Fake Ledger App Scam Drains Musician’s Bitcoin Holdings

American musician G. Love lost 5.9 BTC after entering his seed phrase into a fake Ledger app, highlighting rising crypto scam risks.

By Andrew Collins | Edited by Julia Sakovich Published: , Updated:

Garrett Dutton, the American musician known as G. Love, has lost 5.9 Bitcoin worth roughly $420,000 after falling victim to a fraudulent mobile application impersonating the official software from Ledger. The incident underscores the ongoing risks of social engineering attacks targeting crypto users.

According to Dutton, the scam led to the complete loss of his retirement savings after he unknowingly entered his seed phrase into the malicious app, which he had downloaded from the App Store onto a new computer. The attacker was then able to drain his wallet almost instantly. The speed of the theft highlights how seed phrase exposure remains one of the most critical vulnerabilities in self-custody crypto storage.

Onchain investigator ZachXBT tracked the stolen funds and reported that the attacker moved and laundered the Bitcoin through KuCoin deposit addresses across nine separate transactions, suggesting a coordinated attempt to obscure the origin of the funds.

The incident reflects a broader trend of increasingly sophisticated scams targeting hardware wallet users. Fraudsters have long used phishing emails, fake support messages, and even physical letters in attempts to trick users into revealing sensitive recovery phrases. Despite repeated warnings from security experts, these tactics continue to succeed.

Crypto-related fraud continues to rise sharply. According to recent data from the FBI’s Internet Crime Report, losses from crypto scams reached record highs in 2025, exceeding $11 billion. The report also noted a significant increase in complaints and high-value victim losses, with thousands reporting losses above $100,000.

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