AI Deepfakes and Fraud
Law Enforcement & AI | PO Box 58 | West Wareham MA 02576 | lawenforcementandai.com | henry@lawenforcementandai.com September 2025 Volume 1 | No. 3 September 2025 | Volume 1 | No. 3 Table of Contents AI Deepfakes AI Agents Authenticating AI-Generated Evidence Judges and AI: A Risky Experiment in the U.S. Legal System AI Fraud Alert The Many Ways Tech Faciltated Abuse Can Be Delivered AI-Generated Child Sexual Abuse Overwhelms Authorities Turning Law Enforcement’s Data Overload Into Actionable Intelligence Responsible AI Use By US Police Departments New Orleans Police Rethinking Facial Recognition Prompt of the Month Odds and Ends AI Deepfakes AI Agents Authenticating AI-Generated Evidence Judges and AI: A Risky Experiment in the U.S. Legal System AI Fraud Alert The Many Ways Tech Faciltated Abuse Can Be Delivered AI-Generated Child Sexual Abuse Overwhelms Authorities Turning Law Enforcement’s Data Overload Into Actionable Intelligence Responsible AI Use By US Police Departments New Orleans Police Rethinking Facial Recognition Prompt of the Month Odds and Ends AI Deepfakes AI has worsened cybersecurity threats in two main ways. First, hackers have turned into large language models (LLMs) to extend the scope of malware. Generating deep-fakes, fraudulent emails, and social-engineering assaults that manipulate human behavior is now far easier and quicker. XanthoroxAI, an AI model developed by cybercriminals, can be utilized to create deepfakes, alongside other nefarious activities, for as little as $150 per month. Hackers can launch sweeping phishing attacks by asking an LLM to gather vast quantities of information from the internet and social media to fake personalized emails. And for spearphishing—hitting a specific target with a highly personalized attack—they can even generate fake voice and video [...]