to be happy too, so I am letting you in."

Then they steer you to a specific app or website. The core of the scam is that this is not a real exchange but a fake platform whose on-screen numbers the operators can rewrite at will.

Stage 4: Extraction

Only here does the real intent appear. The specific extraction tactics are covered below.

How to Read

Figure 2 (the four-stage script): Four steps arranged as a descending staircase. Each step shows [stage name] [duration] [typical lines]. Stage 1, Contact (days): 'Wrong number, sorry / I saw your profile and got curious'. Stage 2, Trust-building (weeks to months): 'Good morning, let us both do our best today / Please do not think this is about money'. Stage 3, Investment pitch (days): 'My uncle gives me special tips / I want you to be happy too'. Stage 4, Extraction (all at once): 'This is the last chance / Pay the tax and you can withdraw'. Draw the Stage 2 box as the largest, showing visually that this is where most time is spent.View live on TradingView →

II. How the Fake Platform Works

The single biggest reason losses grow so large is the craftsmanship of the fake exchange app.

To bypass official app store review, it is delivered through routes that avoid the legitimate channel: a URL the scammer sends you, a beta-distribution tool like TestFlight, or a method that asks you to install a device profile.

The app looks indistinguishable from a real exchange. Charts, order books, balances, profit and loss: all of it moves smoothly.

But every number you see is fabricated and freely editable by the operators.

You deposit, and your balance rises. The asset you "bought" climbs on screen. An unrealized gain of "+38%" or "+120%" appears.

In reality, your money went straight into the scammer's wallet from the start. The numbers on screen are only a performance designed to draw out your deposits.

How to Read

Figure 3 (real vs fake): Split the frame into two columns. Left column, 'real exchange': deposits go to segregated accounts, the displayed balance reflects real assets, withdrawals are always possible, the operator is registered and supervised. Right column, 'fake platform': deposits go straight to the criminal's wallet, the displayed balance is a fabricated number the operators rewrite at will, withdrawals work only at first then are refused, no registration and no real substance. Place the same-looking trading-screen illustration in both columns, labeling the left 'has substance' and the right 'empty shell', to stress that identical surfaces hide opposite interiors.View live on TradingView →

III. Common Variations

The skeleton is the same, but the entry point and the costume vary by type.

Variation A: Crypto (USDT) yield

The most common type.

You are made to deposit in stablecoins such as USDT or USDC. The pitch: "It is on the blockchain, so it is safe", "No bank involved, so fees are low".

Unlike a bank transfer, a crypto transfer generally cannot be recalled or reversed. It is also harder to trace. That is exactly why criminals prefer it.

Variation B: FX or futures "winning signals"

The setup: "My uncle (or mentor) tells me where the market will move in advance." When you place the orders as told, the screen always shows a win.

In reality both the signals and the wins are fabricated, a stage set built to grow your deposits.

Variation C: Wrong-number opener

It starts with "sorry, wrong number", drifts into small talk, and you become close before you notice. Romance stays in the background; they close the distance as a friend or confidant.

With no romance to raise alarm, some people lower their guard, which makes this version unusually effective.

Variation D: Prize or airdrop

"Your wallet has won", "Claim free coins": you are steered to a fake site that asks you to connect your wallet or approve a transaction. The moment you connect, the assets are drained, a more technical offshoot of the same scheme.

How to Read

Figure 4 (four variations): A 2x2 card layout. Each card carries an icon, type name, entry point, and key feature. A, Crypto USDT yield: 'It is on the blockchain, so it is safe' leading to 'transfers are irreversible and hard to trace'. B, Winning signals: 'My uncle reads the market' leading to 'both signals and wins are fabricated'. C, Wrong number: 'Sorry, wrong number' leading to 'no romance means a lowered guard'. D, Prize/airdrop: 'Your wallet has won' leading to 'assets drained the moment you connect'. Run a shared banner beneath all four cards: the entry points differ, but the destination is the same: your money flows out one way and disappears.View live on TradingView →

IV. Why It Works, and Where It Breaks

Why it works

This scam functions by inverting two natural orders.

First, trust before money. People rarely doubt advice from someone they trust. The scammer spends months building trust before money is ever mentioned, buying the very foundation of your judgment in advance.

Second, the small withdrawal goes first. Nothing reassures like the experience of "I actually withdrew my money". But that withdrawal was deliberately permitted by the criminal as an investment, the bait that draws out a far larger deposit.

"I was able to withdraw" is not proof of safety. It is the sign that a bigger strike is coming.

Where it breaks (the break point, seen from the victim's side)

The break always happens at withdrawal.

When the profit looks large and you try to withdraw, the wall appears for the first time.

"Withdrawal requires prepayment of tax." "Deposit a security bond to unfreeze the account." "There is a fee for the anti-money-laundering review."

These are all pretexts to make you deposit more. Paying them does not release a withdrawal. It only brings the next pretext.

A legitimate exchange does not, as a rule, demand that you "pay tax first" in order to withdraw. Tax is levied on profit after the fact; it is never a precondition for withdrawing.

How to Read

Figure 5 (the withdrawal wall, an infinite loop): On the left, a user pressing a 'Withdraw' button; on the right, the 'Funds received' that should exist. Between them, place three walls in series. Wall 1: 'Withdrawal requires prepaid tax'. Wall 2: 'Deposit a bond to unfreeze'. Wall 3: 'Anti-money-laundering review fee'. Clearing each wall reveals the next, and beyond the last wall there is no 'Funds received', only an arrow looping back to the first wall (infinite loop). Below, state clearly: a legitimate exchange never demands prepayment to withdraw; tax falls on profit afterward and is not a condition of withdrawing.View live on TradingView →

V. The Victim's Psychology: Blame the Tactic, Not the Person

✦  Market Psychology

To ask a victim "how did you not notice" is to misread the structure.

The human brain is built not to drop, easily, the trust it spent a long time building. This is not a flaw; it is the normal functioning of a social creature. The scammer takes precise aim at that normal function.

Once money has gone in, a sunk-cost effect takes hold. Stop now and everything paid so far is wasted, so surely a little more will recover it. This thinking is the fuel that pays the next round of tax or bond fees.

When romance is involved, it grows more complicated still. The pain of lost money and the pain of betrayal by someone you believed in stack on top of each other. That is why simply admitting the loss can feel so heavy.

What matters is not to blame yourself into silence. It is to know the structure of the tactic and to reach out for help as early as you can.

How to Read

Figure 6 (the curve of how hard it is to escape): Plot a rising curve with time on the x-axis and 'how hard it is to stop or to ask for help' on the y-axis. Hang three weights along the curve in time order. Weight 1, Trust: you cannot doubt someone you care for. Weight 2, Sunk cost: stopping now wastes everything so far. Weight 3, Shame: too embarrassed to tell anyone. Show the curve steepening as weights accumulate, and note at the top right: the earlier the stage, the easier to escape; the moment you realize is the best time. Frame it as structure, never as blame on the victim.View live on TradingView →

VI. How to Spot It

Catch it early in the contact and the loss is almost entirely preventable. Use the checklist below as your baseline.

Red flags of a romance investment scam (be wary if even one applies)

: Never meets in person, and avoids video calls with excuses. : Brings up money, investing, or a side hustle from their side, unprompted. : Claims an edge from a dubious source: "special information", "my uncle or mentor tells me". : Has you install an app through a non-official route (a sent URL, TestFlight, a device profile). : Asks for deposits in crypto (USDT, USDC, and the like). : Lets a small withdrawal succeed first to win your trust. : Rushes you with "only now", "today only", leaving no time to think. : Demands prepaid tax, bond, or fees the moment you try to withdraw.

If someone who will not meet you and avoids video calls brings up a money-making opportunity from their side, you can treat it as all but confirmed.

The simplest and most powerful test is one thing. Ask for a video call.

A real person will agree. A scammer always finds a reason to avoid it: bad connection, broken camera, too shy. The stolen photos of someone else will not match the face on the call.

How to Read

Figure 7 (red-flag checklist): A tall checklist. Each item has a checkbox and a short heading. (1) Never meets, avoids video calls. (2) Pitches money from their side. (3) A dubious 'special information' edge. (4) App installed outside the official store. (5) Demands deposits in crypto. (6) Only a small early withdrawal to build trust. (7) Rushes you with 'only now'. (8) Prepaid tax or bond demanded at withdrawal. At the bottom, in an emphasis box: if even one red light is on, stop depositing and consult a third party. Highlight items 1 and 2, the most important, in red.View live on TradingView →

A one-move habit that protects you

The instant a stranger raises an investment, put your decision on hold. Then always tell a third party, family or friends, who has no stake in that relationship.

What scammers fear most is the victim talking to a calm outsider. That is precisely why they fence you in with "let us keep this between us", "do not tell the people around you". That fencing-in is itself the biggest red flag.

VII. If You Are Already a Victim or Have Deposited

The moment you realize is always the best time. It is never too late. Move through this in order.

1. Stop any further deposit immediately

"Pay just a little more and you can withdraw" is almost certainly a lie. No matter how much you pay under the name of tax, bond, or fees, no withdrawal will come. Stopping here is the first step toward limiting the damage.

2. Preserve the evidence

You will need it for advice and for any investigation. Keep what you have; do not delete it.

: Save your chat history with the scammer (LINE, messages, email) as screenshots. : The scammer's account names, profile, phone number, and social media URLs. : The fake platform's URL, app name, and the deposit and withdrawal screens. : Records of your transfers (bank transfer statements, and for crypto the destination address and transaction ID). : A list of the dates and amounts you sent.

If you sent crypto, the destination address and transaction ID are especially important, as they give investigators something to trace.

3. See whether the transfer can be stopped

: Bank transfer: contact the receiving bank and your own bank as fast as possible. In Japan this can lead to account freezing and victim-recovery procedures under the law on remittance-fraud relief. : Crypto: report it to the support team of the exchange you used. If the funds have not yet moved to another exchange, they can sometimes be frozen. : Credit card: ask your card issuer about a chargeback (reversing the payment).

Speed decides whether recovery is possible. Once you realize, act at once.

4. Consult an official channel

Do not carry it alone. Always reach outside for help. (These are Japan's channels; in other countries, use the equivalent police and consumer bodies, and your national financial regulator.)

: Police consultation line #9110 (in an emergency, 110). You can ask about filing a report. : Consumer Hotline 188. It connects you to your nearest consumer affairs center. : National Consumer Affairs Center, for contract and money trouble in general. : The Financial Services Agency (FSA). You can check whether an operator is unregistered against the FSA's published warning list of unregistered financial-instruments businesses.

Even with the background that the other person may be a trafficking victim forced into the work, the harm you suffered is still harm. That is no reason to hesitate to report.

5. Beware of secondary scams

After a loss, anyone who contacts you claiming "we will recover your money" as a recovery agent or lawyer is very likely a second-stage scam. The original criminal group may also come back at you using the victim list.

If you do seek recovery, work only with someone you have verified through an official bar association or public channel. Anyone rushing you for an upfront "retainer" or "fee" deserves suspicion first.

How to Read

Figure 8 (post-loss action flow): A vertical flow of five steps, top to bottom. STEP 1: Stop further deposits immediately. STEP 2: Preserve evidence (chat history, transfer records, scammer details, transaction ID). STEP 3: Stop the transfer (contact bank, exchange, card issuer at once). STEP 4: Consult official channels (police #9110, Consumer Hotline 188, National Consumer Affairs Center, the FSA's unregistered-operator warning list). STEP 5: Avoid secondary scams (beware recovery fraud). Add contacts and concrete examples with icons at each step. Note on STEP 3: speed decides recovery. Note on STEP 5: distrust any recovery agent who rushes you for an upfront fee.View live on TradingView →

VIII. Protecting Others: Watching Out for Family and Older Relatives

This scam takes special aim at people living alone, those who recently lost someone close, and anyone who feels isolated. If you have older family members, watch for these changes.

They are more absorbed in their phone or a dating app than before. They speak happily about a newly met person, but never in detail. They suddenly start talking about investing or crypto. Asked where their money is going, they deflect or get irritable.

The key is to stand beside them as an ally, not to interrogate. Cornered, people tend to defend the scammer, isolate themselves, and sink deeper.

How to Read

Figure 9 (signs others can notice): On the left, list 'behavior-change signs' vertically as bullets: more absorbed in phone and dating apps; speaks happily of a new acquaintance but gives no detail; suddenly talks about investing or crypto; deflects or gets irritable when asked where money is going; appears to be sending money to someone never met. On the right, place 'how to respond' as a contrast: cross-mark, interrogate or blame, leads to defending the scammer and isolation; check-mark, listen as an ally and consult a third party together. Draw an arrow in the center showing the relationship: the more you blame, the deeper the harm; the more you stand beside them, the easier to escape.View live on TradingView →

Conclusion

The romance investment scam is a precise attack on the emotions, fusing romance fraud with investment fraud. It builds trust first, reassures you with a small withdrawal, fattens you up, then slaughters.

Here are the key points in one table.

How the scammer appearsThe real structure
A kind, sincere partner or friendAn actor performing trust from a script
"You withdrew, so it is safe"Bait to draw out a large deposit
Unrealized gains on screenFabricated numbers the operators rewrite
"Pay the tax and you can withdraw"An endless pretext to make you deposit more
A secret investment, just the two of youFencing you off from a third party's advice

The core of the defense reduces to just three things.

Distrust a money-making pitch from someone who will not meet you. Before any deposit, always tell a third party with no stake. Ask for a video call.

And if you are already caught in it, there is no need to blame yourself. What deserves blame is the tactic that turns the will to trust against you.

This very moment you realize it is the earliest time to get out. Stop depositing, keep the evidence, and reach outside for help. That is the best action to protect yourself, and someone not yet targeted.

How to Read

Figure 10 (the three defense principles, summary): Place a shield icon in the center, supported by three pillars. Pillar 1: Distrust a money-making pitch from someone who will not meet you. Pillar 2: Before any deposit, consult a third party with no stake. Pillar 3: Ask for a video call. Above the shield: three principles to protect yourself from a tactic that turns trust against you. Below, in an emphasis box: even if you fall for it, blame belongs to the tactic, not the person; the moment you realize is the best time to get out. Beside Pillar 3, add a small note: a video call is what the scammer most wants to avoid.View live on TradingView →