Regional report — US city

Scams in Denver

If you live in Denver or were targeted by a scam connected to Denver, this page is your starting point. We surface active scam patterns in this US city, recent reports posted by the community, and the right place to file an official complaint locally.

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Frequently asked questions

What scams are most common in Denver?

Across reports submitted to ScamGuard for Denver, the most common active scams are USPS / FedEx delivery smishing, fake IRS or local-tax calls, Zelle/Venmo "wrong recipient" scams, fake job offers over WhatsApp, and pig-butchering crypto scams via dating apps.

How do I report a scam in Denver?

Three places: ScamGuard (so the community gets warned in hours), the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov, and your local consumer-protection office or attorney general. Many states also accept reports through their AG website.

Are there phone-number prefixes used by scammers in Denver?

Scammers frequently spoof local area codes to look familiar. A call appearing to be from Denver can still originate anywhere. Caller-ID spoofing is illegal in the US under the Truth in Caller ID Act but enforcement is hard, so treat unsolicited calls from any number as suspect.

Where can I get help recovering money in Denver?

Start with your bank's fraud line within 24 hours. File a police report — it is required for many bank reimbursements. For wire transfers contact your bank immediately to attempt a SWIFT recall. For crypto, file with IC3 (US) or your country's cybercrime unit.

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