News listCrypto scammers offer ‘safe passage’ through Hormuz. At least one ship may have been conned.
CoinDesk2026-04-21 09:31:09

Crypto scammers offer ‘safe passage’ through Hormuz. At least one ship may have been conned.

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Crypto scammers offer ‘safe passage’ through Hormuz. At least one ship may have been conned. Marisks, a maritime risk company, alerted ships stranded by the Hormuz blockade to scammers posing as Iranian authorities asking for bitcoin or USDT. What to know: - Shipowners are receiving fraudulent messages from scammers posing as Iranian authorities and demanding bitcoin or USDT payments for safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz, according to Greek risk management firm Marisks. - Marisks said it believes at least one vessel fell victim to the scam and was fired on while attempting to transit the strait, which has been largely blocked by Iran since late February amid a U.S.- and Israel-led war. - The scam follows Tehran's proposal to charge official crypto tolls for safe transit. Marisks stressed that the messages it flagged did not come from legitimate Iranian sources. Shipowners are receiving fraudulent messages asking for crypto payments in exchange for safe passage across the Strait of Hormuz, and at least one may have been taken in, Reuters reported Tuesday. Marisks, a Greek maritime risk services company, issued a warning saying several shipping companies had received messages from scammers posing as Iranian authorities and asking for bitcoin or USDT. The firm said it believed at least one ship fell victim to the scam and was fired upon while trying to pass through the strait over the weekend, Reuters said. Shipping traffic through the strait has largely been blocked by Iran since Feb. 28, when the U.S. and Israel initiated a war on the Middle East country. According to Reuters, there are roughly 20,000 oil tankers and other freighters stranded in the Gulf. A week ago, U.S. President Donald Trump ordered a naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz and has since seized one Iranian vessel trying to evade the operation. On April 9, Tehran, which controls the chokepoint, proposed crypto tolls on vessels in exchange for safe transit. Hamid Hosseini, spokesperson for Iran’s Oil, Gas and Petrochemical Products Exporters’ Union, said the crypto fees would likely be charged in bitcoin. Marisks issued its alert on Monday. Iran has not made any comment, Reuters added. "These specific messages are a scam," Marisks said, assuring the messages did not come from official Iranian sources. "After providing the documents and assessing your eligibility by the Iranian Security Services, we will be able to determine the fee to be paid in cryptocurrency (BTC or USDT). Only then will your vessel be able to transit the strait unimpeded at the pre-agreed time," said the fraudulent message cited by Marisks, according to Reuters. The shipping company did not immediately respond to a CoinDesk request for comment. More For You KelpDAO hackers are moving $290M in stolen crypto across blockchains, using privacy tools to mask the trail as DeFi contagion fears move through the sector. What to know: - Hackers are laundering $290 million in stolen crypto by moving large sums across the Ethereum and Bitcoin blockchains. - Blockchain investigators have tracked the funds through privacy tools and cross-chain bridges often favored by state-sponsored groups. - The breach has triggered widespread liquidations across the decentralized finance sector amid fears that the...
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Published:2026-04-21 09:31:09
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