- Scam Center Strike Force has frozen or seized over $580 million in crypto tied to Southeast Asian pig butchering scams and related crime networks.
- Analysts report around 27,000 active criminal groups and $27.5 billion in fraud exposure, showing seizures cover only part of global scam activity.
U.S. authorities say the Scam Center Strike Force has now frozen or seized more than $580 million in cryptocurrency tied to Southeast Asian crime networks, underscoring the scale and complexity of online fraud tied to the region. The announcement, made Thursday by the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, highlights both growing law enforcement coordination and the limits of current efforts against a rapidly expanding ecosystem of crypto-enabled scams.
Expanding impact of the Scam Center Strike Force
U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro said the Scam Center Strike Force has made “significant progress” in shutting down crypto flows linked to transnational fraud groups operating in countries including Burma, Cambodia, and Laos. The $580 million figure reflects assets that have been frozen, seized, or placed into forfeiture proceedings as part of ongoing investigations into large-scale online investment scams.
Pirro emphasized that recovering digital assets is only one part of the Strike Force’s broader mission. Through established legal procedures, her office intends to pursue full forfeiture of those funds and return them to victims “to the maximum extent possible.” That focus on victim restitution is central to the initiative, which is designed to confront the financial infrastructure of cyber-enabled fraud, not just individual operators.
The Scam Center Strike Force was created in November 2025 to consolidate efforts across multiple U.S. agencies. It brings together the Department of Justice, the FBI, the U.S. Secret Service, the Treasury Department, and other federal entities. Its remit is to identify and disrupt criminal organizations that have collectively generated billions of dollars through online schemes, particularly “pig butchering” scams that rely on aggressive social engineering and bogus investment platforms.
How pig butchering scams fuel crypto fraud
At the core of many cases pursued by the Scam Center Strike Force are pig butchering scams, a term used for schemes that combine psychological manipulation with fraudulent investment opportunities. Scammers typically establish contact with victims through social media, messaging apps, or dating platforms, building trust over weeks or months. Victims are then urged to buy cryptocurrency and funnel it into what appear to be sophisticated trading or investment applications.
In reality, the platforms are controlled by the scammers, who quietly assume full control over the funds. Interfaces often show fabricated profits to compel larger deposits, until the operators suddenly block withdrawals, vanish, or claim the account has been frozen due to tax or compliance issues, demanding additional payments. By the time victims realize the fraud, the cryptocurrency has usually been moved through multiple wallets and laundering channels.
Southeast Asia has become a focal point for these operations. The region hosts extensive scam compounds that, according to law enforcement and rights groups, frequently depend on coerced labor. Interpol last year elevated such compounds to the level of a global threat, citing the cross-border nature of the fraud, the scale of victimization, and the human rights abuses involved in maintaining the scams.
In September 2025, the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) moved against this infrastructure, sanctioning 19 entities in Burma and Cambodia. Those entities were linked to networks that, in 2024 alone, inflicted losses of more than $10 billion on victims worldwide. The sanctions aimed to cut off access to the U.S. financial system and put pressure on facilitators that provide logistics, payment channels, or infrastructure to scam groups.
Human rights organizations have warned that the enforcement push is intersecting with a separate humanitarian emergency. Last month, Amnesty International reported mass escapes from Cambodian scam compounds, describing a “humanitarian crisis” as trafficked workers flee threats, rape, and torture. Many of these individuals had been recruited under false pretenses and then forced to participate in fraud, further complicating the line between perpetrators and victims.
Scale of global fraud and the limits of current seizures
While the headline figure of $580 million in seized crypto is substantial, experts caution that it represents only a narrow slice of the broader criminal landscape. Deddy Lavid, CEO of blockchain analytics firm Cyvers, told Decrypt that the seizures are “certainly operationally meaningful” for law enforcement. However, when compared with total global crypto fraud, he said they account for only a small portion of what his company tracks.
According to Lavid, Cyvers has identified roughly 27,000 active criminal groups involved in crypto-related fraud around the world. The firm has detected about $27.5 billion in fraud exposure and illicit value flows, a scale that places the Scam Center Strike Force’s enforcement actions in a wider, far more extensive context. These numbers reflect both confirmed criminal activity and exposure linked to high-risk patterns on the blockchain.
The disparity between seized amounts and estimated illicit flows illustrates several challenges. Crypto assets can be moved quickly across borders, fragmented into small transactions, and routed through a web of exchanges, mixers, and cross-chain bridges. The Strike Force’s results show that coordinated action can intercept a meaningful volume of funds, but they also highlight how much remains beyond the reach of present enforcement tools.
Still, the $580 million figure signals growing sophistication in tracing and freezing digital assets. Working with blockchain analytics providers like Cyvers, investigators can now follow complex transaction patterns, identify clusters of wallets linked to scam networks, and coordinate with exchanges to block or confiscate funds before they are fully laundered.
scam center networks and the role of Chinese organized crime
In her Thursday statement, Pirro drew a direct connection between Southeast Asian scam operations and Chinese organized crime. She said the Scam Center Strike Force is targeting transnational criminal organizations that use the region as a base of operations while drawing on Chinese-language infrastructure and financial channels.
Lavid, however, described a more complex structure behind the scam center networks. He acknowledged that a “meaningful share” of the Southeast Asian infrastructure shows operational, linguistic, financial, or routing links to Chinese transnational criminal organizations (TCOs). At the same time, he said the networks have evolved into decentralized and hybrid systems that involve multiple layers of actors and jurisdictions.
These hybrid networks often combine:
- Local operators who run compounds and manage day-to-day scams
- Regional facilitators who secure real estate, labor, and connectivity
- Cross-border laundering hubs that process and move funds internationally
Above these layers, Lavid said, are “core orchestration” structures that rely heavily on Chinese-language platforms and financial routing patterns. These orchestration hubs are tied to execution centers in locations such as Cambodia, Myanmar, and Laos, and to widely dispersed laundering and cash-out operations across numerous countries.
As a result, Chinese TCOs seem to occupy a central coordinating position in what Lavid calls an increasingly “multinational and operationally fragmented” criminal ecosystem. The scam center model relies on modularity: components can be relocated or replaced when law enforcement pressure mounts, while the overarching orchestration layer remains intact and continues to direct operations.
This architecture poses distinctive challenges for the Scam Center Strike Force and its partners. Even when a compound is raided or a network of wallets is frozen, other nodes in the system can quickly adapt. It also means that effective disruption requires action against not only individual scam centers but also the financial, logistical, and digital infrastructure connecting them.
Conclusion
The latest figures from the Scam Center Strike Force show that U.S. authorities have made notable progress in intercepting funds from Southeast Asian crypto scams, with more than $580 million now frozen or seized. Yet data from Cyvers, naming 27,000 active criminal groups and $27.5 billion in fraud exposure, indicates that the seizures represent only a small fraction of the global problem.
Pig butchering schemes, centralized in scam compounds across Burma, Cambodia, Laos, and the wider region, continue to generate large-scale losses and serious human rights concerns. The emerging picture of decentralized, hybrid networks—often orchestrated through Chinese-language infrastructure and coordinated by Chinese TCOs—underscores the transnational nature of the threat.
For the Scam Center Strike Force, the path forward involves not only continuing to trace and forfeit crypto assets but also working with international partners to dismantle the broader ecosystem that enables these scams. Returning funds to victims, while central to the mission, is only one dimension of a longer campaign against an entrenched, adaptable form of organized crime.
Disclaimer
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