An investigation into the increasing prevalence of elaborate scams in Switzerland, including fraudsters posing as police officers who have stolen nearly CHF10 million, and a surge in fraudulent websites for the electronic motorway vignette.

"I was so sure it was genuine. I thought they were just going to take photos and give everything back."
"Traditional first names are often associated with older people. Thatâs the starting point."
A staggering CHF 10 million has vanished from the pockets of residents in French-speaking Switzerland since 2023, funnelled directly into the hands of criminals posing as police officers. This is not petty theft; it is a calculated assault on public trust that is escalating at an alarming rate. While authorities grapple with the surge, the financial toll tells a terrifying story of acceleration. In 2023, losses stood at CHF 1.5 million. By 2024, that figure had more than doubled to CHF 3.5 million. The trend for 2025 is even more critical, with losses smashing past the CHF 4.5 million mark in just the first ten months.
The victims, primarily the elderly, are being ruthlessly targeted by international networks that exploit their respect for authority. Fraudsters, often operating from France, convince residents that their assets are at risk from local thieves, persuading them to hand over jewelry, cash, and bank cards for "safekeeping." This surge represents a sophisticated evolution in cross-border crime, leaving emotional devastation in its wake that far exceeds the monetary damage.
The brilliance of these scams lies in their terrifying attention to detail. Criminals are not selecting targets at random; they are weaponizing public data. Simon Baechler, head of criminal investigations in NeuchĂątel, reveals that perpetrators scour directories for "traditional first names" associated with older generations. Once a target is identified, the psychological manipulation begins. Victims receive calls from "officers" citing urgent security threatsâoften claiming a duplicate bank card has been found on a criminalâand are bombarded with fake badge numbers and station addresses to cement the illusion.
Suzanne Mermoud, an 81-year-old from Sion, became one of hundreds to fall into this trap in April 2025. "I was so sure it was genuine," she recounted, after handing over her valuables to men she believed were protecting her. The scammers' ability to mimic authority is so potent that victims often provide the very bags used to steal their life savings. This is social engineering at its most predatory, turning a citizen's law-abiding nature into their greatest vulnerability.
While fake police knock on doors, a different breed of predator is lurking online. With the January 31st deadline for the 2026 motorway vignette approaching, Swiss motorists are facing a deluge of fraudulent websites. As the popularity of the e-vignette soarsâadoption jumped to 45% in 2025âscammers have industrialized the process of ripping off drivers. Unofficial sites are intercepting traffic meant for the federal portal, charging inflated prices well above the official CHF 40 fee.
These platforms are deceptive by design. They don't just add a surcharge of up to CHF 10; they frequently trap users into hidden, recurring subscriptions that are notoriously difficult to cancel. Furthermore, because these third-party sites must manually purchase the vignette on your behalf, drivers risk significant delays. The Federal Office for Customs and Border Security is urging extreme vigilance: there is only one official portal, www.e-vignette.ch. Anything else is a gamble with your credit card data and a guarantee of overpayment.
Behind the fake police calls lies a criminal infrastructure that operates with military-grade logistics. Investigations have exposed a highly structured network where masterminds in France command "mules" recruited via Snapchat to execute the physical theft. These couriers are not merely sent to an address; they are micromanaged with surgical precision. Transcripts reveal coordinators demanding real-time location updates and enforcing strict dress codesâspecifically, a "classic white shirt" from Zaraâto ensure the couriers look respectable and unsuspicious.
The operational discipline is chilling. Mules are instructed to track petrol costs to the cent to avoid gaps in financial records, while constantly rotating Swiss SIM cards to evade police tracking. Despite knowing the modus operandi, Swiss law enforcement faces a complex cat-and-mouse game. The cross-border nature of the crime, combined with the rapid turnover of disposable foot soldiers, makes dismantling the leadership structure incredibly difficult. As these networks refine their professionalism, the threat to Swiss residents is becoming more organized, more digital, and more dangerous.