Stablecoins Grew Up Fast — and the Rules Are Racing to Catch Them
Stablecoins as the New Regulatory Pressure Point If crypto regulation has a focal point in 2026, stablecoins will be it. Once positioned as a safer,
When California capped crypto ATM transactions at $1,000 a day, the goal was clear: stop scammers from draining victims’ life savings overnight. Nebraska, Iowa, and other states quickly followed suit. The new regulations made headlines and were hailed as a win for consumer protection. But behind the scenes, something troubling started to unfold.
Instead of giving up, scammers adapted.
Now, we’re seeing a dramatic rise in courier-based fraud schemes. Victims, often seniors, are being manipulated into emptying their bank accounts, converting the funds into gold or prepaid cards, and handing them over to a stranger in a parking lot—driven in large part by the daily limits on crypto ATMs which made it harder for fraudsters to get what they wanted quickly. Scammers have simply adapted, placing victims at even greater risk of harm in the process.
Bitcoin ATMs used to be a scammer’s dream. They offered high daily transaction limits, an intuitive interface , and fast execution. But recent state regulations capped those limits and imposed strict licensing and fee controls. The hope was to reduce the massive losses tied to crypto ATM scams, which had ballooned to over $114 million in 2023.
And to some degree, it worked. But it didn’t stop the scammers. It just forced them to change tactics.
Instead of relying largely on crypto ATMs, fraudsters began instructing victims in increasing numbers to:
In effect, they sidestepped the BTM caps entirely by moving to unregulated or lightly regulated forms of value transfer, which often have much weaker compliance and consumer safeguards. And in doing so, they created a chilling new trend: the courier scam economy.
Scam operations are now combining old-school fear tactics with high-tech logistics. A typical scenario looks like this:
And they do.
Victims are instructed to meet a courier in a random parking lot. They’re told not to make eye contact, not to ask questions. Just hand over the duffel bag. And for some, that duffel bag contains their life savings.
The result? A high-value handoff that is untraceable, unregulated, and devastating.
The rise of couriers is perhaps the most disturbing evolution of this fraud trend. It turns digital theft into physical crime.
Why couriers?
Couriers are the linchpin. Some are deeply involved; others think they’re just running errands. But the result is the same: organized fraud rings using physical pickups to bypass digital consumer protections.
And it’s working.
In one shocking case, scammers combined ATM transfers with $700,000 in gold pickups before the courier was caught. In another, a courier posed as a Treasury agent to collect $40,000 in cash. In many cases, the funds are never recovered.
Across the country, police departments are issuing urgent warnings. From Florida to Maryland to Nebraska, detectives are reporting a rise in fraud rings deploying local couriers to collect gold, cash, and prepaid cards. Victims have been convinced to meet strangers in parking lots and hand over thousands—sometimes hundreds of thousands—of dollars.
These operations are highly organized. They involve offshore call centers run by sophisticated criminal syndicates who deploy identity spoofing, and recruit domestic couriers under the guise of legitimate work. Some couriers are complicit; others claim ignorance. Either way, they’re part of a growing pipeline that moves stolen wealth across borders, quickly and quietly.
And the impact is enormous.
Victims lose their homes. Their retirement funds. Their peace of mind. Some are forced to return to work in their 70s. Others never financially recover. And yet many never report the crime at all, out of shame or confusion.
Let’s be clear: certain crypto ATM limits were a step in the right direction. They’ve bought victims time. They’ve made large scams harder to execute quickly. But they’re not a cure-all.
As predicted by many in the industry, bad actors simply shifted tactics.
The BTM transaction caps addressed one channel. But scammers opened another. Gold. Jewelry. Prepaid cards. These fall outside the same regulatory framework—and that’s a growing problem.
So what can we do?
We advocate for a broader, smarter approach to scam prevention:
We’re not advocating for a rollback of regulation. We’re pushing for smarter, more adaptive regulation that keeps pace with how criminals actually operate.
Crypto is maturing. Regulation is inevitable—and necessary. But as we build a safer, more accountable industry, we can’t afford to focus so narrowly that we leave glaring gaps in the system.
The rise of courier scams shows us what happens when we fix one leak and ignore others. Real fraud prevention requires a layered, integrated approach that protects consumers without stifling innovation.
That means:
This isn’t just a compliance issue. It’s a human one.
Crypto has the potential to empower. But that promise can only be fulfilled if we also protect.
At BitAML, we help crypto businesses stay ahead of evolving threats while staying compliant. If you operate a crypto ATM, exchange, or wallet service and want to make sure your consumer protections go beyond limits and into real prevention, let’s talk. Schedule a complimentary discovery call with our team. Together, we can make crypto safer for everyone.
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