Scam Center Strike Force Targets Chinese Organized Crime and Expanding Crypto Fraud Networks in Southeast Asia

The U.S. government has launched a sweeping new initiative aimed at dismantling transnational criminal networks responsible for a surge in cryptocurrency scams and investment fraud schemes originating in Southeast Asia. U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro announced the creation of the Scam Center Strike Force, a multi-agency unit designed to “investigate, disrupt, and prosecute the most egregious Southeast Asian scam centers and their leaders,” many of whom are linked to Chinese organized crime groups.

According to Pirro, the Strike Force will bring together agents and attorneys from the Department of Justice, the FBI, the Secret Service, and Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, working alongside the State Department and international partners. The initiative comes amid a dramatic increase in scam compounds operating in Cambodia, Laos, and Burma, where victims are often lured into fake crypto-investment platforms through social media, dating apps, and messaging services.

US 'Scam Center Strike Force' lasers in on Southeast Asian crypto fraud

These scam operations, sometimes run out of fortified compounds, use a combination of psychological manipulation, fraudulent financial apps, and cryptocurrency laundering channels to steal billions from victims worldwide. U.S. officials describe the crisis as both a humanitarian concern—due to reports of forced labor and human trafficking—and a national security threat because of the involvement of transnational criminal syndicates tied to Chinese networks.

In announcing the Strike Force, Pirro revealed that U.S. authorities have already seized more than $400 million in cryptocurrency linked to these fraud operations. Additional legal actions are underway to recover another $80 million allegedly stolen from American victims. The Justice Department emphasized that any recovered funds will be returned to victims whenever possible, while enforcement efforts will continue to target the financial infrastructure enabling these scams.

The initiative also coincides with new sanctions imposed by the Treasury Department on several entities and individuals associated with scam centers in Southeast Asia. These sanctions target not only fraud operations but also armed groups accused of running compounds where trafficked workers are forced to participate in scams under threat of violence.

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According to federal officials, Americans lost an estimated $9–10 billion to crypto-investment scams in 2024 alone—a number they believe severely underrepresents the true scale of the problem, given widespread underreporting by victims who feel embarrassed or misled. The Scam Center Strike Force intends to tackle the issue at multiple levels, from disrupting online infrastructure and fraudulent websites to working with social media companies to identify and remove scam networks before they reach new victims.

Pirro described the initiative as long overdue, noting that these criminal organizations have operated with increasing sophistication and impunity. “This is a generational wealth transfer from Main Street America into the pockets of Chinese organized crime,” she said, emphasizing that the U.S. will pursue both domestic collaborators and overseas perpetrators.

As Southeast Asia remains a global hub for cyber-fraud compounds, U.S. officials hope the Strike Force will serve as a turning point—combining law enforcement pressure, international cooperation, and financial sanctions to curb one of the fastest-growing criminal enterprises in the world.