Dubai Police, the FBI and China’s Ministry of Public Security have dismantled at least nine scam centers used for cryptocurrency investment fraud, in one of the most significant cross-border crackdowns on crypto fraud this year.
The U.S. Department of Justice said the operation resulted in at least 276 arrests and targeted scam centers that allegedly defrauded Americans out of millions of dollars. The crackdown was led by Dubai Police under the UAE Ministry of Interior, with support from the FBI and Chinese authorities.
According to the DOJ, 275 people were arrested by Dubai authorities, while one additional suspect was arrested by the Royal Thai Police. Three of the people arrested in Dubai were among defendants charged in the Southern District of California with federal wire fraud and money laundering offenses.
The Scam Centers Were Built Around Fake Crypto Investments
Authorities said the alleged fraud rings operated through several scam centers tied to three groups named in U.S. court documents as Ko Thet Company, Sanduo Group and Giant Company.
The schemes were described as cryptocurrency investment frauds using “pig-butchering” tactics. In these scams, fraudsters spend time building a victim’s trust through fake friendships or romantic relationships before pushing them toward fraudulent investment platforms. Once victims transfer money or crypto, they lose control of the funds.
The DOJ said scammers encouraged victims to invest more by showing fake gains, claiming personal trading success and even urging some victims to borrow from friends, family or lenders. Funds were then allegedly laundered through other cryptocurrency accounts, including accounts controlled by the scammers.
That pattern is familiar across modern crypto fraud. The scam does not depend on hacking a blockchain or exploiting a DeFi protocol. Instead, it exploits trust, emotion and financial anxiety, then uses crypto rails to move stolen funds quickly across borders.
Dubai Says the Operation Targeted Three Criminal Syndicates
Local reporting in the UAE described the effort as a Dubai Police-led operation conducted with the FBI and Chinese police.
Emirates 24|7 reported that the operation, called Operation Triple Force Guardian, targeted three criminal gangs running nine sophisticated fraud centers involved in fake-return investment schemes and international cryptocurrency scams. The report said most of the 276 suspects were from Southeast Asian countries and linked to a transnational fraud network.
Gulf News separately reported the operation under the name Tri-Force Sentinel, saying Dubai Police led a coordinated action against nine scam centers involved in high-yield investment fraud and virtual currency scams. The report also said a key leader of one of the syndicates was arrested in Thailand with help from the Royal Thai Police.
The slightly different operation names in local reports do not change the core finding: U.S., UAE, Chinese and Thai authorities coordinated against a network accused of running crypto investment scams from Dubai-linked fraud centers.
Why This Case Matters for Crypto
The arrests come as governments are increasing pressure on organised crypto fraud networks, especially those using fake investment platforms to target victims across borders.
For the crypto industry, these cases create a difficult but important distinction. The underlying blockchains are not necessarily the problem. In many pig-butchering cases, criminals use social engineering first, then rely on crypto because it can be transferred quickly, converted across assets and moved between wallets.
That means enforcement has to follow both the people and the money. The DOJ said FBI agents identified victims through complaints filed with the Internet Crime Complaint Center, then analysed financial and cryptocurrency records to trace losses. Investigators have so far identified millions of dollars in losses linked to the schemes.
This is also why exchanges, wallet providers and analytics firms are under growing pressure to detect suspicious flows. Scam centers can be physically located in one country, recruit workers from another, target victims in a third and launder funds through global crypto infrastructure.
The Charges Are Serious, But Defendants Are Presumed Innocent
U.S. prosecutors unsealed charges against several defendants, including Thet Min Nyi, Wiliang Awang, Andreas Chandra and Lisa Mariam. The charges include wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy, depending on the defendant and case.
The DOJ said wire fraud conspiracy carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison. Money laundering conspiracy also carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison, along with potential fines. The charges remain allegations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless proven guilty in court.
That legal caveat matters. Large international takedowns often involve multiple jurisdictions, complex evidence and separate proceedings. Some suspects may be extradited, some may face local prosecution and others may remain fugitives.
How Users Can Protect Themselves
The safest response to this case is not panic. It is better awareness.
Pig-butchering scams usually begin slowly. A stranger builds rapport through messaging apps, social media or dating platforms. The conversation later shifts to investing, often with screenshots of fake profits and pressure to deposit more funds. Victims may be allowed to withdraw small amounts at first to build confidence before larger transfers are blocked or stolen.
Users should be suspicious of anyone offering guaranteed crypto returns, private trading platforms or urgent investment opportunities. They should also avoid sending funds to platforms introduced by online acquaintances, especially when the platform is not a regulated exchange and cannot be independently verified.
The Dubai crackdown shows that law enforcement is becoming more coordinated. But it also shows how large the problem has become. Crypto scams are no longer just isolated online frauds. In many cases, they are organised, transnational businesses built to industrialise deception.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.


















