The stranger sending fraudulent investment messages may appear to be a willing criminal. In many cases, however, the person behind the screen is another victim — trafficked into a guarded compound, stripped of identification and forced to deceive people thousands of kilometres away.
Fraud begins with a fake job
Scam centres recruit internationally through advertisements promising legitimate employment in technology, customer service, online marketing or cryptocurrency trading. Candidates may be offered attractive salaries, accommodation and help with travel.
After arriving in countries such as Cambodia, Myanmar or Laos, recruits are transported to enclosed compounds. Passports and telephones are confiscated, debts are invented and workers are told they must earn their release.
Threats, beatings and confinement have been documented by survivors. Workers who fail to meet financial targets may be punished, resold to another criminal group or ordered to contact their families for ransom payments.
This system has created two connected groups of victims: people losing their savings online and trafficked workers compelled to steal from them.
A factory built for deception
Inside the compounds, fraud is organised like an industrial production process. Workers receive scripts, lists of potential targets and detailed instructions for building emotional relationships.
Some specialise in making initial contact. Others develop trust, manage fake investment platforms or persuade victims to transfer increasingly large amounts. Supervisors monitor conversations, set daily targets and assess which victims appear wealthy or emotionally vulnerable.
The buildings can contain fake offices, banks and police stations used during video calls. Carefully constructed backgrounds help impersonators appear to be financial advisers, government officials or law-enforcement officers.
A recent investigation into a compound near the Thai-Cambodian border found facilities reportedly capable of housing thousands of workers. The operation allegedly used sophisticated sets and impersonation techniques to target victims internationally.
Victims forced to create victims
Recognising forced criminality does not make the financial damage less real. Victims of investment and romance fraud can lose pensions, homes and businesses. Many also experience shame, broken relationships and serious mental-health consequences.
However, treating every person sending fraudulent messages as an independent scammer overlooks the criminal organisations controlling the system. The workers visible to victims are often the most replaceable part of a much larger network involving recruiters, managers, property operators, money launderers and digital payment channels.
Some recruits understand that the advertised job may involve questionable activity. Others are deceived completely. Once inside a guarded compound, that distinction can become irrelevant if departure is prevented through violence, debt or confiscated documents.
Crackdowns move the industry
Governments have raided compounds, arrested operators and disrupted electricity, internet and satellite connections. International sanctions have also targeted businesses and individuals accused of supporting scam networks.
Yet enforcement in one location often pushes operations across a border or into a more remote area. Criminal groups can relocate workers, replace websites and move stolen funds through cryptocurrency wallets, informal banking networks and money mules.
The most effective response must therefore address the entire structure: fraudulent recruitment, trafficking, online platforms, financial transfers, property ownership and official protection.
Part four of Inside the scam reveals an uncomfortable reality. The person trying to steal from you may also be trapped. Behind one fraudulent message can stand an organisation profiting from two crimes at once — financial fraud and modern slavery.
Newshub Editorial in Asia – 16 July 2026

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