US federal agents at a press conference displaying seized Bitcoin assets and maps related to a massive Cambodian fraud scheme involving human trafficking and investment scams.
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US seizes $15 billion in bitcoin from Cambodian pig butchering scam

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Federal prosecutors have seized 127,271 bitcoin worth approximately $15 billion from a massive cryptocurrency fraud scheme operated from forced labor camps in Cambodia. The operation, led by Chinese national Chen Zhi, involved human trafficking and investment scams targeting victims worldwide. Chen faces charges of wire fraud and money laundering conspiracy, marking the largest forfeiture action in US history.

On October 14, 2025, US authorities unsealed an indictment in Brooklyn federal court charging Chen Zhi, also known as Vincent, a 38-year-old founder of the Cambodia-based Prince Holding Group, with wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy. Chen remains at large. Prosecutors allege he directed a transnational criminal organization that operated at least 10 forced labor compounds across Cambodia since 2015, blending crypto investment fraud with human trafficking.

Workers, often migrants lured by fake job ads, were held captive in facilities like the Jinbei Casino Hotel and Golden Fortune Science and Technology Park. These sites functioned as phone farms with up to 1,250 mobile phones controlling 76,000 fake social media accounts. Instructions directed scammers to use profile photos of women who were not 'too beautiful' to build rapport with victims via messaging apps, feigning romance or emergencies before luring them into fake cryptocurrency investments. Once funds were transferred, scammers showed fabricated profits to encourage more deposits, then vanished.

The scheme, known as 'pig butchering' or 'sha zhu,' generated up to $30 million daily at its 2018 peak, according to court records. Chen allegedly sanctioned violence to discipline workers, with evidence including photos of beatings leaving workers with bloody gashes and lash marks. He approved at least one beating but cautioned against killing the victim. Proceeds funded luxuries like yachts, private jets, a Picasso painting, and bribes, including a $3 million yacht for a foreign official in 2019.

The US Treasury designated Prince Holding Group a transnational criminal organization, imposing sanctions on Chen and 146 affiliates alongside the UK. FinCEN isolated the related Huione Group from the US financial system under Section 311 of the USA PATRIOT Act. The seized bitcoin, now in US custody, could fund the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve per a Trump executive order or repay victims if approved by courts.

Assistant Attorney General John Eisenberg described Chen as the 'mastermind behind a sprawling cyberfraud empire.' US Attorney Joseph Nocella called it 'one of the largest investment fraud operations in history.' FBI Assistant Director Christopher Raia noted the focus on major cases to 'cut off the head of the snake,' amid rising scams costing Americans at least $10 billion last year, a 66% increase from 2023. The UN estimates 100,000 people forced into such scams in Cambodia alone.

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U.S. authorities seize $15 billion in Bitcoin from Cambodian crypto scam, showing agents with evidence and wanted poster in a DOJ setting.
AI:n luoma kuva

U.S. seizes $15 billion in bitcoin from Cambodian crypto scam

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Federal prosecutors have charged Chen Zhi, chairman of Cambodia's Prince Holding Group, with wire fraud and money laundering in a global cryptocurrency scam that exploited forced labor. The U.S. government seized bitcoin worth approximately $15 billion, marking the largest forfeiture action in Department of Justice history. Chen remains at large, facing up to 40 years in prison if convicted.

Chen Zhi, chair of the Prince Group, has been arrested in Cambodia and deported to China amid accusations of orchestrating forced labour scam operations that stole billions in cryptocurrency. The arrest follows recent actions by US authorities seizing assets linked to him. This development is expected to disrupt large-scale pig butchering scams in Southeast Asia.

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Qian Zhimin, a 47-year-old Chinese woman dubbed the 'cryptoqueen,' was sentenced to 11 years and eight months in prison in London for money laundering proceeds from a massive Ponzi scheme. The fraud defrauded around 128,000 investors in China of billions, with funds converted into bitcoin now worth over $6 billion. British police made their largest-ever cryptocurrency seizure in the case.

President Donald Trump pardoned Changpeng Zhao, founder of the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange Binance, on October 24, 2025. Zhao had pleaded guilty in 2023 to money-laundering violations after his platform facilitated illicit transactions linked to child sex abuse, terrorism, and drug trafficking. The decision raises questions about conflicts of interest due to Binance's ties to the Trump family's crypto ventures.

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A new report from blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis reveals that Chinese-language money laundering networks processed $16.1 billion in illicit cryptocurrency funds last year, accounting for about 20% of all known crypto laundering activity. These Telegram-based operations have grown dramatically since 2020, outpacing other laundering channels by thousands of times. The findings highlight the networks' role in facilitating global crime while evading enforcement efforts.

North Korean hackers stole a record $2.02 billion in cryptocurrency in 2025, according to a new Chainalysis report, surpassing the previous year's haul by 51 percent and bringing their total to $6.75 billion. The thefts, which accounted for 60 percent of the global total of $3.4 billion stolen, were driven by fewer but larger attacks, including a $1.5 billion breach of the Dubai-based Bybit exchange in February. Experts attribute the success to sophisticated tactics like embedding IT workers in crypto firms and impersonating recruiters.

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Building on a Chainalysis report documenting $2.02 billion in 2025 cryptocurrency thefts by North Korean hackers, a U.S. State Department official told a U.N. meeting that Pyongyang likely stole more than $2 billion last year to support its nuclear and missile programs. The figure aligns with Multilateral Sanctions Monitoring Team findings of over $1.6 billion stolen from January to September 2025.

 

 

 

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