Cambodia: Forced Labour Camps and International Crypto Scams Targeting YOU

Cambodia: Forced Labour Camps and International Crypto Scams Targeting YOU
The world of Cryptocurrency is well established now and it has every man and their dog scheming their own new ways to get their hands on their very own Bitcoin and for a long time global authorities remained idol believing that Decentralized Finance (DeFi) was just a fad that occupied subcultures on the internet and that no real person would actually invest in internet money.
But the lack of authorities to develop policies and update financial laws only made the sector more alluring and a bigger target with the cryptosphere continuing to grow daily. But with it so to the new financial crimes that have plagued the world. In fact, it has only really been this year where watchdogs have started calling for improved regulations and for governments to take action.
With the latest news of what has occurred in Cambodia will only sicken readers to learn that their governments are only just taking action now.

Crypto, Forced Labour Camps and Slaves
United States Authorities have swooped in on a Cambodian organised crime syndicate and seized USD 15 Billion in cryptocurrency that is alleged to have been accumulated through human trafficking. Allegedly the network was developed by Chinese business man Chen Zhi the founder of Prince Group and has been one of the worlds largest Crypto forfeiture in the U.S Dept of Justice ever recorded.
According to federal prosecutors in Brooklyn, Chen Zhi, also known as Vincent Chen was the mastermind behind a massive network of a forced labour scam operation designed to lure unsuspecting investors into fraudulent crypto schemes. Using his legitimate conglomerate which spans real estate, finance and gambling enterprises. Chen than allegedly laundered billions in illicit funds and converting them into luxury assets such as private jets, yachts, vacation homes and even a Picasso painting.
The U.S. Justice Department said it seized over 127,000 bitcoins worth approximately USD 14–15 billion in what officials described as a “historic recovery.” The cryptocurrency is believed to have been generated through thousands of fake investment platforms operated by coerced workers.
Assistant Attorney General John Eisenberg called Chen “the mastermind behind a sprawling cyberfraud empire,” while U.S. Attorney Joseph Nocella described the case as “one of the largest investment fraud operations in history.”

Pig Butchering
The “pig butchering” scam a term derived from how victims are “fattened up” through trust building before being financially slaughtered has become one of the most lucrative forms of cybercrime in recent years. Scammers initiate contact via social media or dating apps, pretending to form relationships or offer investment advice. Over weeks or months they convince victims to invest in fake crypto trading platforms that show false profits before draining the wallets completely.
In Chen’s case, authorities say the operation scaled to industrial levels. At least ten forced labour compounds in Cambodia were used to house and exploit workers many of whom had been lured with false promises of tech jobs, only to have their passports confiscated. Inside these compounds, hundreds of workers managed thousands of fake online personas, communicating with victims across the world and convincing them to transfer cryptocurrencies into scam wallets.
“These weren’t just call centres,” one investigator noted. “They were digital factories for fraud, run under brutal and coercive conditions.”

Growing Human Rights Concerns
The indictment paints a grim picture of the human cost behind the scam. Workers were allegedly beaten, starved, and imprisoned in compounds surrounded by barbed wire. Photographs submitted as evidence show individuals with lash marks, bruises, and bound hands. In one instance, Chen is said to have personally approved a beating, telling subordinates not to “beat the man to death.”
According to the U.S. Treasury Department, some survivors reported that those who attempted to flee were “beaten until they were barely alive.”
At least one compound was tied to the Jinbei Casino Hotel, while another, named Golden Fortune, became notorious among local residents for its heavy security presence.
Human rights experts estimate that over 100,000 people are currently trapped in similar forced labour cyberfraud operations across Cambodia, with tens of thousands more in neighbouring Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, and the Philippines.
image sources provided supplemented by Canva Pro Subscription. This is not financial advice and readers are advised to undertake their own research or seek professional financial services.
Posted Using INLEO
Scambodia
it has been the hub for the scams