White House Directs Sustained National Effort to Combat Cyber‑Enabled Fraud and Scam Centers
The White House issued a March 6, 2026 policy directing federal agencies to prioritize prosecutions and coordinated action against transnational cyber‑enabled fraud, including scam centers and crypto investment schemes. The announcement tasks the Department of Justice with maintaining prosecution and victim relief priorities and frames recent takedowns as part of a national disruption strategy.
On March 6, 2026, the White House released a policy and implementation directive ordering a sustained, whole‑of‑government effort to combat cyber‑enabled fraud, explicitly referencing ransomware, phishing, sextortion, scam centers and crypto investment fraud as priority threats. The directive requires federal agencies to prioritize interagency investigation, information sharing and prosecutions, and directs the Department of Justice to continue emphasizing cyber‑enabled fraud prosecutions and coordinated victim relief, including restitution pathways. The statement positions recent enforcement actions — from forum seizures to large crypto asset freezes — as elements of a broader strategy to disrupt criminal infrastructure, speed asset recovery and improve protections for victims. It calls for enhanced partnerships with state, local and international counterparts and urges financial and technology sectors to adopt stronger controls and reporting mechanisms. By formalizing these priorities, the administration seeks to institutionalize rapid response capabilities, strengthen legal and technical tools across agencies, and ensure victims receive timely relief while dismantling networks that facilitate large‑scale, cross‑border fraud.
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