Judge hits Chinese crypto scammer who helped swindle $37 million from U.S. victims with 46 month sentence | Fortune
Briefly

Judge hits Chinese crypto scammer who helped swindle $37 million from U.S. victims with 46 month sentence | Fortune
"Jingliang Su, a Chinese national, faces almost four years in prison for his role in crypto fraud that relied on befriending Americans on social media, then winning their trust in order to fleece them. He laundered about $37 million from 174 U.S. victims via scam centers in Cambodia, according to a statement released by the Department of Justice on Tuesday. In June, Su pleaded guilty to conspiracy to operate an illegal money transmitting business."
"Scam centers have become notorious in Southeast Asian countries like Myanmar, and recent kidnappings in the region have been linked to these fraud hubs. "This case is emblematic of a broader trend we're observing: highly organized scam conglomerates in Southeast Asia weaponizing technology and cryptocurrencies to defraud victims at scale across borders," said Jacqueline Burns Koven, the head of cyber threat intelligence at Chainalysis, in a note to Fortune."
"The fraudsters would contact American victims through social media, texts, or online dating platforms to get people's trust. They would then create fake websites that looked like real crypto exchanges, where they convinced victims to send their money. These tactics, which are intended to exploit lonely or otherwise vulnerable people, are at the core of what Chinese criminals call "pig butchering." The term describes winning an individual's trust over time in order to abruptly swindle them."
Jingliang Su faces nearly four years in prison for participating in crypto fraud that befriended Americans on social platforms to win trust and steal funds. He laundered about $37 million from 174 U.S. victims through scam centers in Cambodia and pleaded guilty in June to conspiracy to operate an illegal money transmitting business. The case follows a year in which mostly Chinese scammers stole a record $17 billion from ordinary people and coincides with growing notoriety of scam centers and related kidnappings in Southeast Asia. The scheme used social outreach, fake crypto exchange websites, and Tether (USDT) to move and launder victim proceeds.
Read at Fortune
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]