Báo cáo tội phạm Crypto 2025 – The 2025 Crypto Crime Report

How crypto is scaling traditional crime types, like drug trafficking, money laundering, and fraud.

Download repport https://go.chainalysis.com/2025-Crypto-Crime-Report.html

Ransomware 

Darknet Markets 

Market Manipulation 

Scams 

Stolen Funds 

Extremism 

Organized Crime

Báo cáo tội phạm mạng hoạt động ở Đông Nam Á – Compound crime: Cyber scam operations in Southeast Asia

Repurposed hotels, casinos, and private compounds across Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and the Philippines have become centres of global fraud. These compounds are operated by organized criminal networks that exploit hundreds of thousands of people, many of whom are trafficked and forced to perpetrate online scams. Victims include not only those defrauded online but also the scam workers themselves, subjected to threats, violence, sexual exploitation and extreme working conditions. 

The report details how cyber scams —including ‘pig-butchering’ romance-investment scams, crypto fraud, impersonation and sextortion— now generate tens of billions of dollars annually.  

Download report https://globalinitiative.net/analysis/compound-crime-cyber-scam-operations-in-southeast-asia/

Thống kê và xu hướng tội pham Crypto 2025 – Crypto Crime Report: 2025 Statistics & Trends

Crypto crime is escalating fast and shifting in form. In 2024 alone, $51 billion flowed into illicit wallets, with $40 billion laundered and over $2 billion stolen outright. Bitcoin is no longer king in the shadows; stablecoins now dominate criminal crypto flows. This report breaks down who’s losing money, how it’s being funneled, and why tracking these shifts is critical. The insights ahead reveal patterns that can help spot emerging threats and shape stronger policy.

How much cryptocurrency has been stolen in the world

How many Bitcoins have been stolen?
How much Ethereum was stolen?
How much Solana has been stolen?
The biggest crypto rug pulls
Cryptocurrency money laundering statistics
The biggest crypto scams in history
Insights & Implications:
Methodology:
References:

Download report https://coinledger.io/research/crypto-crime-report

Vì sao băng nhóm tội phạm Crypto ở Đông Nam Á nở rộ –  Why scam gangs in Southeast Asia are a growing global threat

Griffith.edu.au May 19, 2025 By Dr Hai Thanh Luong

From fake job offers to cryptocurrency fraud and online romance scams, Southeast Asia has become a global hub for transnational scam operations. 

These aren’t isolated crimes, they are organised, cross-border and industrial-scale criminal enterprises that exploit vulnerable people and expose the limits of international law enforcement.

New research shows this surge in scams represents more than just a regional issue. It’s a transnational emergency, and it demands an urgent, coordinated response.

Why Southeast Asia?

Several factors have turned Southeast Asia into a hotbed for scam syndicates. 

The collapse of rule of law in parts of Myanmar has created ungoverned spaces where criminal operations flourish. 

Meanwhile, countries like Cambodia, Laos and the Philippines offer a fertile environment for transnational crime due to weak governance, corruption, and limited oversight.

These scam centres don’t just target foreign victims. They also lure and trap workers—many of them young people from poorer nations—under the false promise of legitimate employment. Once inside, many are subjected to forced labour, abuse and trafficking.

This has become a humanitarian crisis as scam compounds across Southeast Asia have held thousands of people against their will, forcing them to commit fraud under threat of violence.

The rise of digital technologies has only made these operations harder to trace and easier to scale. From encrypted messaging to unregulated cryptocurrency, scam networks have globalised rapidly, while enforcement efforts remain stuck behind borders.

Why national responses aren’t working

One of the key challenges in confronting this crisis is the fragmented nature of law enforcement. 

Scams that begin in one country can target victims in another, while using platforms, payment systems, and communication tools hosted across multiple jurisdictions.

But many national police forces are not equipped to act beyond their borders. And transnational criminal syndicates have exploited the lack of international coordination to operate with relative impunity.

Even where political will exists, legal mismatches and diplomatic bottlenecks prevent timely investigations, arrests or prosecutions. 

Countries tend to focus inward, launching isolated crackdowns that fail to dismantle the broader networks.

This mismatch between the global nature of the threat and the localised nature of responses is precisely what allows these scams to thrive.

What needs to happen

To seriously confront this growing criminal economy, regional governments must prioritise coordinated responses, cross-border investigations, and robust intelligence sharing.

This includes:

  • Building shared databases and real-time intelligence channels to track trends, suspects and operations;
  • Developing harmonised legal tools to enable prosecutions and asset recovery across jurisdictions;
  • Working with tech and financial platforms to shut down scam infrastructure;
  • Protecting and rehabilitating victims, particularly those trafficked into scam compounds.

ASEAN, Interpol, and UNODC all have a role to play. But meaningful cooperation remains patchy, slow and overly politicised. Tackling scams as a global crisis, not just a regional one, will require serious investment and political leadership.

A crisis we can’t ignore

Scams are often dismissed as digital annoyances or consumer issues. 

The response to this crisis cannot be local, slow or siloed. The fight against transnational scams cannot be won in isolation. 

Only by working together can states dismantle the criminal networks exploiting the region’s vulnerabilities.

But what we are seeing in Southeast Asia is a complex ecosystem of transnational organised crime, often underpinned by exploitation and violence.

Billions of dollars are being stolen. Thousands of people are being trafficked and abused. And public trust in digital systems is eroding as scams become more sophisticated.

“Một loại ung thư” – UN cảnh báo tập đoàn tội phạm mạng Châu Á mở rộng khắp thế giới – ‘A cancer’: UN warns Asia-based cybercrime syndicates expanding worldwide

Al Jazeera

Agency says gangs caused $37bn in losses in Asia as they gain new footholds in Africa, South America, and Middle East.

Tiếp tục đọc “Vì sao băng nhóm tội phạm Crypto ở Đông Nam Á nở rộ –  Why scam gangs in Southeast Asia are a growing global threat”

Nhận diện các thủ đoạn rửa tiền thông qua tiền mã hóa – crypto currency

a. Thông qua các sàn giao dịch tiền mã hóa tập trung (Centralised exchanges). 
b. Thông qua hệ thống tài chính phi tập trung (Decentralised Finance – DeFi)
c. Thông qua Máy trộn tiền mã hóa (Mixers hoặc Tumblers) và Cầu nối chuỗi (cross-chain bridge)
d. Thông qua thị trường mua bán trao tay OTC (Over the counter market)
e. Thông qua tiền mã hóa ẩn danh (Privacy coins)
f. Thông qua các sàn đánh bạc trực tuyến
g. Sử dụng tiền mã hóa mua bất động sản, tác phẩm nghệ thuật và hàng hóa bán lẻ

Tạp chí pháp lý 19:10 07/04/2025

(Pháp lý). Bài viết nghiên cứu về thực trạng lợi dụng các đồng tiền mã hóa để phục vụ các hoạt động phạm tội nói chung và tội phạm rửa tiền nói riêng tại Việt Nam và trên thế giới. Trên cơ sở đó, tác giả đề xuất các giải pháp mà các lực lượng chức năng nghiên cứu áp dụng để chủ động phòng, chống tội phạm rửa tiền thông qua các giao dịch tiền mã hóa.

image001-1729504752.png
 

1. Tiền mã hóa – công cụ mới được “ưa chuộng” của tội phạm và rửa tiền 

Trong những năm gần đây, các đồng tiền mã hóa (CryptoCurrency) đã và đang phát triển mạnh mẽ, với hàng loạt các đồng tiền mới được ra đời, dựa trên các công nghệ tiên tiến, và độ phổ biến không ngừng được mở rộng với số lượng người sử dụng và tổng giá trị giao dịch ngày một tăng. 

Tiếp tục đọc “Nhận diện các thủ đoạn rửa tiền thông qua tiền mã hóa – crypto currency”