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CRYPTO CRIME

I lost £230k to cryptocurrency scams & dodgy investments – here are the red flags to look out for

IMPULSE took over as James Gale hit the button to invest £3,000 in what he thought was the presale link to a hotly tipped new cryptocurrency – but in a second the money was gone.

This wasn’t the first - or last - time the 34-year-old was duped out of his hard-earned cash, and sadly it’s a story heard all too often in the world of online assets.

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James Gale was conned out of £30,000 through cryptocurrency scams – and has now launched his own type of coin called Koda

Last year alone, scammers took home a record £10billion ($14bn) according to data from Chainalysis - a 79 per cent rise from 2020. 

Cryptocurrencies - online money that can be used to purchase certain items or services without the need to use real names or go through a bank - dominate the headlines too, with price fluctuations, new coins and even Eric Trump threatening to sue a creator coin for using his family name.

Losing £230,000 to dodgy and bad investments spurred James, from Uxbridge, London, to want to make the online space safer for users.

He launched his own coin – Koda Cryptocurrency – in May last year and now advises about the dangers to be aware of when investing.

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From "FOMO" to "apeing", "rug pulls" and "doxxing", he also helps decode common crypto terms and how investors can avoid falling foul of cons.

James tells The Sun: “The reason people get scammed, in my opinion, is that everyone has seen the success that can come from a good cryptocurrency and getting in there early.

“If you get in early you stand to earn the biggest gains, which causes mass panic and FOMO - fear of missing out – which leads people to make massive mistakes.

“There’s a thing called ‘apeing’, which refers to an ape-like mentality when going after cryptocurrencies, and that can cost you.

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“It’s when you are not researching a project and go all guns blazing, throwing your money at something when you don’t know what you’re doing.

“I’ve lost up to £30,000 to cryptocurrency scams and £200,000 from coins devaluing, but learned very quickly from my mistakes and have made up the money I lost.

“The one that sticks with me is when I lost £3,000 ($4,000) in seconds. I was so busy and made a move I shouldn’t have.

"I fell prone to scammers because they were running a pre-sale for a cryptocurrency I was following.

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“I signed up to the website, put in my wallet address and sent £3,000 but as soon as I hit the button I knew what I had done. It was FOMO and it overrode my emotions and logic.

“As I watched the transaction go through I realised the website was not correct, nor was the wallet. You have to go through those mistakes to learn and educate others.”

Start small

James, who runs one of Britain's largest pest control companies, started investing in cryptocurrencies back in 2018.

He began investing smaller sums online due to being "too busy" with his other business but eventually put in thousands at a time.

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James claims to have had "a few big successes" over the years and now has more than £1.86million ($2.5million) in crypto assets.

This far exceeds the £30,000 he lost to scams – including "being scammed twice for up to £5,000" and others for £1,500 a time – bad investments which saw coins devalue by £200,000.

However, he believes those losses allowed him to learn very quickly what not to do and the red flags to keep an eye out for.

It was this that made him decide to launch his own cryptocurrency – in a bid to make the space safer and more accessible, while also capitalising from potential earnings.

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What is cryptocurrency and how does it work?

CRYPTOCURRENCY is online money that can be used to purchase certain items or services without the need to use real names or to go through a bank.

How much coin a person holds, the deals that are made and the fluctuation of a currency’s worth are all recorded on the ‘blockchain’, which serves as a ledger.

The value of a cryptocurrency typically goes up and down based upon supply and demand, dependent on how many transactions are made using the coin and how many coins are made, referred to as mining.

The more useful the coin is seen to be the more it is worth, which is decided based on the number of people who invest in it and the number of transactions that are made using it. 

However, the value of a cryptocurrency can also increase if tech figures, such as Elon Musk, talk about a specific coin as they are seen as experts of the online world.

The big players include Bitcoin, Ethereum, Binance Coin and Dodgecoin – but even their currencies' values have fluctuated over time.

When Koda was launched in May last year the currency was worth $0.0000730 and last week, it was worth $0.00068110, according to CoinGecko. 

Like all cryptocurrencies, the value fluctuates by the day but at its peak, it was worth $0.00223939, which was a 2,967 per cent increase from its original value.

Coin copycats & Elon Musk risk

James advises people considering investing in cryptocurrency to “only invest what you can afford to lose”, describing it as a “gambling game”.

He said: “If you’re not going to spend hours or days working out whether a project is worth investing in, it really is like spinning the roulette wheel.”

His greatest pitfalls came after trying spot patterns in cryptocurrencies based on what had done well in the past and following what was current in the news.

James said: “The whole space follows Elon Musk, Dr Dre and other influences, when they talk about a coin it can cause massive price disruption.

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