A deepfake celebrity ad on Facebook or Instagram pushes a fraudulent investment platform
Scam ads on Facebook and Instagram feature AI deepfake videos of celebrities endorsing crypto or stock platforms. Victims invest real money on platforms showing fake profits—then find withdrawals permanently blocked.
Also known as: celebrity deepfake investment scam, Meta platform investment fraud, fake crypto trading ad scam, pump and dump social media ad, Instagram crypto scam
Already happened to you? Do this in the next few minutes
- 1 Call your bank or card's fraud line right now. Use the number on the back of your card — not any number from the message or caller. Ask them to stop or reverse the payment and freeze the account.
- 2 If you paid by gift card, wire, or an app (Zelle, Venmo, Cash App): contact that company immediately and report it as fraud. Acting fast sometimes recovers the money.
- 3 Report to the FBI at ic3.gov and the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov. The sooner, the better.
What to do right now
- 1 Never invest based on a social media ad, even if a recognized celebrity appears to endorse it — deepfake technology makes fake celebrity videos indistinguishable
- 2 Verify any investment platform independently using FINRA BrokerCheck (brokercheck.finra.org) or the SEC's EDGAR before sending money
- 3 Do not pay any fee to 'unlock' or 'withdraw' funds — a legitimate platform never requires an upfront payment to release your own money
- 4 If you already deposited, stop immediately and contact your bank's fraud team — some wire transfers can be recalled within hours
- 5 Report to the FTC at https://reportfraud.ftc.gov and the FBI's IC3 at https://www.ic3.gov.
Red flags
- ⚠ A celebrity or well-known financial expert appears in a social media video endorsing an investment platform you have never heard of
- ⚠ The platform shows impressive profits very quickly but blocks or delays any withdrawal attempt
- ⚠ After clicking an ad, someone contacts you directly (WhatsApp, Telegram) to guide you through 'investing'
- ⚠ An investment 'group' on WhatsApp or Telegram has members constantly sharing profit screenshots — all fake personas
- ⚠ Withdrawing requires paying a 'capital gains tax,' 'verification fee,' or 'account unlock fee' that is itself stolen
- ⚠ The platform looks professional with real-time charts, but the app is not listed in official app stores under the company name
Known variants
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Paid Facebook and Instagram ads use a real financial executive's name, photo, and credentials to promote a fake stock-trading group promising 95% accuracy and 30–40% daily returns. Victims wire money to a platform that blocks withdrawals. A single such operation cost investors over $300 million; 42 state AGs have warned about this pattern.
Last seen: 6/13/2026
Sources
- NY AG — Investor Alert: Investment Scams on Meta Platforms (2026)
- CT AG — Investment Scams on Meta Platforms ($16M in CT losses, 2026)
- Wyoming AG — Rising Investment Scams on Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp (Apr 2026)
- FTC — People Have Lost Billions to Social Media Scams: $1.1B from Investment Scams (Apr 2026)
- Michigan AG — Investment Scams on Meta Platforms (Apr 2026)
- Meta sues Brazil/China advertisers over celebrity deepfake scams (Feb 2026)
- FTC Press Release — New FTC Data Show People Have Lost Billions to Social Media Scams (April 2026)
- American Banker — Scam ads used a BofA exec. Now Meta faces the fallout (Jun 2026)
- 42 State AGs — Letter to Meta urging action against investment scam ads on Facebook and WhatsApp (Jun 2026)