A Florida man has been handed back his $710,000, the biggest crypto-fraud reimbursement in the state’s history. The officials behind it say stolen digital funds can occasionally be traced and recovered. The return was announced by Attorney General of Florida James Uthmeier on Thursday, July 16. He called it the largest single reimbursement his office’s Cyber Fraud Enforcement Unit has delivered.
According to officials, the victim unknowingly entered a work-from-home scheme built around fake product reviews. He was told to deposit cryptocurrency to match the value of the items he was supposedly reviewing, with a promise of commissions and a full refund plus profit once the products were sold. The bad actors behind the scam kept on increasing the amount to be deposited as the products got bigger. When they had drained everything they could from the victim, they cut contact and told him the balance was “stuck in the blockchain” unless he paid one more fee.
Florida reimburses stolen funds to scam victim
Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office investigators were able to trace the stolen deposits to a larger consolidation wallet, which was used to hold funds pooled from several different frauds. Prosecutors then pursued civil forfeiture. The scammers declined to contest the case; therefore, the court entered a default judgment, which saw the recovered amount paid back to the victim. “Instead of setting records, we prefer to prevent fraud but are proud to deliver justice and make this victim whole,” Uthmeier stated.
He credited the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office and Chief Assistant Statewide Prosecutor John Paul and said the funds were pulled back from what he described as transnational criminals. Jacksonville Sheriff T.K. Waters stated, “Recovering more than $700,000 and returning it to the victim is an outstanding result,” Waters said in the release, thanking Uthmeier’s team for its work holding fraudsters to account. The reason a single $710,000 refund makes headlines is that most crypto-fraud money is never recovered.
Many crypto investigations end with a conviction, while the victims are left empty-handed or with far less than the value of what was stolen from them. An example is the OneCoin case, where the Department of Justice only recently opened a compensation process using more than $40 million in forfeited assets, years after the scheme defrauded an estimated 3.5 million people out of over $4 billion. In Arizona, the state attorney general’s office stated that residents lost more than $177 million to crypto-ATM fraud schemes in 2024 alone.
The development led the state to pass a law giving Bitcoin-ATM victims a narrow 30-day window to request a refund. Despite this, victims say that they are only getting part of their money back after a slow process. Given the above cases, the Jacksonville case then becomes a ray of hope. Uthmeier used the case to repeat warnings about work-from-home fraud, which he said tends to target the most vulnerable.
The attorney general’s office listed upfront charges for background checks or equipment, requests to buy gift cards or crypto as part of a job, unsolicited job offers by text, and interviews conducted only over text as red flags that people should be looking out for. The office advised anyone considering an online job to contact the company directly to confirm it is real before sending any money.

