Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 20
Arizona Law Helps Gail Barr Recover $10,000 After Jury Duty Bitcoin ATM Scam
Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 20

Arizona Law Helps Gail Barr Recover $10,000 After Jury Duty Bitcoin ATM Scam

2 articles · Updated · Fox News · May 20
  • Gail Barr recovered the $9,260 she sent through a Bitcoin ATM after scammers posing as Maricopa County sheriff’s officials threatened her with arrest for missing jury duty.
  • Real judges’ names, fake badge numbers and a demand to stay on the phone pushed Barr to withdraw cash and feed it into a Circle K kiosk labeled as a “federal bonding” payment.
  • A second demand for $12,000—later cut to $3,000—collapsed when a bank manager questioned her cover story, helping her realize the call was fraudulent before she lost more.
  • Arizona’s Cryptocurrency Kiosk License Fraud Prevention law, effective Sept. 26, 2025, let her obtain a refund after she filed a police report within 30 days and contacted the kiosk operator and attorney general.
  • Crypto kiosk scams caused more than $389 million in reported 2025 losses, AARP said, with adults 60 and older accounting for 86% of known-age cases as 29 states adopted kiosk laws by April 2026.
With billions lost annually, should a nationwide ban on crypto ATMs be considered to protect vulnerable citizens?
A new law helped one victim recover her money, but what will it take to make this the rule, not the exception?
As AI-powered scams become hyper-realistic, can technology alone protect the vulnerable from sophisticated psychological manipulation?