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Woman loses nearly $10K in jury duty crypto scam

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Woman loses nearly K in jury duty crypto scam

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Gail Barr expected birthday calls on her 70th birthday. She got plenty of sweet messages from family and friends. Then one voicemail turned her day upside down. The caller claimed to be Chief Deputy Derek Elmore with the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office. He said Gail had an urgent legal matter involving court documents from an Arizona judge. When Gail called back, the story got scarier.

She had missed jury duty, the caller said. Now she needed to pay a nearly $10,000 fine or risk arrest. Gail is a nurse practitioner. She knows how to handle medical pressure. But a missed jury duty threat felt different. “Well, I didn’t know,” Gail said on the CyberGuy Report podcast at cyberguy.com/podcast, “I know medical things, but I didn’t know how that worked.” That confusion helped the scammer pull her deeper into a jury duty crypto scam.

6 CRYPTO SCAM SCRIPTS CRIMINALS USE TO STEAL YOUR MONEY

Scammers told Gail Barr to stay on the phone, withdraw cash and use a Bitcoin machine to avoid arrest for missing jury duty. (Getty Images/Kurt “Cyberguy” Knutsson)

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How the jury duty crypto scam fooled Gail

The scammer did not sound like a random criminal. He used real local names and official-sounding titles. Gail said the voicemail mentioned Judge Jennifer Zipes. She checked the name and found that Jennifer Zipes was indeed an Arizona judge. She also looked up Derek Elmore and found a law enforcement connection. That made the call feel real.

Gail said she was transferred to someone who claimed to be Police Captain John Bailey. He gave her a badge number. He also told her she had been hand-selected for a grand jury case because of her medical background. That detail hit hard. Gail had worked in nursing and as a nurse practitioner. So the story felt possible.

“They said that I was hand-selected by the judge to appear in a grand jury, a medical malpractice case, because of my background in nursing,” Gail said. “So that kind of rang a bell that I believed them.” Then came the threat. The caller claimed Gail had signed a subpoena, failed to appear in court and now faced citations for contempt of court and failure to appear. 

Why the fake sheriff’s call felt so real

Scammers know how to use fear. They also know how to use pieces of real information to make a lie sound believable. That is what happened to Gail. The caller used the names of real people. He knew enough about her work to make the story fit. He also sounded calm and official.

Gail said there were “no accents involved” and that the call sounded “totally legit.” When I asked her if it was a legitimate call, Gail’s answer was direct. “Not at all,” she said. Still, in the moment, the pressure worked. “Something seemed a little weird, I think, but I just kept going because I was frightened,” Gail said. That is the part scammers count on. They want you scared enough to act before you think.

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The $9,260 demand that sent Gail to a Bitcoin ATM

The caller told Gail she needed to pay $9,260. He called it a payment through a “federal bonding kiosk.” That phrase sounds official. But it was really a Bitcoin machine inside a Circle K. Gail said she did not know much about Bitcoin. Her son did, but the scammer told her not to call anyone. “They said you cannot get off the phone with us,” Gail said. “You must stay on the phone the whole time.”

The caller claimed they needed to make sure she did not “skip town.” He also told her not to tell the bank why she needed the cash. That is one of the biggest red flags in this entire story. Gail withdrew the money. Then she went to the crypto kiosk. The scammer sent her an official-looking barcode that appeared to come from the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office.

She scanned it and fed the cash into the machine. “We had to do it, like, five different times because there was a limit to how much you could put in at once,” Gail said. “I was getting very tired. I was so tired.” By the end, Gail had deposited $9,260. “And that was money that I had worked for,” Gail said. “I went back to work to help pay for my son’s medical bills.”

Jury duty scammers may use real judges’ names, fake badge numbers and arrest threats to pressure victims into sending cryptocurrency. (Anna Barclay/Getty Images)

The crypto scam did not stop after Gail paid

After Gail sent the money, the scammer told her to go to the sheriff’s department. Then he suddenly claimed there was another problem. This time, he said Gail had a federal citation. He wanted another $12,000. Gail said she did not have that much money. So the scammer lowered the demand to $3,000 and sent her to another bank. That second bank visit saved her from losing more.

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The bank manager asked what the money was for. Gail gave the excuse that the scammer had told her to use. Then the manager asked whether she planned to give the money to her son that day. That question broke through the fear. Gail said no. The manager took her aside and talked with her. He knew something was wrong.

How Gail got her jury duty scam money back

After Gail realized what had happened, she went home and told her husband and son. She also contacted a local news reporter. That is how Gail learned about Arizona’s Cryptocurrency Kiosk License Fraud Prevention law. “It went into effect a month before my scam,” Gail said. “And what it does is it protects people like myself who have been scammed to get all of their money back.”

Arizona’s law requires crypto kiosk operators to provide fraud warnings, transaction receipts, daily limits and refund protections for certain victims who report fraud within the required time window. The Arizona Corporation Commission says the law took effect Sept. 26, 2025. Gail moved fast. “You have to file a police report within 30 days,” she said. “And you have to contact the cryptocurrency kiosk, Bitcoin Machine Company. I also made a report to the attorney general.” After she completed the steps, Gail got her money back by check. “It was a good birthday present,” she said.

States with crypto ATM fraud laws

Crypto ATM scams have become a major problem. AARP reports that cryptocurrency kiosks were used in scams tied to more than $389 million in reported losses in 2025. Adults 60 and older accounted for 86% of reported losses in cases where the victim’s age was known. AARP also reports that 29 states had passed crypto kiosk laws as of April 2026. These laws can include transaction limits, fraud warning signs, licensing rules and receipt requirements. Indiana became the first state to enact a statewide ban. Tennessee later became the second state to enact a ban.

States publicly identified in AARP reporting and related coverage as having enacted crypto ATM protections, restrictions, or bans include: California, Connecticut, Arizona, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Nebraska, Tennessee, Vermont, and Wisconsin.

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Some states regulate the machines instead of banning them. Others limit daily deposits, require warning signs or force operators to help refund fraud victims. California and Connecticut were among the first states to pass crypto ATM laws in 2023. Vermont extended a moratorium on new crypto kiosks to July 1, 2026. Nebraska passed statewide legislation in 2025. Iowa passed a crypto kiosk consumer protection law in 2025.

THIS IS WHAT YOU ARE DOING WRONG WHEN SCAMMERS CALL

Authorities warn that real courts do not demand jury duty fines through Bitcoin ATMs, gift cards, wire transfers or payment apps. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

Red flags in a jury duty crypto scam

This scam had several warning signs. Knowing them can help you stop the same trick before it drains your account.

A caller threatens arrest

Real courts do not demand instant payment over the phone to make an arrest warrant disappear.

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The caller tells you to stay on the phone

Scammers do this so you cannot call family, police or the real court.

The caller says not to tell the bank

A real law enforcement officer will not tell you to lie about why you need cash.

The caller sends you to a crypto kiosk

 Courts, sheriff’s offices and government agencies do not collect fines through Bitcoin ATMs.

The caller uses real names

Scammers often use public information to make the lie feel real.

The caller creates panic

They want you scared, tired and rushed.

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Tips to protect yourself from a jury duty scam

Here are the warning signs to watch for and the simple steps that can help you avoid falling for a jury duty scam.

1) Hang up and verify the claim yourself

Hang up if someone says you will be arrested unless you pay immediately. Then call the court directly using a number from an official government website. Do not use the phone number left in the voicemail. Also, avoid links sent by text or email. Scammers can spoof phone numbers, copy official names and build fake websites that look convincing.  Use strong antivirus software, to help block malicious links, fake websites and phishing messages before they trick you into handing over personal information. Get my picks for the best 2026 antivirus protection winners for your Windows, Mac, Android & iOS devices at Cyberguy.com

2) Never pay a court fine through a Bitcoin ATM

A real court will not demand payment through cryptocurrency, gift cards, wire transfers or payment apps. That means any request to visit a Bitcoin machine should stop the conversation. The same goes for a caller who says the machine is a “bonding kiosk” or “federal kiosk.” Those phrases are meant to make the scam sound official. 

3) Talk to someone before you withdraw cash

Call a spouse, an adult child, a friend, an attorney or a local court clerk before withdrawing money. A quick conversation can break the scammer’s hold. Scammers often tell victims to stay on the phone to maintain control. They do not want you to hear a calm second opinion. If a caller says you cannot hang up, hang up anyway.

4) Tell the bank what is really happening

Ask your bank for help if you feel rushed, scared or confused. Tell the teller or bank manager exactly what the caller said. Do not use the cover story the scammer gave you. Gail was told to say the money was for her son. That kind of instruction is a major red flag. A real law enforcement officer will not tell you to lie to your bank.

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Scammers told Gail Barr to stay on the phone, withdraw cash and use a Bitcoin machine to avoid arrest for missing jury duty. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

5) Check your jury duty status through the court

Look up your jury duty status through your county court website. You can also call the clerk’s office directly. Do not click a link sent by the caller. Some jury duty scammers now use fake websites to collect personal information and steal money.

6) Watch for personal details that make the scam feel real

Scammers may know your name, job, address or family details. That does not make the call legitimate. Much of that information can come from public records, data broker sites or past data breaches. If a caller uses personal details to scare you, pause before you react.

7) Use a data removal service to reduce your online exposure

Consider using a data removal service to reduce the personal information scammers can find about you online. These services can help remove your name, address, phone number and other details from many people-search and data broker sites. This will not erase everything from the internet. However, it can make it harder for scammers to build a convincing story around your life, job or family. Check out my top picks for data removal services and get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web by visiting Cyberguy.com

HOW SCAMMERS BUILD A PROFILE ON YOU USING DATA BROKERS

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What to do if you already paid a crypto scammer

If you already sent money through a crypto kiosk, speed matters. Acting quickly can help you document the fraud, secure your accounts and possibly qualify for protections in your state.

Act fast after a crypto scam payment

Move quickly if you have already sent money through a crypto kiosk. Time can matter, especially in states with refund protections. Some state crypto ATM laws require victims to report the fraud within a set window. In Gail’s case, Arizona’s law required fast action, including a police report and contact with the kiosk operator. 

File a police report right away

Start with a police report. Ask for a copy or report number. You may need that report when you contact the crypto kiosk company, your bank, your state attorney general or any consumer protection agency.

Contact the crypto kiosk operator

Check the receipt or the machine for the crypto kiosk operator’s contact information. Then report the fraud directly to the company. Share the transaction details, time, location, barcode or wallet address if you have it. Also, provide the police report number.

Report the scam to federal agencies

Report the scam to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center at IC3.gov. Also, file a report with the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. These reports help federal agencies track scam patterns. They may also create a record you can use when dealing with the kiosk operator or state officials.

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Contact your state attorney general

Report the scam to your state attorney general’s office. This step can be especially important if your state has crypto kiosk protections or refund rules. Your state may also track complaints tied to specific kiosk operators. That can help investigators spot larger scam patterns.

Save every piece of evidence

Keep the receipt, barcode, phone number, voicemail, text messages and any names the caller used. Also, write down the address of the kiosk and the time of each transaction. Do not delete anything, even if it feels embarrassing. Those details may help law enforcement, the kiosk operator or your state consumer protection office review the case.

Ask your bank to secure your accounts

Contact your bank after the scam. Even if the crypto payment cannot be reversed, the bank can help protect your accounts. Ask about new debit cards, password changes, account alerts and extra verification steps. Also, review recent transactions for anything suspicious.

Gail Barr lost nearly $10,000 after a fake sheriff’s office caller claimed she missed jury duty and had to pay through a Bitcoin ATM. (Kurt “Cyberguy” Knutsson)

Kurt’s key takeaways

Gail’s story shows how fast a normal day can turn into a financial emergency. One fake sheriff’s call, one believable legal threat and one Bitcoin machine almost cost her nearly $10,000 for good. The most important lesson is simple. Fear is the scammer’s favorite tool. They want you rushed, isolated and too embarrassed to ask for help. Gail got her money back because Arizona had a new law, and she acted fast. Many victims never recover a dime. That is why these crypto kiosk laws matter. They give people a fighting chance after scammers use technology to make cash vanish. If someone calls and says you missed jury duty, pause before you panic. Real courts do not solve legal problems through a Bitcoin ATM at a convenience store. To hear more of Gail’s story, check out  the CyberGuy Report podcast at cyberguy.com/podcast

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Amazon security research reportedly led to the White House’s Anthropic Fable ban

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Amazon security research reportedly led to the White House’s Anthropic Fable ban

According to the Wall Street Journal, the export control directive that led to Anthropic cutting off access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 was triggered in part by cybersecurity research from Amazon and conversations between CEO Andy Jassy and the White House. According to the report, the paper from Amazon claims that, through a series of prompts, it was able to get Fable 5 to serve up information that could be used in cyberattacks. Amazon has yet to respond to a request for comment.

Shortly after Jassy shared the company’s findings with the government, it made the call to block its use by foreign nationals. Complicating this issue is that many of Anthropic’s researchers are foreign-born, meaning they were barred from accessing their own product.

In a statement, Anthropic disputed the government’s characterization of the issue as a “jailbreak.” It argued that many of the same vulnerabilities could be discovered using other publicly available models, including GPT 5.5. Some security researchers appear to back the company’s interpretation. Katie Moussouris, the founder and CEO of LutaSecurity posted on BlueSky that “I’ve seen the paper. It’s not a jailbreak.” Former Commerce Department official Kate Koren speculated to the WSJ that the White House’s dislike of Anthropic may have influenced the decision.

Anthropic and the Trump administration have been at odds for some time over the company’s refusal to allow its AI to be used for mass surveillance of Americans or to power lethal autonomous weapons. In February, Trump instructed federal agencies to stop using Anthropic’s AI. And just hours later, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth designated the company a supply chain risk.

The government and the company seemed to have made amends, and the two had worked together to expand access to Mythos. However, now the two seem destined to clash again.

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Robot soccer player dents wall with terrifying kicks

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Robot soccer player dents wall with terrifying kicks

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A robot soccer player just gave goalkeepers another reason to feel nervous. Booster Robotics titled its YouTube video “Try Stopping This Robot,” and after watching its T1 humanoid hammer soccer balls toward a goal, you can see why.

Most of the kicks hit the curtain behind the net. But several shots appear to hit with enough force to leave visible impact marks and dents in the wall. That part is what everyone is talking about.

At first, it just looks like a viral robot soccer video. Then the wall damage makes the whole thing feel a lot more serious. This video also raises an important question: What happens if someone were to end up in the path of a soccer ball kicked by one of these robots?

AUTONOMOUS HUMANOID ROBOT SOCCER DEBUTS IN CHINA

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Booster Robotics’ T1 humanoid robot lines up a soccer kick inside the company’s lab, where its shots hit with enough force to dent the wall. (Booster Robotics)

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What is the Booster T1 humanoid robot?

The Booster T1 is a humanoid robot from Beijing-based Booster Robotics. According to Booster, the T1 stands about 3 feet, 10 inches tall and weighs about 66 pounds. Booster says the T1 has 23 to 41 degrees of freedom, depending on the configuration. In everyday terms, that means it has enough moving joints to walk, turn, balance and perform athletic movements.

The company also says the T1 can walk for about two hours and stand for about four hours on a charge. It supports open-source tools, software frameworks and API interfaces. That makes it easier for teams to train the robot for new tasks. The company also says more than 50 robotics teams and research institutes already use the platform.

How robot soccer helps train humanoid robots

There is also a serious reason companies test robots this way. Soccer forces a humanoid robot to deal with movement, balance and split-second changes. The ball does not stay still. The robot has to adjust its body, shift its weight and decide what to do next. That makes soccer a useful test for machines that may one day work around people.

Those lessons can carry beyond the soccer field. A robot that learns how to recover from a fall or adjust to a moving object could be more useful in a warehouse, lab or disaster zone. That is why robot soccer has become a way for engineers to test how these machines handle pressure when the action does not go perfectly.

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ROBOT PLAYS TENNIS WITH HUMANS IN REAL TIME

The soccer ball bounces back from the damaged lab wall after Booster Robotics’ T1 delivers a powerful kick. (Booster Robotics)

Booster T1 robot is built for developers

The T1 is meant for research and development. Booster positions the robot as a platform for schools, labs and robotics teams. Developers can use it to test software, train motion models and build new robot behaviors.

The company also offers RoboCup-related tools, including an open-source reinforcement learning framework and a demo system. That demo system covers perception, localization and decision-making for robot matches.

In other words, the T1 works like a serious robot body that developers can teach. That also explains why the wall-denting video is such a strong showcase. It shows the power, balance and control of these robots.

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NEW CHINESE HUMANOID ROBOT SHOWS OFF ITS STRENGTH BY LIFTING 35 POUNDS PER HAND

Booster’s humanoid robot steps into a powerful kick, raising new questions about how much force these machines can safely use around people. (Booster Robotics)

Robot soccer power raises safety concerns

A robot strong enough to dent a wall can damage more than drywall. If a system fails, a powerful leg or arm could hurt someone nearby. That does not mean every humanoid robot poses a danger. It means companies need strong guardrails before these machines move into homes, hospitals, stores or public spaces.

Force limits matter. Emergency stops matter. Testing environments matter. Clear rules about where robots can operate matter. A robot in a lab can be impressive. A robot near the public needs a much higher safety bar.

RoboCup robot soccer has a bigger goal

Booster’s T1 is also part of the RoboCup world, which is basically an international robot soccer competition. But RoboCup isn’t only about robots kicking a ball around a field. The long-term goal is much bigger. RoboCup wants fully autonomous humanoid robots to eventually beat the human World Cup champions under official soccer rules.

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That may sound like a wild idea. However, there is serious research behind it. Robot soccer forces teams to improve how these machines balance, see the field, react to movement and make decisions on their own. Booster says the T1 was built around robot soccer and RoboCup standards. The company also offers tools that help teams create robot soccer demos more quickly.

So, while robot soccer may look like a game, it is also helping engineers figure out how humanoid robots could become more capable in places far beyond the soccer field.

What this means for you

You may not care about robot soccer. Still, this kind of demo says a lot about the future of everyday robotics. Humanoid robots are learning to move with more confidence. They can balance better, recover faster and use their bodies with more force. That progress could eventually help with useful jobs, including warehouse work, elder care support or disaster response.

At the same time, stronger robots create new questions. Who checks their safety? Who sets the rules? Who is responsible when a robot breaks something or injures someone? The T1 video shows why the next phase of robotics really needs testing, transparency and accountability.

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Kurt’s key takeaways

This robot soccer video makes you stop and think. Booster Robotics’ T1 can kick a soccer ball with enough force to leave visible dents and impact marks in a wall. That to me is scary. It also raises a real safety question. As humanoid robots get stronger, companies will need to prove they can control that power around people. A robot kicking soccer balls in a lab is one thing. A robot near players, workers or bystanders is a very different story. Robot soccer may look like a game today. But it may also be showing us what tomorrow’s machines will be able to do. That is why it is important to keep an eye on this technology as it develops.

When you see a robot kick with this much force, does it make you excited about what is coming next, or worried about how safe these machines will be around people? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.

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Copyright 2026 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.

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Sealed Super Mario Bros. sells for a record $3 million

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Sealed Super Mario Bros. sells for a record  million

A copy of Super Mario Bros., still in the box and sealed with its original sticker, just sold at Heritage Auctions for $3 million. That absolutely crushes the previous record of $2 million, also for a copy of Super Mario Bros., in 2021. That sale also came hot on the heels of a controversial auction of Super Mario 64 for $1.56 million.

Part of what drove the price of this particular copy so high is that, according to Heritage Auctions, instead of shrink wrap, this 19895 second run was sealed with a glossy sticker, which was discontinued shortly after. The site claims it’s the earliest known sealed copy of the game in existence. It’s also graded at 9.6 A++ by Professional Sports Authenticator.

The price of vintage gaming collectibles has been skyrocketing over the last few years. It was only in July of 2020 that Heritage Auctions set the record for the highest price paid for a game at auction, again, with a copy of Super Mario Bros., for $114,000. Six years later, that seems like an absolute bargain.

If the winner of the auction decides to do the unthinkable and break the seal on the game, Heritage Auctions is throwing in an NES console.

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