FBI Nabs Alleged Gold Courier At Sky Harbor In ‘Phantom Hacker’ Scam

Federal agents arrested a man at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport on April 10 after investigators say he was working as a courier in a sprawling “phantom hacker” fraud that wiped out a local woman’s savings. Court filings identify the suspect as Gary Christopher. Authorities say he was detained while trying to board a flight to Florida and later ordered held pending further proceedings, in a case that spotlights a fast-growing scam that pressures victims, often older adults, to turn retirement funds into hard-to-trace assets like gold.

According to court documents reviewed by 12 News, the victim, identified in filings only as J.H., first wired $24,358, then was talked into buying $390,456 in gold and handing the bars to a courier. Investigators say the scammers then pushed her to cash out an IRA worth about $600,000 for yet another pickup. At that point, according to prosecutors, she grew suspicious, contacted law enforcement and allowed agents to stage at her home so they could intercept the next handoff. Authorities say investigators later found Christopher at Sky Harbor as he waited to depart and obtained federal authorization to arrest him after reviewing the evidence.

How the ‘phantom hacker’ scheme works

In the phantom-hacker playbook, the scam usually starts with a phony tech-support alert or pop-up that convinces a target that their computer or financial accounts have been breached. From there, impostors posing as bank employees and government officials pile on, insisting that money must be “protected” by moving it into new accounts or by converting it to assets such as gold or cryptocurrency that a courier then picks up. FBI Phoenix has warned that the ruse frequently ends with funds routed overseas or transformed into valuables that are difficult to recover. For background and safety tips, see the FBI Phoenix advisory from FBI Phoenix.

Local pattern and enforcement

Arizona officials say courier-driven frauds like this are not rare and that breaking up those in-person pickups is a critical piece of enforcement. A recent Maricopa County Attorney’s Office press release detailed the sentencing of a courier in a similar elder-targeting operation, underscoring how these scams rely on people who travel specifically to collect cash, gold or other valuables from victims. Local prosecutors and federal agents say they are working together to identify organizers as well as the couriers and to intervene before stolen property leaves the region. For more on comparable cases, see the statement from the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office.

Legal status and what investigators say

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