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Canadian securities regulators have dismantled more than
7,500 fraudulent investment and cryptocurrency websites as part of a
coordinated national campaign to combat online financial crime.

The Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) said the
enforcement action took place between June 5, 2025, and February 12, 2026,
involving 7,586 deactivated scam platforms tied to more than 13,000 URLs.

Coordinated Effort Against Online Fraud

The operation, announced during Fraud Prevention Month,
reflects an expanded push to disrupt fraudulent activity targeting Canadian
investors.

Last year, Canada’s national police closed unregistered platform TradeOgre and recovered more than CAD 56 million in digital assets, in what it was described as the largest crypto seizure in Canadian history.

The Eastern Region’s Money Laundering Investigative Team began investigating the exchange in June 2024 after a Europol tip and later found that TradeOgre was not registered with FINTRAC and did not verify client identities.

“Online investment scams continue to pose a serious risk to
Canadians, and we are using a full range of regulatory and enforcement tools,
including advanced technological capabilities, to proactively identify and
disrupt fraudulent websites,” said Stan Magidson, Chair of the CSA and CEO of
the Alberta Securities Commission.

You may also like: Australia’s Fraud-Intel Network Exposes $60M in Scams as Account Takeovers Rise 47%

The CSA said its members have strengthened cooperation with
law enforcement and industry partners to identify scams faster and prevent
investor losses. The regulator urged the public to check the registration of
investment advisors and platforms using the CSA’s National Registration Search
tool before investing.

Ongoing Investor Protection

Statistics on deactivated websites will be included in the
CSA’s Year in Review report starting in 2026. Investors who suspect fraud are
encouraged to contact their local securities regulator.

Miles away from individual enforcement actions, Singapore is the worst hit by cyber‑enabled fraud, with scam cases jumping 61% over two
years, according to recent findings by the Financial Action Task Force.

The
global watchdog now treats cyber‑enabled fraud as one of the most
widespread profit‑driven crimes worldwide and a core driver of money
laundering, terrorist financing and proliferation financing risks, as rapid
digitalization, new payment rails and virtual assets enable criminals to move
illicit funds across borders at scale.

FATF notes that 156 jurisdictions, or roughly 90% of those
it assessed, now classify fraud as a major money laundering threat. National
data underscores how quickly the threat has escalated: alongside Singapore’s
spike, fraud now accounts for more than 40% of all recorded crime in the United
Kingdom.

This article was written by Jared Kirui at www.financemagnates.com.

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CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. Between 74-89% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs. You should consider whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money

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