A person who transfers illegally obtained money on behalf of criminals, often through their personal bank account. Money mules may be knowing participants or unknowing victims recruited through fake job offers.
A person who transfers illegally obtained money on behalf of criminals, often through their personal bank account. Money mules may be knowing participants or unknowing victims recruited through fake job offers.
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Money mules are the human links in the money laundering chain. After scammers steal money through fraud, they need to move it without being traced. Money mules receive the stolen funds and transfer them elsewhere, making the money harder to track and recover.
Many money mules don't know they're committing a crime. They're recruited through fake job advertisements for "payment processing agents," "financial managers," or "money transfer agents." They believe they have a legitimate work-from-home job.
Being a money mule has severe legal consequences, regardless of whether you knew the money was stolen. Mules face criminal charges for money laundering, which can result in imprisonment, fines, and a permanent criminal record. Banks will also close their accounts.
In 2023, European law enforcement arrested over 1,000 money mules in a coordinated operation. Many were young people who had been recruited through social media with promises of easy money — "just let us use your bank account and keep 10%." Many faced money laundering charges.