Why Industrial-Scale Cyber Scamming of US Victims Is Thriving In Burma

The Epoch Times Header

Every day, people in the United States and many other countries are being scammed—by phony customer service operators, romance fraudsters, and perpetrators of more complex cryptocurrency investment scams.

But those being scammed out of retirement savings, or college funds, probably do not realize the person on the other end of the phone is likely another victim, who has already paid with their freedom.

Revelations in recent months about the existence of vast scam centers along Burma’s border with Thailand, run by Chinese organized crime syndicates and human traffickers, have highlighted the sheer scale of international cybercrime.

Amy Miller, regional director of Acts of Mercy International, told The Epoch Times: “This is a new form of human trafficking. It’s human trafficking for forced criminality.”

She is based in Mae Sot, Thailand, just over the border from the cybercrime hubs, and has spoken to hundreds of scammers.

“These people have no other choice. It’s scam somebody or be electrocuted, scam somebody or be locked into a prison with your hands handcuffed above your head for days or weeks with no food or water,” Miller said.

“That is, obviously, the very severe side of the victimization that happens.”

Andy Jenkinson, a fellow of the Cyber Theory Institute and author of the book “Stuxnet to Sunburst: 20 Years of Digital Exploitation and Cyberwarfare,” said the cyber scam centers were “very, very profitable.”

“The annual losses to cybercrime globally is over $10 trillion, or put it another way, $32 billion a day,” he told The Epoch Times.

Matthew Hogan, a detective with Connecticut State Police and an officer on the Secret Service Financial Crimes Task Force, said the scammers in Burma (also known as Myanmar) were working on a variety of frauds, including romance scams and duping bank customers over the phone.

But he told The Epoch Times the biggest growth was in long-term scams known as “pig butchering,” which involved luring people into fake cryptocurrency investments.

The phrase comes from the Chinese term “sha zhu pan.”

“They see the victims as being the pigs, and they are fattening them by creating this lure of incredible investment opportunity. So the pig gets fattened…and at some point it’s time to butcher the pig,” Hogan said.

Hogan said the scams usually started with someone receiving an SMS or a direct message on social media from a stranger, who would then begin building a “rapport.”

“They won’t shy away from the fact that they’re Chinese. … The ones I’ve gotten are usually female and … they‘ll say, ’hey, my name is Emma, I actually work out in California,’ and they always espouse some kind of wealth in some capacity,” he said.

By Chris Summers

Read Full Article on TheEpochTimes.com

The Epoch Times
The Epoch Timeshttps://www.theepochtimes.com/
Tired of biased news? The Epoch Times is truthful, factual news that other media outlets don't report. No spin. No agenda. Just honest journalism like it used to be.

Columns

No Pain, No Gain

There will be short term pain from Trump's tariffs, but long-term we'll see the unshackling of the greatest country and economy the world has ever known.

 The Right is So Much Funnier than the Left!

When one thinks of humor one does not normally think of our leadership on Capitol Hill or in the White House but there's been episodes that are hilarious.

Screen angels

Not only did Disney’s latest film Snow White take a...

WATCH: Biden Disinfo Czar/Dystopian Mary Poppins Re-Emerges For Horrific Congressional Testimony

The self-professed “Mary Poppins of disinformation,” Nina Jankowicz, emerged from whatever troll-cave she’s been living in to testify to Congress,

Justice Delayed is Justice Denied, Prosecute Jeffrey Goldberg!

Jeffrey Goldberg reported on his mistaken inclusion in a signal chat as a hit piece on Trump. Should he be prosecuted under the Espionage Act?

News

DOJ Says Judge Lacks Authority to Demand US Return Deported Gang Member

DOJ told appeals court that federal judge in Maryland does not have authority to order Trump admin to return man who was deported to a prison in El Salvador.

FBI Issues Identity Theft Warning Against Criminals Claiming Tax Refunds

The FBI issued an alert Wednesday, warning Americans about criminals stealing the identities of taxpayers to file fake returns and claim refunds.

Jaguar Land Rover Halts US Shipments in Response to 25 Percent Auto Tariff

British automaker JLR temporarily paused vehicle shipments to US, citing need to reassess operations following Trump admin’s 25% tariff on vehicle imports.

At Least 16 Dead as Flooding, Tornadoes Rip Across South and Midwest

Severe weather sent torrential downpours over South and Midwest, leaving at least 16 dead as communities were hit by tornado and flash flood warnings.

2 Border Patrol Agents Charged for Taking Bribes to Allow Illegal Immigrants Entry

DOJ said two border patrol officers have been arrested for allegedly taking bribes to allow cars with illegal immigrants to cross the border into the US.

Shen Yun Performs to Full House in Southern California City Despite Fake Bomb Threat

Shen Yun Performing Arts, facing pressure from Beijing, performed to a full house in Claremont, CA, after venue was evacuated due to bomb threat proven false.

Judge Issues Permanent Block on Trump Admin’s Change to NIH Indirect Cost Rate

Federal judge issued permanent injunction blocking Trump admin from reducing money NIH pays grant recipients for indirect costs, such as administration or maintenance of facilities.

Federal Judge Blocks Trump’s Attempt to Fire InterAmerican Foundation Leaders

Federal judge in Washington blocked Trump’s admin from firing the leadership of the InterAmerican Foundation and canceling most of its grant contracts.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central