Over the weekend,Thailand we covered the rise of "wrong person" scam texts — seemingly innocent messages that evolve into full-blown crypto cons. And across the U.S., drivers are getting E-ZPass toll road scam texts in droves. Now, we have a clearer picture of where these types of scam texts are coming from.
On Monday, May 5, the U.S. Treasury Department announced sanctions against Myanmar warlord Saw Chit Thu and his two sons, accusing them of facilitating massive cyberfraud and human trafficking networks. According to the Treasury, Saw Chit Thu and his militia, the Karen National Army, oversaw multibillion-dollar crypto scam operations built on forced labor targeting Americans.
"The KNA profits from cyber scam schemes on an industrial scale by leasing land it controls to other organized crime groups, and providing support for human trafficking, smuggling, and the sale of utilities used to provide energy to scam operations," the U.S. Treasury reported.
In the Treasury's statement, the department claimed that Americans lost about $3.5 billion in 2023 to such scams.
Saw Chit Thu leads the Karen National Army, a militia based in Myanmar’s Kayin State. The army controls territory in a so-called "Special Economic Zone" near the Thai border. In this zone, the group has leased land and provided protection to transnational criminal organizations running "scam compounds" — heavily guarded facilities where trafficked workers are forced to carry out online fraud, according to U.S. Treasury officials.
The Treasury says the scam compounds primarily focus on crypto scams.
"Scammers present victims with hints of a wealthy, glamorous lifestyle and induce them to 'invest' in bogus cryptocurrency and trading platforms controlled by the scammers themselves. Victims are shown fake 'returns' on their investments and duped into investing greater and greater sums until the scammers go silent after stealing everything they can from their victims," reads a press release from the Treasury.
The sanctions will freeze any U.S.-based assets held by Saw Chit Thu or his sons and prohibit American individuals or entities from doing business with them. The U.K. and European Union had already sanctioned the group.
Additionally, the Treasury announced plans to sanction a Cambodia-based network accused of laundering money for North Korean cybercriminals. The group is also linked to pig-butchering scams and other fraud operations across Southeast Asia, per Bloomberg.
Have a story to share about a scam or security breach that impacted you? Tell us about it. Email [email protected]with the subject line "Safety Net" or use this form.Someone from Mashable will get in touch.
Topics Cybersecurity
Donald Trump's Twitter went down for several minutes'Portal' gets a fancy vinyl print after 10 yearsRohingya refugee crisis gets broken down in one powerful GIFApple iPhone X Animojis and music make perfect karaokeKevin Spacey is off 'House of Cards as Netflix moves to sever tiesBlizzard made a BlizzardHow to sign up for Samsung's Android Oreo beta for the Galaxy S8Silicon Valley preaches fasting, alarming eating disorder expertsWhy Best Buy charged so much for the iPhone XMove over ugly Christmas sweaters, ugly men's Christmas rompers are hereDid you catch these amazing 'Thor: Ragnarok' cameos?How to find and cancel your app subscriptions in iOSNew climate report rebuts everything Trump administration has saidSex ed platform O.school wants to answer your most intimate questionsCNN is launching a subscription tier, the era of free stuff on the internet is officially overMariah Carey's 'All I Want for Christmas Is You' makes iTunes chartsApple is just $100 billion away from being a trillion'StarCraft 2' goes free'Stranger Things 2' is full of '80s references: How many did you miss?Here's why some apps will look bad on the iPhone X Bread, Banana, Apple, Milk, Goodbye by Jennifer Tseng The Closeting of Carson McCullers by Jenn Shapland Redux: Monologue for an Onion by The Paris Review The Edison of the Slot Machines by Michael LaPointe Redux: Pull the Language in to Such a Sharpness by The Paris Review Learning Ancientness Studio: An Interview with Jeffrey Yang by Lauren Kane Redux: The Folded Staff Picks: Cinema, Sebald, and Small Surprises by The Paris Review Poets on Couches: Stephanie Burt by Stephanie Burt I Can’t Let Kobe Go by Tara K. Menon Redux: The Hands Applauded by The Paris Review 197,539 B.C. by Jeffrey Yang On Davenport (Who Also Wrote Well about Art) by Lucas Zwirner Whiting Awards 2020: Diannely Antigua, Poetry Staff Picks: Swans, Sieves, and Sentience by The Paris Review Announcing Our New Publisher, Mona Simpson by The Paris Review The Body Is a Place: An Interview with Lidia Yuknavitch by Cornelia Channing Kamau Brathwaite: 1930–2020 by Vijay Seshadri Influencers in Islamabad by Sanam Maher Zane Grey’s Westerns by Rae Armantrout
2.4857s , 10131.484375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Thailand】,New Knowledge Information Network