The short version.
Money mules are people whose bank accounts route fraud proceeds through the legitimate banking system. Recruiters target teens on Discord, Telegram, and increasingly TikTok with offers like 'get paid $200 to receive a deposit and send most of it back.' The teen's account becomes part of the laundering chain for romance-scam, business-email-compromise, or pension-fraud proceeds. The real criminals are abroad; the U.S.-based teen is the only person federal prosecutors can charge.
The platforms and contexts.
Discord 'side hustle' or 'get money' servers, Telegram channels, Snapchat DMs, TikTok comments under finance content. Sometimes routed through a 'friend of a friend' approach that obscures the recruiter.
The timeline.
Mule recruitment exists as long as bank accounts have; the teen-targeted online version scaled after 2020 with COVID-era fraud and overseas crime-group professionalization. FBI public warnings escalated in 2023–2024.
The core facts a parent needs.
- 'Receive and forward' offers are always fraud. Legitimate jobs don't pay you to route money through your bank account.
- The teen's federal exposure is real — money-laundering charges have been brought against minors, even when the teen was unaware of the source. 'I didn't know' is not a complete defense.
- The teen's bank account can also be permanently flagged across the banking system, making it difficult to open future accounts or get loans.
What's actually at stake.
- Federal criminal charges, including money laundering (which can carry significant sentences even with cooperation).
- Permanent banking blacklisting, affecting future financial life.
- Cascading recruitment: once a teen has cooperated once, the network pressures further work with threats of exposure.
Concrete next steps.
- Educate explicitly: 'No legitimate job ever uses your personal bank account to receive money for someone else.' Most teens haven't been told this directly.
- If a teen has already received money, do not let them spend or forward it. Contact the bank, FBI's IC3, and an attorney before any other step.
- Watch for unexplained deposits, new bank accounts the teen opened on their own, or sudden 'side hustle' income.
See it for yourself.
FBI ic3.gov · FBI tip line 1-800-CALL-FBI · Bank fraud-prevention line · Attorney before talking to anyone else if charges are possible.