As the saying goes, if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
Florida resident Jessica Gipson spent her 20s saving money so she could invest in real estate. Then she met a man through mutual connections who said he was working on a great trading deal and the timing seemed right. (1)
“He felt very trustworthy,” she told CBS News Miami. “We had spent some time together. It’s not like I had met someone and we were just going off of a whim.”
The man, identified as Alex Lee Moore, showed her a one-page contract indicating that if she invested $25,000 with him, she’d get a tenfold return of $250,000 on Jan. 17 2025 — plus 40 follow-up weekly performance checks.
Gipson said she only had $21,000 in savings to invest, but he said that was fine. She signed the contract. And that’s the last she saw of her $21,000 investment — or any money at all from Moore.
Gipson told CBS News Miami that when she started reaching out to him last January, he was evasive.
“There’s a different excuse of ‘The money is backed up’, or ‘The deal didn’t go through’ or ‘The person who was supposed to pay on the deal didn’t go through,’” she said.
She sent Moore a letter of withdrawal and demand letters (one written by her lawyer) to no avail, then filed a police report.
The police told Moore it was a civil matter. She did file a suit in Florida Circuit Court last August, but the case was not settled in court (2).
In desperation, she reached out to CBS News Miami. When the media outlet got in touch with Moore, he told them not to run the story. He has still not returned Gipson’s money.
She told CBS News that it’s been a tough lesson and admits it was a too-good-to-be-true deal.
It’s not only tricky for victims of investment scams to pursue justice, it’s tough for prosecutors too.
Here’s why, and how to protect yourself.
Investment scams are a massive part of the modern financial landscape.
The Federal Trade Commission reports that consumers lost $4.6 billion to investment scams in 2023. By 2024, that figure rose to $5.7 billion, with a median loss of over $9,000 for victims (3).
Unfortunately, prosecuting fraudsters in civil court is notoriously difficult. Federal prosecutors filed charges in only 24% of white-collar criminal referrals in 2025 (4).