If you are still in contact with the person who stole your Bitcoin, do not let that contact create false hope. Scammers often stay engaged after the theft to delay victims, make new promises, ask for more money, or buy time while moving funds further. The FTC says victims should stop sending money immediately, and the FBI advises preserving all communications and transaction details for reporting and investigation.
At RefundRequest.org, we help victims turn that ongoing contact into something useful: evidence. Messages, email threads, wallet addresses, payment instructions, usernames, screenshots, and transaction hashes can all help build a clearer picture of how the scam worked and where the Bitcoin was sent. A strong case is not built on chasing promises from the scammer — it is built on documenting the facts quickly and accurately.
If the scammer is still talking to you, do not argue, threaten, or send more funds to “unlock” your money, pay “tax,” or cover a “release fee.” U.S. consumer agencies warn that follow-up demands like these are common in fraud and recovery scams, especially after an initial loss.
RefundRequest.org helps victims respond with structure, not panic — by reviewing the transaction trail, organizing the communication history, and identifying the next steps worth taking.
RefundRequest.org — when the scammer is still talking, the evidence may still be growing.