Cambodia's parliment passes law targeting online, crypto scam compounds
The Block
04-04 01:37
Ai Focus
The Law on Anti-Technology Fraud introduces five new offenses aimed at rooting out modern online scams and crimes.
Helpful
No.Help

Author:Crayon Xiao_X_

Cambodia is taking action against online scams with its parliament passing the country's first law to address the rising issue. 

All 112 members of Cambodia’s parliament present voted to approve the legislation, officially titled the Law on Anti-Technology Fraud, the Associated Press reported on March 30. 

The law introduces five new offenses aimed at rooting out modern, internet-based crimes, including cybercrime, directing scams, recruiting/training scammers, malicious collection of personal data, and specialized money laundering. 

Southeast Asia has become a major hub for cyber scam compounds. Years of investigative reporting indicate these semi-militarized facilities force trafficked individuals — or people lured by the promise of fake job offers — to operate online scams, including romance scams, crypto investment schemes, and other types of fraud. 

Reuters noted in an article on Friday that the Cambodian government has long downplayed the existence of these scam ​compounds, making the recently passed law particularly significant. 

On Thursday, Britain sanctioned the operators of what was believed to be the largest fraud complex in Cambodia and an online crypto marketplace used to trade stolen personal data, Reuters reported. 

The new law, which still requires Cambodia's King Norodom Sihamoni for final signature, imposes ​two to five years in prison and fines of up to $125,000 for those convicted of online scams. 

Directors of scam compounds face increased fines reaching $250,000 and five to 10 years in prison. Instances of human trafficking, illegal confinement or violence could bump the prison penalty to between 10 and 20 years, the AP reported. 

Online scams are big business

Blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis found that pig butcher scams — a type of romance scam so named because victims are buttered up over time — are on the rise and increasingly reliant on crypto. 

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission has previously estimated annual losses tied to romance scams could exceed $1 billion, while the FBI has identified crypto-linked investment fraud as its largest loss category.

Crypto firms are also increasingly collaborating with law enforcement to track, freeze, and recapture stolen funds. In 2023, Tether froze $225 million in USDT linked to a Southeast Asian fraud syndicate after a Department of Justice investigation, a landmark collaboration at the time.

Tip
$0
Like
0
Save
0
Views 227
CoinMeta reminds readers to view blockchain rationally, stay aware of risks, and beware of virtual token issuance and speculation. All content on this site represents market information or related viewpoints only and does not constitute any form of investment advice. If you find sensitive content, please click“Report”,and we will handle it promptly。
Submit
Comment 0
Hot
Latest
No comments yet. Be the first!
Related
Cambodia Advances Law Targeting Crypto Scam Compound Kingpins with Life in Jail
The draft law would impose prison terms of up to life for those running the scam compounds behind billions of dollars in crypto fraud.
Decrypt
·2026-04-03 20:23:17
665
Iran’s Hormuz Crypto Toll Claim Faces Verification Gap
Iran tightens Strait of Hormuz control as reports link tanker passage fees to crypto payments, yuan settlements, and selective transit rules.
Coinpaper
·2026-04-06 04:22:00
240
XRP Flips Bitcoin as Most Traded Asset on Korea's Top Crypto Exchange
U.Today
·2026-04-06 14:38:00
915
Trump’s New Attorney General Held Bitcoin—But Has a Mixed Crypto Track Record
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche directed his staff last year to lay off crypto developers—but also oversaw their continued prosecution.
Decrypt
·2026-04-04 01:23:17
260
Ant Group’s blockchain arm unveils platform for AI agents to transact on crypto rails
CoinDesk
·2026-04-02 21:22:45
849