by WorldTribune Staff, January 14, 2026 Real World News
Western states are being robbed massively by foreign fraudsters who know that even if they are caught in their scams the sanctuary states will not come down hard on them, a report said.
In the City Journal’s Jan. 13 report, Christopher Rufo interviews a detective who details the foreign fraud schemes:
Rufo: We’ve seen the Somali fraud schemes in Minnesota, but in the West Coast, there seems to be another pattern: foreign fraud rings ripping off Americans. What are the most common schemes you’re seeing here?
Detective: The two most common I investigate are credit-card fraud and elder fraud. I noticed that in cases involving a high dollar amount—$1,000 or more—and that target a stranger, it’s almost always perpetrated by foreigners.
A typical organized-crime credit-card crew would be from Romania. They will come to the United States by sneaking over the Mexican border and go up and down the I-5 corridor. They steal credit cards out of gym lockers at fitness clubs.
They’re very sophisticated. They have a computer and a printer in their car. They will steal your credit card, and if your phone’s there, they will steal the SIM card. Once they get to their car, they will immediately make a fake ID that matches those credentials.
Then, they’ll go downtown to a jewelry store and buy a Rolex watch for $40,000. If the bank sends you an alert asking if you made the purchase, the thieves have your SIM card and your ID, so they reply, “Yes.” Eventually we’ll catch up with them, but then they just go elsewhere. They’ll start out in Los Angeles, then go up to Salem, then Portland, then Vancouver, Olympia, and Seattle.
Though they involve large sums of money, these are nonviolent crimes, so the justice system doesn’t take them that seriously. Eventually these criminals will get caught, but they are not extraditable out of state, and we’re not allowed to call immigration. They’ll have Romanian passports, but nobody ever picks up the phone and calls ICE because it’s against the law in blue states to call them. They do a few months’ time and then are out again.
Rufo: What are some of the other schemes that you’ve seen, and how do they work?
Detective: Here’s a typical case of elder fraud. Grandma is using her computer, and a pop-up, apparently from Microsoft, appears and says, “Your computer’s infected, you need to call this number.” Grandma calls the number and is connected to a call center in Eastern Europe. (I had one case where the call center was in Moldova.) The call center operator tells Grandma, “Your account’s been compromised. We need to keep your money safe.” And while I can’t believe Grandma is gullible enough to do it, she pulls $30,000 out of her checking account, puts it in a paper bag, and hands it to a courier, who—in the cases I’ve seen recently—is usually a Chinese national who doesn’t speak English.
They will do this all day long; it’s like an Uber service for fraud. They have a script. The courier speaks enough English to say the code word, and the victim hands over the money. These scams are hard to investigate because everything the couriers do is in Chinese, and I can’t go to Moldova, where the money winds up, to track it. It’s just gone.
Rufo: It’s remarkable. We have fraud schemes emanating from every continent on Earth. Why is this happening, and why can’t we stop it?
Detective: Something like one-third of the wealth in the globe is in the United States, and we’re just a hair over 4 percent of the population, so it only makes sense for criminal groups to focus on America. Additionally, in blue states, it’s a taboo to focus on immigrant communities. Politicians have passed “sanctuary state” laws and reduced criminal penalties, which, in effect, are advertisements saying, “We’re open for business for fraudsters. You probably won’t get caught. If you do get caught, you probably won’t get convicted. If you do get convicted, you won’t get that much time. And you never have to worry about getting kicked out the country.”
In my experience, nearly 100 percent of high-dollar, stranger-on-stranger frauds are committed by foreigners. I cannot think of one case of mine where a native-born American committed a fraud over $1,000 against a stranger. Not in my entire career.