Cambodia extradites alleged scam mastermind to China after arrest

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Jan 7, 2026, 3:37:20 PM (10 days ago) Jan 7
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Cambodia extradites alleged scam mastermind to China after arrest


Simon Fraser:https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cy4q8e88n2voAsia editor, BBC News website
Prince Group/Getty images Chen Zhi alongside a company buildingPrince Group/Getty images

Cambodia says it has extradited to China a billionaire businessman accused of masterminding a vast cryptocurrency scam in which trafficked workers were lured to forced labour camps to defraud victims globally.

Chen Zhi was among three Chinese nationals arrested on 6 January after a joint investigation into transnational crime lasting several months, Cambodia said.

The US charged the 37-year-old, who was born in south-east China, last October with running internet scams from Cambodia that it said had stolen billions in cryptocurrency.

The US Treasury Department seized about $14bn (£10.4bn) worth of bitcoin it alleged belonged to him. The UK also sanctioned his global business empire, Prince Group.

US prosecutors said it was one the biggest financial takedowns in history and the largest ever seizure of bitcoin.

The BBC contacted Prince Group for comment at the time. In the past, the Cambodia-based group has denied any involvement in scams. Its website says its businesses include property development, and financial and consumer services.

Since Chen Zhi was indicted by the US on fraud and money-laundering charges in October, his whereabouts have been unclear.

But on Wednesday, the Cambodian authorities said they had "arrested three Chinese nationals namely Chen Zhi, Xu Ji Liang, and Shao Ji Hui and extradited [them] to the People's Republic of China". The interior ministry statement did not say where Chen Zhi had been detained.

His Cambodian nationality had been revoked by royal decree last month, it added. The enigmatic tycoon had given up his Chinese nationality to become a Cambodian citizen in 2014.

The UN estimates that hundreds of thousands of people have been trafficked to South East Asia, many of them to Cambodia, lured by the promise of legitimate jobs and then forced to run online scams.

People are held against their will in the scam farms and made to defraud strangers online under the threat of punishment or torture. Many of those trapped are Chinese and targeted people in China.

EPA People who were rescued from scam centers in Myanmar arrive in Thailand, at the Myanmar-Thai border of Phop Phra district, near Mae Sot, Tak province, northern Thailand, 12 February 2025EPA
Scam centres have proliferated in South East Asia - above, people rescued from compounds in Myanmar last February are seen arriving in Thailand
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