New Lincoln ordinance requires warnings on cryptocurrency ATMs

This post was originally published on this site.

The Lincoln Police Department is partnering with AARP Nebraska on an educational campaign with the goal of preventing cryptocurrency fraud.

Businesses in Lincoln with cryptocurrency ATMs will be required to display a warning sticker by Dec. 24 in order to abide by a new ordinance.

The sticker reads: “STOP: If someone told you to put money in this machine, whether they claim to be a loved one, partner, government, bank, or business, you may be getting scammed. Scammers use fear, secrecy and urgency to trick you into sending cryptocurrency.” It then directs the reader to contact LPD.

The Lincoln Municipal Code comes after city residents lost over $11 million in cryptocurrency scams in 2025. The City Council approved the code on Nov. 17, and Mayor Leirion Gaylor Baird signed it on Nov. 24.

Along with the new requirement, Erika Thomas, public information officer for LPD, encouraged business owners to communicate with patrons.

“If you see someone, especially someone who’s elderly, with a phone to their ear, maybe looking confused and approaching one of these machines,” Thomas said. “Those are telltale signs that they are likely in the midst of a scam in that moment.”

Business owners and general members of the public can access information for tips on how to avoid these scams through the City of Lincoln’s website.

“There is an acronym we’ve created that is the word scam itself, that stands for stop, check, avoid and make a report,” Thomas said.

Additionally, LPD will add a cryptocurrency investigator as part of its Technical Investigations Unit in January.

AARP Nebraska is also working with the Grand Island Police Department to incorporate similar warning tactics, including a Grand Island-specific version of the sticker in both English and Spanish.