South Korean police escort handcuffed scam suspects repatriated from Cambodia at Incheon Airport, with arrest warrants visible.
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Arrest warrants issued for 55 of 73 scam suspects from Cambodia

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Police have issued arrest warrants for 55 of the 73 South Korean online scam suspects repatriated from Cambodia. The group allegedly swindled 48.6 billion won from 869 victims through methods including no-show and deepfake romance scams. This repatriation represents the largest return of criminal suspects from a single country in national history.

The 73 South Korean online scam suspects repatriated from Cambodia arrived home last Friday, marking the nation's largest such operation from a single country. They landed in the southeastern port city of Busan, and police requested arrest warrants for 72 of them, excluding one with minor charges. As of 9 a.m. Monday, courts across the country had issued warrants for 55 suspects, according to the Korean National Police Agency's National Office of Investigation.

The group is accused of defrauding 869 South Korean victims of a combined 48.6 billion won (US$33.6 million). Among those arrested are 49 no-show scammers who impersonated civil servants to swindle 6.9 billion won from 194 victims. A couple was also detained for using deepfake technology in romance scams to defraud 104 people of 12 billion won.

The remaining 17 suspects, charged with romance scams that targeted about 30 victims for roughly 5 billion won, are scheduled to attend arrest warrant hearings in South Chungcheong Province on Monday afternoon. Earlier, a court granted a warrant for one individual accused of siphoning 19.4 billion won from 229 people by posing as a global financial company at a Cambodia-based call center until July last year.

This repatriation highlights intensified international cooperation against cross-border cybercrimes, with police vowing further investigations to aid victim compensation.

人々が言っていること

X discussions highlight shock over Koreans scamming fellow citizens via deepfake and no-show methods in Cambodia, with 55 arrests out of 73 repatriated suspects. Users criticize perpetrators harshly as betrayers, express caution for overseas jobs distinguishing victims from criminals, and question why one warrant was rejected, suspecting connections.

関連記事

South Korean police escort 73 scam suspects arriving from Cambodia at Incheon Airport.
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73 South Koreans detained in Cambodia return home to face scam probes

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A group of 73 South Koreans detained in Cambodia over alleged online scam operations returned home on January 23 to face investigations. They are accused of swindling 48.6 billion won from 869 South Korean victims, marking the nation's largest repatriation of criminal suspects from a single country.

Seventy-three South Korean nationals detained in Cambodia over alleged scam crimes will be forcibly returned home for investigation. Cheong Wa Dae announced on Thursday that a chartered flight carrying them will depart from Incheon International Airport. They are accused of swindling 486.7 billion won from 869 South Korean victims.

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A joint South Korean investigation team has arrested 26 people over scam crimes involving sexual exploitation in Cambodia, in cooperation with local authorities. The suspects deceived Korean victims into believing they were implicated in crimes, extorting 26.7 billion won and forcing female victims to produce explicit videos. The government plans to block the videos' circulation and repatriate the suspects for punishment.

連邦検察当局は、カンボジアのプリンス・ホールディング・グループ会長である陳志(Chen Zhi)を、強制労働を悪用した世界的な暗号通貨詐欺に関連する電信詐欺とマネーロンダリングで起訴した。米国政府は約150億ドル相当のビットコインを押収し、これは司法省史上最大の没収措置となった。陳は依然として逃亡中で、有罪判決を受ければ最大40年の懲役に直面する。

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Two decoration workers suspected in a 1 billion yen (US$6.4 million) robbery in Hong Kong were remanded in custody after appearing at Fanling Court. Lee Wan-kwong, 36, is alleged to be the mastermind, while Lee Chun-wa, 28, is accused of handling the stolen cash. The case stems from a robbery on December 18 in Central.

South Korea's customs authorities announced plans for a nationwide special inspection targeting suspected illegal trade and foreign exchange practices amid the won's ongoing depreciation. The probe will cover 1,138 companies showing significant discrepancies between reported trade data and bank payments.

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A massive data breach at South Korea's leading e-commerce firm Coupang has exposed personal information of 33.7 million customers. Police are tracking a Chinese former employee suspect using an IP address, while the government considers fines up to 1 trillion won. The breach, starting in June, went undetected for five months.

 

 

 

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