111 comments

  • Reason077 2 hours ago ago

    Wow. $15 billion is an astronomical, nearly unfathomable amount of money in Cambodia. This must have been a huge operation. It's almost 1/3 of the country's entire GDP!

    Well done DOJ. Hopefully the victims get their money back.

    • xnx 5 minutes ago ago

      > 1/3 of the country's entire GDP

      $15 billion is a huge number to be sure, but it's unclear from the article how many years it took to acquire.

      • postexitus a minute ago ago

        So should we praise the gang's money saving habits?

    • ValveFan6969 41 minutes ago ago

      The victims getting their money back would defeat the whole purpose of Bitcoin. No one knows who originally owned it.

      How about cash it out and trickle it down to us... or is all that just gonna magically disappear?

      • eloisius 22 minutes ago ago

        Surely it would be possible for victims to come forward and provide a paper trail of WhatsApp transcripts and blockchain transactions.

      • IshKebab 28 minutes ago ago

        Well you could just reverse all the transactions. But they probably won't do that.

        • itake 24 minutes ago ago

          not really? presumably many people transfer via platforms like Coinbase that use a shared wallet system. You can't just "send the money back where it came from" as those wallets might not actually be controlled by the funds owner.

      • ForHackernews 14 minutes ago ago

        It's part of America's new Strategic Crypto Reserve now where Uncle Sam holds bags for crypto bros.

    • tonyhart7 an hour ago ago

      their business is scam center that by definition is not counted by GDP anyway

      • IanCal an hour ago ago

        That’s not necessarily true, though may be for Cambodia. GDP can include black market activities but countries differ in whether they include specific ones and how.

        • bilekas 27 minutes ago ago

          Right, it's not black market if you eventually pay some taxes on it somewhere. Dare we call it washed money, and for our American friends in the audience, laundered money.

      • bilekas 31 minutes ago ago

        That money would have flowed somewhere, also I'm not sure OP was talking about impacting the GDP just quantizing it. For Cambodia, it's an extraordinary amount of money. Actually for anywhere it's a ridiculous amount of money.

      • alecsm an hour ago ago

        Which makes it worse. A scamming operation that is 1/3 of the GDP is huuuuuuge.

        • Muromec 22 minutes ago ago

          It’s apples to oranges really. You confuse turnover with capital here.

    • vkou 28 minutes ago ago

      Wait, hold on, I thought the promise of crypto was that:

      1. The feds can't take your money.

      2. Once your money's gone, it's gone.

      If criminals can't count on #1 holding true, and their victims can't count on #2 holding true, what is even the point of it?

      • yard2010 6 minutes ago ago

        Instead of these two take this simple rule: not your key not your money.

        There's no thing that the feds can't have because they have an infinite amount of sanctions violence and tools at their disposal to make anyone do what they want, one way or another.

      • Muromec 21 minutes ago ago

        They used the forbidden technique of 5€ wrench.

  • Wingman4l7 10 hours ago ago

    Long overdue. At some point, these scam operations are so large that they have to be operating with tacit approval of their host countries, who have been given no incentive to stop the virtual cold war against the personal finances of foreign citizenry that is bringing in millions of dollars into their economy.

    • PaywallBuster 3 hours ago ago

      Direct link to the indictment https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/chairman-prince-group-i...

      Cambodia's specifically 30-50% of the economy can be directly attributed to scamming plus casinos

      This one of the other organizations / major bank used for money laundering directly linked to Hun Sen

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huione_Group

      > The company is linked to Cambodia's ruling Hun family, which includes the current prime minister, Hun Manet.[4] His cousin Hun To is a major shareholder and director of Huione Pay

      • yhager 3 hours ago ago

        > Cambodia's specifically 30-50% of the economy can be directly attributed to scamming plus casinos

        Are you saying that 30-50% of Cambodia's economy can be directly attributed to scamming and casinos? I find that shocking and hard to believe. Do you have a source for that statement?

        • pyrale an hour ago ago

          First off, the amount seized was not necessarily made in a year.

          Second, most of the money would not make it to the Cambodian economy. It is likely laundered abroad. The whole operation is likely multinational, with only the workforce located in Cambodia.

        • PaywallBuster 3 hours ago ago

          It's a small / under developed country

          the economy is not that big to start with :)

          GDP $49.8 Billion (nominal; 2025)

          Some examples

          https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/latest-news/cambodia...

        • vintermann 2 hours ago ago

          It's not hard to believe that a small country can have a vastly oversized economy due to finance - legal or illegal.

          • immibis an hour ago ago

            An example of a legal one is the UK

        • shkkmo 2 hours ago ago

          The amount of bitcoin siezed here is about 30% of the Cambodia GDP...

          • padjo an hour ago ago

            Presumably they didn’t accumulate it all in one year?

    • rags2riches 21 minutes ago ago

      This makes me think of the Barbary Wars where piracy out of the Barbary states was a huge issue. There's also the connection with the slave trade then and the human trafficking for the scam centers now.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbary_Wars

    • JumpCrisscross 10 hours ago ago

      > the virtual cold war against the personal finances of foreign citizenry

      Comparing a scam to war is inaccurate. The Cold War was a war running cold with the potential to go hot. Cambodia and America are not going to war over this.

      • bobthepanda 9 hours ago ago

        Interestingly enough, China is thought to have leaned on the scales in Myanmar’s civil conflict due to pig-butchering there. (Not only were they scamming Chinese, they were also human trafficking them to operate the scams.)

        • alephnerd 6 hours ago ago

          China only began executing those pig-butcherers when the EAO that was providing protection to Chinese pig-butchering gangs in that region of Myanmar (Kachin Independence Army) re-flipped towards India recently [0] and had begun to ignore China [1] and rerouting rare earths and other goods to India [2]

          Meanwhile, China never cracked down against similar scams in Cambodia. Most notably, Prince Group remains unsanctioned in China and it's leadership are Mainland Chinese in origin.

          While pig butchering (along with opium and human trafficking and other organized crime activities) are a major reason behind Chinese involvement in Myanmar, ignoring the very real proxy war going on between Chinese and Indian interests in Myanmar fails to contextualize some of the decisions that both countries make within Myanmar.

          This also explains why you don't see a similar crackdown in Cambodia, which is solidly within the Chinese sphere at this point.

          [0] - https://www.stimson.org/2025/rare-earths-and-realpolitik-fut...

          [1] - https://www.irrawaddy.com/news/war-against-the-junta/ignorin...

          [2] - https://www.reuters.com/world/china/india-explores-rare-eart...

          • yorwba 25 minutes ago ago

            > the EAO that was providing protection to Chinese pig-butchering gangs in that region of Myanmar (Kachin Independence Army)

            Kachin is not a relevant location of scam centers. You can find articles that claim otherwise, e.g. https://www.ctol.digital/news/inside-worlds-largest-scam-emp... but from the fact that they mention the Thai border and the city of Myawaddy, which is in Kayin/Karen State, it's clear that they're just confusing Kachin and Kayin.

            The Kachin Independence Army seems to finance itself through mining instead.

            While it's true that some scammers were recently sentenced to death in China https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c78nrx309kzo and this only happened after the Kachin Independence Army disrupted the rare-earth trade with China, that's just a temporal coincidence. The scammers were captured in 2023 in Laukkai in northern Shan State near the Chinese border by the MNDAA (an anti-junta armed group dominated by ethnic Chinese) as part of Operation 1027. China is rumored to have assisted the operation in order to crack down on the scam centers in junta-controlled territory. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_1027#Cyber-scamming_... The Kachin Independence Army also participated in Operation 1027, but in Kachin, not Shan.

            I don't know about Cambodia.

          • bobbiechen 5 hours ago ago

            That's interesting - I had seen some news articles reporting that some Chinese pig butchering scammers were encouraging others to target foreigners only, and exclude the mainland Chinese. Like this one: https://globalinitiative.net/analysis/chinas-acquiescence-to...

            It's reminiscent of stories about Russian malware doing nothing on machines with Cyrillic keyboard layouts.

            • alephnerd 5 hours ago ago

              Yep, but notice how that article is about Kokang in Myanmar as well.

              Cambodia continues to have scam centers targeting Putonghua speakers (including PRC nationals), but there hasn't been a similar crackdown on such activities due to Chinese pressure.

              The crackdown in Kokang happened after China flipped to supporting the Tatmadaw against the Northern Alliance [0] and India began peeling historically India-aligned members of the alliance like the KIA and the Arakan Army back into Indian orbit [1].

              P.S. Circa 2 years ago, a large portion of Chinese in SF Chinatown became Kokang and Cambodian Chinese. Bamar, Kuki-Zo, and Kachin Myanmarese primarily reside in Daly City, Ingleside/Outer Mission, and Oakland/East Bay.

              SF has a lot of Asian and Latiné subcultures and communities - it's kind of insane how underdocumented it is under the guise of "Asian" and "Latino"

              [0] - https://www.stimson.org/2025/too-little-too-late-china-steps...

              [1] - https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/india-extends-unp...

      • greenchair 9 hours ago ago

        that's a pretty naive view of war. we are at war with many countries all the time, most of it is cold.

        • JumpCrisscross 9 hours ago ago

          > we are at war with many countries all the time, most of it is cold

          Like whom? We (and let's be honest, every other great power) are at war with many countries all of the time, and while they may be cold for long stretches, they absolutely (a) go hot from time to time and (b) are constantly threatening to go hot.

        • _carbyau_ 6 hours ago ago

          I this similar concept, differently.

          To me "war" is a state of "no rules" hurting. IE nuclear, biological, any weapon goes. Anything less is an exercise in restraint - even if still quite terrible in it's own right.

          Which means there are lots of "exercises" of varying lethality, risk profiles, spheres of influence, etc. And yes many countries are jockeying against other countries in varying ways.

          Large scale scams against other countries could be seen as an unintended (not a planned government action) exercise that is condoned by the government.

  • wraptile 2 hours ago ago

    Btw this is low-key the reason why Cambodia almost went to war with Thailand recently. In particular what's interesting is that how quickly Cambodia repurposed scam center employees as internet trolls. They're onto a really powerful golden goose here that not only brings in 15B usd but also empowers the current dictatorship. But also it's a pit of doom that is destined to erupt anytime now.

  • throw-10-13 an hour ago ago

    I am shocked that the organizer of a large scam call center in SEAsia is a Chinese national.

    Large scam call centers run by Chinese nationals are getting broken up in the region pretty regularly.

    • myrmidon 35 minutes ago ago

      I see multiple factors here:

      - There's a lot of Chinese people in the region (1.3b vs <20M in Cambodia)

      - Better access to capital for setting up big operations like this

      - Much tighter control and policing in their homeland, so the scammers operate elsewhere

  • mrtksn 12 minutes ago ago

    It's 127,271 Bitcoins. Interesting choice not to mention the number of Bitcoins but use its current market value in USD. I feel like this says something about Bitcoin but not sure what exactly.

    Edit: Wow, people really don't want to know how many Bitcoins were seized :)

    • jlg23 a minute ago ago

      This is regular reporting using end-consumer market rates to inflate numbers.

      Just as you could not sell 127,271 bitcoins all at once at market value, you could not just sell cocaine worth $1.4 billion but still confiscated drugs, even in large quantities, are reported with end consumer market rates. Nowadays, if a report mentions that is talking about "street value", that is already a big plus in my book.

  • Animats 10 hours ago ago

    DOJ press release.[1] DOJ claims custody of US$15 billion in Bitcoin. "Largest forfeiture action in the history of the Department of Justice."

    [1] https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/chairman-prince-group-indicte...

  • yard2010 10 minutes ago ago

    > Zhi and a network of top executives in the Prince Group are accused of using political influence in multiple countries to protect their criminal enterprise and paid bribes to public officials to avoid actions by law enforcement authorities targeting the scheme, according to prosecutors.

    Gentle reminder that the presence of a strong democratic regime with law and no bribes keeps the world a better place.

    Once the US becomes corrupted at this scale we are doomed to this bullshit.

  • kenjackson 11 hours ago ago

    From this article they got $15B (https://www.cnbc.com/2025/10/14/bitcoin-doj-chen-zhi-pig-but...). At what point do you say, "That's enough money?" Did they think the scam was going to go on forever?

    • mothballed 10 hours ago ago

      I'm not sure if one can merely walk away from a criminal enterprise of that size. As soon as you stop paying certain people you end up in a cage, and unless the stream of money is constant there is no reason to just not reneg on all prior agreements and go in a cage for stuff you already paid authorities off for.

      • JumpCrisscross 10 hours ago ago

        > As soon as you stop paying certain people you end up in a cage

        You end up dead because your co-conspirators don't want to end up in a cage.

      • dgfitz 10 hours ago ago

        So the whole crypto anonymity thing isn’t actually real? As it turns out, tracing people is still easier than tracing money? Decentralized economies are run by criminal enterprises?! We aren’t safe!?!

        Wonder how this whole concept overlays onto LLMs, with a lot more money on the line and a lot less regulation.

        • wmf 9 hours ago ago

          You're probably joking, but even if crypto was totally anonymous, running a massive criminal human trafficking empire in the real world is very non-anonymous.

        • hshdhdhehd an hour ago ago

          Good old police work still works. Because people need to talk to each other to do stuff. The only time anonymity helps is if you can pull it all off solo, and mix the funds enough to not be traced as well as cover tracks well enough.

        • dotnet00 9 hours ago ago

          Crypto anonymity is still possible if you don't plan to spend your ill-gotten millions or billions particularly quickly. But, of course, you don't get to having a massive active criminal empire that way.

    • verteu 9 hours ago ago

      At that scale, you have massive influence within the Cambodian government, so you're not worried about "getting caught" in the traditional sense.

    • apnsngr 8 hours ago ago

      These scams have enormous scale. The Economist has a fascinating podcast about it. The full series requires a subscription, but it is worth at least listening to the first 3 free episodes. https://www.economist.com/audio/podcasts/scam-inc

    • yieldcrv 3 hours ago ago

      They have shareholders who bought the shares for more than the company annual revenue and expect infinite potential of profits to justify the price they paid

    • al_borland 8 hours ago ago

      Had they thought $1B was enough they would have missed out on $14B.

      • skylurk 2 hours ago ago

        I think the implication is they could have stayed under the radar and still have that $1B.

  • littlecranky67 an hour ago ago

    Since in pig butchering scams the victims often do not go to the police or tell anyone due to feelings of shame, we can assume quite a big pot of that money will go into the US federal crypto reserve.

  • advisedwang 16 hours ago ago

    Criminal podcast shared the story of one of the forced workers at scamming camp in Myanmar: https://thisiscriminal.com/episode-332-the-compound-9-12-202...

  • _cs2017_ 17 hours ago ago

    Is it actually usable, sellable Bitcoin worth $15B? Or is it some kind of storage that the owner couldn't really use easily for some reason?

    $15B of real wealth is a large amount even for a powerful family, so I am surprised it's not a headline news in global media.

  • andruby 2 hours ago ago

    I had never heard of "pig butchering".

    > The practice is called “pig butchering” because scammers deliberately build up trust and emotionally manipulate victims over an extended period—much like fattening up a pig—before ultimately stealing as much money as possible in a final act of financial “slaughter”

  • chistev 3 hours ago ago

    Do they force you to reveal your private keys?

    After obtaining the bitcoins, are they forced to sell it immediately? How does this affect the market?

    • oskarkk 2 hours ago ago

      Bitcoin market cap is $2.2T, so $15B of that is 0.7% of all bitcoins. They aren't selling them on open market, but in an auction (or a couple of auctions). It may not have an immediate influence on the bitcoin price, unless the buyer sells them right away. When someone sells an amount that big, it's done over a long period of time, to not crash the market (you'd probably get significantly less money if you sold it fast).

      > Once they did, however, the marshals fell back on standard procedure, preparing to handle the Bitcoin the same way they would a coke smuggler’s speedboat: by auctioning it off. That posed challenges because of the sheer size of the seizure—about 175,000 Bitcoins, or 2% of all the Bitcoin in circulation at the time. According to a prosecutor familiar with the case, the marshals opted for a staggered series of auctions to avoid crashing Bitcoin’s price. In four auctions between June 2014 and November 2015, the marshals sold the Silk Road Bitcoins for an average price of $379. (https://fortune.com/crypto/2018/02/21/government-forfeiture-...)

      There were also some bitcoins seized from a hacker that stole them from Silk Road in 2013, and when they seized it in 2020 it was worth $1B, now it's worth $6.5B. Nice profit for the government. https://fortune.com/crypto/2025/01/09/federal-government-all...

      • Eisenstein 23 minutes ago ago

        > Bitcoin market cap is $2.2T, so $15B of that is 0.7% of all bitcoins.

        Famously illiquid though.

    • hshdhdhehd an hour ago ago

      Through my mind... either they do deals less for prison time. $15bn for some freedom. Or they do something "extrajudicial" with a $5 wrench.

    • me_again 3 hours ago ago

      As I understand it, they persuade their marks to transfer bitcoin to accounts they control.

  • mrandish 8 hours ago ago

    Sounds like good news but the press release doesn't detail how the FBI managed to trace, positively identify and then seize such a huge pile of crypto ($15B) from a suspect they say took extensive steps to launder and hide the source and ownership of the crypto. I'm curious because this guy is clearly very experienced, highly sophisticated and located in a country where the government and law enforcement are obviously tacitly protecting him.

    So did the U.S. hack this guy? Anyone who manages to build such a massive multi-national corporation with myriad illicit businesses but also dozens of legitimate businesses with thousands of employees - including a large bank with over 100,000 customers - and then operate it all for over a decade, doesn't strike me as someone who's trivially careless. I mean he managed to successfully protect that much money for a long time from his own criminal co-conspirators (who would certainly include hackers with insider knowledge of his operations), criminal competitors and all the people he was bribing like senior Cambodian politicians, law enforcement and intelligence agencies.

    This just strikes me as either a very lucky break or a perhaps a sign that the FBI is adopting a new playbook to go after shielded international operations like this. Like maybe involving U.S. and 'Five Eyes' intelligence assets.

    • tonyhart7 an hour ago ago

      "but the press release doesn't detail how the FBI managed to trace, positively identify and then seize such a huge pile of crypto ($15B) from a suspect they say took extensive steps"

      Am I slow??? or what under circumstance that you expect FBI to told press how their operate????

    • lotsofpulp 6 hours ago ago

      I am also curious how the US government obtained possession of the bitcoin if the defendant is still at large. Doesn’t that defeat the whole point of bitcoin?

      • sidewndr46 6 hours ago ago

        According to Ars Technica: "Adding further mystery, it’s unknown how federal officials managed to obtain the cryptographic keys required to seize the funds from Zhi."

        My assumption is that at this point they just have orders from a judge allowing them to do it and they will find the means later.

        • lotsofpulp 5 hours ago ago

          Allowing them to do what? The feds are saying they already have the keys, so either they are lying, or they already had the means to get the keys. Which would be the juicy part of the story.

          • mrandish 4 hours ago ago

            > they already had the means to get the keys.

            Yes, and the other big questions are how they even know about the existence of the bitcoin and then how they were able to demonstrate sufficient probable cause to a judge that A) the bitcoin belongs to the suspect, and B) this bitcoin is the direct proceeds of the charged crimes. Given the extremely unusual circumstances around this seizure, its unprecedented size and the complete lack of details - I suspect something new and interesting has happened here.

            Unfortunately, we may never find out unless they manage to arrest the suspect, which seems unlikely. The more interesting scenario might be if the Prince Group files suit challenging the seizure. In that case, the government would not only have to produce evidence proving A and B above, but also that the evidence wasn't obtained illegally (like from secret NSA wiretaps on domestic Cambodian telecoms or targeted covert hacking). Given the circumstances, it's hard to imagine the FBI being able to offer plausible 'parallel construction' to support the legality of the evidence.

          • blueprint 2 hours ago ago

            I guess they have a quantum computer.

          • csomar 3 hours ago ago

            According to the indictment:

            > Those funds (the Defendant Cryptocurrency) are presently in the custody of the U.S. government.

            > The defendant and his co-conspirators subsequently used some of the criminal proceeds for luxury travel and entertainment and to make extravagant purchases such as watches, yachts, private jets, vacation homes, high-end collectables, and rare artwork, including a Picasso painting purchased through an auction house in New York City.

            My guess some of defendants were in New York or around the US. You can be a criminal master mind and also be a complete f*king idiot.

  • walletdrainer 17 hours ago ago

    So apparently the FBI or other US agency hacked this guy and drained his wallets? No indication he’s been arrested, wallets said to be unhosted.

    Clearly should’ve used an offline wallet lol.

    • 0xOsprey 2 hours ago ago

      Taylor is on to something here: https://x.com/tayvano_/status/1978273602719158448

      tl;dr: Someone cracked these weak entropy wallets 3+ years before anyone else and kept it secret

      Whether that was the USG or another entity has yet to be revealed

      • adamors 2 hours ago ago

        Please use xcancel: https://xcancel.com/tayvano_/status/1978273602719158448 when linking to X since a lot of us don't have accounts or just don't want to log in.

      • stef25 14 minutes ago ago

        After having read the thread it's not clear to me where the "3 years" comes from ?

        EDIT and were the keys cracked, or were the passphrases obtained ? It's mentioned elsewhere that he had them written down. Which would be a much easier "hack"

      • hshdhdhehd an hour ago ago

        Risky move, since it is easy to move the funds to a new address at any time.

    • yellow_lead 4 hours ago ago

      It may not be a hack, but a warrant like 'Hey Google, give us access to this guy's Gmail.'

      • ozgrakkurt 4 hours ago ago

        You can’t get a warrant for a bitcoin wallet right?

        • mv 3 hours ago ago
          • yreg an hour ago ago

            They did not physically catch the owners apparently.

          • fruitworks 2 hours ago ago

            What happens if it doesn't work?

            • netsharc an hour ago ago

              If it was a last resort and it didn't work, then we wouldn't be in this thread...

            • otikik an hour ago ago

              You move to the screwdriver

  • jacknews 17 hours ago ago

    And this isn't the only one.

    The ruling family in Cambodia is a big part of it, via their ownership in HuiOne (now renamed), which is essentially the clearing house for the 'industry'.

    In fact the Thai-Cambodia border conflict is due to this industry, and a breakdown in the relationship between Thai and Cambodian leaders over it, with the wiley cambodian leader yet again provoking the sensitive border issue for political gain.

    • decimalenough 2 hours ago ago

      No, it was a "Russia invading Ukraine" sized miscalculation. The "wily" Cambodian leader's military got their asses handed to them by the Thai army, and Cambodia is suffering a lot more from the still ongoing border closure than Thailand is. Remittances, tourism, trade, you name it, it's all in the doldrums. (Good time to visit Angkor Wat if you can swing it, though.)

      • wraptile an hour ago ago

        I'm living in Thailand and been following scam centers for years now. It's 100% the scam center fallout mixed with regional politics.

        Cambodia is fully commited to scam centers and Thailand doesn't like that and even reached out to Xi directly for cooperation here. Not even a year later the conflict broke.

        Finally, cambodia is not suffering at all and if anything the current dictator has become significantly stronger and the country has been on a huge nationalist rise as the dictators control the scam centers and easily repurpose them for online propaganda.

  • tim333 11 hours ago ago

    Glad they got somewhere with that. It's a bit shocking some of the stuff that goes on out there.

  • hansonkd 17 hours ago ago

    So in these cases of government seizing bitcoin, the people they seize from have unencrypted private keys?

    The article just says "private keys the defendant had in his possession" does this mean he was holding onto private keys that had no passwords / encryption at all that unlocked $15B?

    Or does the government have an alternative way of "seizing" bitcoin? I remember years ago people throwing around conspiracy theories that bitcoin was invented by the NSA / other 3 letter agencies with a backdoor to basically allow easy tracking / seizure of criminal assets.

    Im not a conspiracy theorist, but stories like these were the government seems so easy to seize such incredibly large amounts of money so easily seems to suggest some other mechanisms that aren't public.

  • tnt128 8 hours ago ago

    Would these money be returned to the victims?

    • littlecranky67 an hour ago ago

      Unfortunately, in pig butchering scams the victims often feel ashamed and wouldn't claim their stake.

    • throw-10-13 an hour ago ago

      lmao

    • mothballed 8 hours ago ago

      Why would the government bother prosecuting/seizing it if the money was going to the victims?

      • Waterluvian 3 hours ago ago

        That’s how it’s supposed to work. But these days who knows.

      • boc 3 hours ago ago
      • wkat4242 6 hours ago ago

        Um maybe because the government isn't supposed to work for profit but to enforce the law and do the right thing for victims and society?

        If they're going to be only prosecuting crimes where there's something in it for them it's going to be a very unsafe society.

        • hshdhdhehd an hour ago ago

          What about good old asset forfeiture to buy more swat toys?

  • rasz 13 hours ago ago

    Wonder if Musk will be protesting, those seizures could put a dent in SpaceX earnings https://www.barrons.com/news/myanmar-scam-cities-booming-des...

    • strogonoff 3 hours ago ago

      It’s only technically incorrect to suggest that Musk should protest over the recent $15B scam profit seizure—it was from Cambodian scams, whereas the compounds that reportedly had to switch to Starlink due to being disconnected from the Internet are in Myanmar[0]—but yes, it’s still unclear why would Musk not shut any of it down if they have the capability (and if they don’t, then it’s another interesting controversy).

      [0] https://www.lawfaremedia.org/article/starlink--an-internet-l...

  • ChrisArchitect 6 hours ago ago

    Related:

    U.S. Sanctions Cambodian Conglomerate, Citing Role in 'Pig-Butchering' Scams

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45584418

    • dang 4 hours ago ago

      Thanks, we'll merge that thread hither

  • gorgoiler 2 hours ago ago

    Aha, now this administration can flood the markets with BTC sells leaving $TRUMP as the only true stablecoin!!

    I wish this were really just a joke, but I wouldn’t put it past them to raid, hoard, dump, and therefore crash the price of Bitcoin as a strategy to undermine Bitcoin’s position as a stable digital asset for storing value.

    Perhaps though it would be just as scurrilous to hoard Bitcoin and not sell it, in an effort to prop up all digital coins as being things of value when they really aren’t?

    The only real conclusion I can rely on is it is problematic for one’s government to be run by a tulip bulb salesman while also raiding criminals with tulip bulb warehouses.

    • andruby 2 hours ago ago

      When BTC goes down, altcoins typically also go down, so it would have a negative effect on $TRUMP.

  • lifestyleguru 38 minutes ago ago

    Who they were scamming, Americans? How they managed to gain trust, even considering strong accent or grammatical mistakes. How do they identify and trace these Chinese fraudsters? They all look the same and have a name like Hi Lo. Where the money go... of course real estate.