The Match.com login that becomes a criminal case.
People search for the login page. Prosecutors search the account behind it. Dating platforms now generate a steady docket - romance-scam fraud, catfishing, age-misrepresentation stings - and the profile is always Exhibit A.
The dating-app docket.
Three case families dominate. Romance-scam prosecutions: wire fraud built on affection - money “borrowed” across platforms, investment pitches to matches (the pig-butchering pattern), each transfer a count under § 1343. Sting operations: law enforcement profiles posing as adults who “reveal” themselves as minors - generating § 2422(b) enticement cases with ten-year mandatory minimums, defended on entrapment and intent. And identity cases: catfishing that crosses into impersonation crimes, extortion (“sextortion” demands over shared images), and account-takeover fraud. The platform’s records - messages, payment links, login IPs, device fingerprints - are subpoenaed in all three.
The money cases, from both directions.
If you sent money to someone you met on a platform and suspect fraud: report to IC3, your bank, and the platform quickly - clawbacks are time-sensitive - and be careful with “recovery agents,” who are round two of the same scam. If you received money from a match and the relationship soured: understand how fast “gift between adults” gets recharacterized as fraud once an angry complainant talks to agents - contemporaneous messages showing the sender’s intent are the defense, and they need preserving before accounts get deleted. Deleting the profile after a dispute is the single worst move: it reads as consciousness of guilt and destroys the exculpatory thread.
If agents are already asking.
A platform ban, a payment freeze, or an “interview request” about your online activity means an investigation is assembling. The moves are standard and urgent: no interviews without counsel, no deletions, preserve your own message archive (export it - platform data disappears on account closure), and map the money flow honestly with your lawyer before the government maps it adversarially. Online-conduct cases are federal fraud cases - defended on intent, on the record, and best defended early.

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