The Largest Crypto Fraud Seizure by the Strike Force
On February 26, 2026, U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro announced that the Scam Center Strike Force had frozen and seized more than $580 million in cryptocurrency stolen by Chinese transnational criminal organizations through “pig butchering” scams — a milestone reached within just three months of the task force’s formation in November 2025. The centerpiece was a $61 million Tether (USDT) seizure, traced through a web of blockchain transactions to a scam operation based in Southeast Asia, ranking among the largest single USDT confiscations tied to romance-based crypto fraud in U.S. history.
The Strike Force — a collaboration between the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia, DOJ’s Criminal Division, the FBI, and the U.S. Secret Service — represents the most significant coordinated law enforcement response to date against a fraud category that has grown from an obscure regional phenomenon to a global criminal enterprise. The FBI’s 2024 Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) report recorded $5.8 billion in losses from pig butchering schemes alone, part of $9.3 billion in total cryptocurrency fraud losses that year — a 66 percent increase over 2023. DOJ officials estimate the scam industry costs Americans nearly $10 billion annually.
But behind the headline seizure figures lies a story far more complex and disturbing than conventional financial fraud. Pig butchering operations are built on human trafficking, forced labor, and the systematic exploitation of vulnerable populations on both sides of the scam — the victims who lose their savings and the workers who are coerced into conducting the fraud.
The Anatomy of a Pig Butchering Scam
The term “pig butchering” — a translation of the Chinese phrase “sha zhu pan” — refers to the practice of “fattening the pig before slaughter”: building a relationship of trust with a victim over weeks or months before extracting maximum financial value. The methodology is sophisticated, patient, and devastatingly effective.
The Initial Contact
Scams typically begin with an unsolicited contact that appears to be a wrong number text message, a match on a dating app, or a connection request on a professional networking platform. The initial message is deliberately innocuous — “Hey, is this Michael? We met at the conference last week?” or a similar pretext. When the target responds to correct the “mistake,” the conversation begins.
The Relationship Phase
Over days or weeks, the scammer builds a relationship with the target. For romantic variants, this involves extensive personal conversations, sharing of stolen photos, video calls using deepfake technology or scripts that explain why video is unavailable, and the gradual development of emotional intimacy. For investment-focused variants, the scammer positions themselves as a successful crypto trader or financial professional.
The relationship phase is where the “fattening” metaphor applies. The scammer invests significant time in building trust, studying the target’s vulnerabilities, financial situation, and decision-making patterns. Scam operations maintain detailed dossiers on each target, with supervisors coaching operators on how to deepen the emotional connection and overcome resistance.
The Investment Hook
Once trust is established, the scammer introduces the investment opportunity — typically cryptocurrency trading on a platform that appears legitimate but is entirely controlled by the scam operation. The target is guided through opening an account on the fake platform and making an initial small investment. The platform shows impressive returns — fabricated numbers that create the illusion of profit.
The target is encouraged to invest more and may even be allowed to withdraw a small amount to reinforce the belief that the investment is legitimate. Over time, the amounts increase — from hundreds to thousands to tens of thousands of dollars. Victims who hesitate are coached through their resistance with emotional manipulation.
The Slaughter
The endgame arrives when the victim has invested everything they can access — savings, retirement funds, loans, money borrowed from family. The fake platform may show a sudden “loss” that wipes out the investment, or it may simply become inaccessible. The scammer either disappears or continues to extract additional “fees” and “taxes” needed to “release” the locked funds, prolonging the extraction until the victim has nothing left.
The Human Trafficking Dimension
What distinguishes pig butchering from other fraud schemes is the labor model behind it. The scam operations are overwhelmingly conducted from compounds in Southeast Asia — primarily Myanmar (Burma), Cambodia, and Laos — staffed by workers who are themselves victims of human trafficking.
The trafficking pipeline targets young, educated individuals from across Asia — and increasingly from Africa and South America — who are recruited through fake job advertisements for technology companies, call centers, or digital marketing firms. Recruits are promised legitimate employment with attractive salaries, often in a foreign country. Upon arrival, their passports are confiscated, and they are forced to work in scam compounds under threat of violence.
Conditions in the compounds have been extensively documented by the United Nations, survivors, and journalists. Workers are typically required to work 12-16 hour shifts, operating multiple scam conversations simultaneously. Those who fail to meet quotas are beaten, given electric shocks, or sold to other compound operators. Some compounds are immense — the UN has described facilities spanning over 500 acres, resembling self-contained towns, with heavily fortified multi-storey buildings surrounded by barbed wire and armed guards.
The scale of the trafficking is staggering. The UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights estimates that at least 300,000 people are trapped in scam compounds across the Mekong region of Southeast Asia, with at least 120,000 in Myanmar and 100,000 in Cambodia alone. Victims come from more than 40 countries. A February 2026 UN report documented grave abuses including torture and rape within these compounds.
The DOJ’s enforcement actions acknowledged the trafficking dimension, with indictments including charges related to conspiracy to commit forced labor. In October 2025, the Justice Department unsealed charges against Chen Zhi, chairman of Cambodia-based Prince Holding Group, accusing him of operating one of Asia’s largest transnational scam and fraud networks. He was arrested and extradited in early January 2026. However, the geographic and jurisdictional complexities — compounds operating in countries with limited law enforcement capacity, often under the protection of armed groups — make prosecution of trafficking networks far more difficult than tracing cryptocurrency.
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Following the Money: Blockchain Forensics
The $580 million seizure was made possible by advances in blockchain forensic analysis — the discipline of tracing cryptocurrency transactions through the public ledger to identify the real-world entities controlling the funds.
Cryptocurrency was initially attractive to scam operators because of its perceived anonymity. But every transaction on major blockchains is permanently recorded and publicly visible, creating a forensic trail that is in many ways more accessible than traditional banking records. The challenge is de-anonymizing the wallet addresses — connecting the pseudonymous blockchain identities to real-world persons and entities.
The Strike Force leveraged tools from blockchain intelligence firms including Chainalysis and TRM Labs to map the flow of funds from victim wallets through layering networks designed to obscure the trail. Tether’s cooperation was critical for the $61 million seizure — the company froze the wallet at law enforcement’s request, a capability that exists because USDT, unlike decentralized cryptocurrencies, has a centralized issuer with the ability to freeze and seize funds. Tether has frozen a total of $4.2 billion in USDT linked to illicit activity since its launch, cooperating with more than 310 law enforcement agencies across 64 countries.
The layering techniques used by the scam operations were sophisticated but not impenetrable. Funds from individual victims were aggregated into collection wallets, then dispersed through dozens of intermediate wallets, converted between different cryptocurrencies, passed through decentralized exchanges, and eventually consolidated into cash-out wallets. The entire process was automated through scripts designed to overwhelm manual analysis.
Despite the sophistication, forensic teams traced the funds by identifying patterns in the timing, amounts, and network topology of the transactions. The $580 million represents the amount successfully traced and seized — likely a fraction of the total value processed through the identified networks.
The Scale Problem
The Strike Force’s $580 million seizure, while record-setting for the task force, represents a small fraction of estimated total losses. The FBI’s 2024 IC3 report recorded $5.8 billion in pig butchering losses from 41,557 complaints — part of a record $16.6 billion in total cybercrime losses. UNODC estimates the broader cyberfraud industry in East and Southeast Asia generates losses between $18 billion and $37 billion annually, with the Mekong region’s scam industry alone worth more than $43.8 billion per year.
The per-victim losses are among the highest of any fraud category. Unlike mass phishing or payment card fraud, where individual losses typically range from hundreds to low thousands of dollars, pig butchering victims routinely lose six and seven figures. The relationship-based methodology is designed to maximize extraction from each target, and the emotional manipulation ensures that victims continue investing long past the point where rational analysis would suggest stopping.
The victim demographics are broader than stereotypes suggest. Research shows victims are often well-educated, holding bachelor’s or master’s degrees, spanning ages 25 to 89 with a median age of 51. A significant portion — 69 percent in one study — are women between 25 and 40. Professionals, business owners, and financially sophisticated individuals have been victimized because the social engineering exploits emotional needs — loneliness, desire for connection, aspiration for financial security — that are not correlated with financial literacy.
The psychological impact on victims extends far beyond financial loss. The FBI’s Operation Level Up, launched in January 2024 to proactively notify potential victims, has referred 80 victims to FBI victim specialists for suicide intervention. Many victims experience shame, depression, relationship destruction, and suicidal ideation. The combination of financial ruin and the realization that an intimate relationship was entirely fabricated creates a compound trauma that requires specialized support.
International Cooperation and Its Limits
The Strike Force’s enforcement actions involved cooperation with law enforcement agencies across multiple jurisdictions. Europol has conducted its own major operations against crypto fraud networks, including a seizure of over 460 million euros from a pan-European crypto scam ring. The cryptocurrency seizures, which occurred on blockchains rather than within any single national jurisdiction, required novel legal mechanisms for cross-border asset recovery.
However, the fundamental challenge remains: the scam compounds are located in countries where the rule of law is limited or absent. Myanmar, which hosts the largest concentration of scam compounds, is in the midst of a civil war, with compounds often operating in territories controlled by ethnic armed organizations or military-affiliated militias. Cambodia and Laos have faced criticism for insufficient action against compound operators, some of whom maintain connections to politically influential figures.
China has conducted several high-profile operations against scam networks. Between July 2023 and December 2024, the Chinese Ministry of Public Security repatriated 53,000 telecom and internet fraud suspects from northern Myanmar. In January 2026, China executed 11 individuals linked to Myanmar scam operations. But enforcement has focused primarily on Chinese nationals involved in operations rather than rescuing trafficking victims of other nationalities, and the impact on the overall scale of operations has been limited.
The jurisdictional fragmentation means that enforcement actions primarily target the financial infrastructure — cryptocurrency flows, money laundering networks, and cash-out operations — rather than the compound operations themselves. This approach can reduce the profitability of scam operations and recover some victim funds, but it does not address the root cause: the existence of large-scale criminal enterprises that exploit both their workers and their targets.
What Needs to Change
The pig butchering crisis demands a response that matches its scale and complexity.
Financial Infrastructure
Cryptocurrency exchanges and stablecoin issuers need to implement more aggressive transaction monitoring specifically designed to detect pig butchering patterns — gradual increases in victim deposits, characteristic layering patterns, and concentration of funds in high-risk jurisdictions. Tether’s cooperation in the $61 million seizure demonstrates that centralized stablecoin issuers have the technical capability; the question is whether they will apply it proactively rather than reactively.
Platform Responsibility
Dating apps, social media platforms, and messaging services are the initial contact points for most pig butchering scams. These platforms need to invest in detecting and disrupting scam accounts before they reach potential victims — through behavioral analysis, account verification requirements, and proactive warnings to users who exhibit patterns consistent with being targeted.
Victim Support
The United States and other affected countries need dedicated victim support infrastructure for pig butchering. This includes financial counseling, mental health services, and legal assistance for individuals who have lost their savings. The stigma associated with being a fraud victim — particularly a romance fraud victim — prevents many from seeking help. The FBI’s Operation Level Up, which notified over 4,300 victims and saved an estimated $285 million in its first year, demonstrates the value of proactive outreach.
Diplomatic Pressure
The international community must apply sustained diplomatic and economic pressure on countries that host scam compounds. This includes sanctions targeting individuals and entities associated with compound operations, conditioned aid that requires measurable action against trafficking, and support for law enforcement capacity building in affected countries.
The $580 million seizure is a significant achievement, but it is a tactical victory in a war that is far from won. The pig butchering industry continues to grow, adapt, and exploit both the victims it defrauds and the workers it enslaves. Winning this war will require the same sustained, multi-domain commitment that has been applied to other transnational criminal enterprises — and an acknowledgment that the current pace of response is not keeping up with the scale of the problem.
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🧭 Decision Radar (Algeria Lens)
| Dimension | Assessment |
|---|---|
| Relevance for Algeria | High — Algerian citizens are increasingly targeted by crypto investment scams via social media and messaging apps; the country’s growing smartphone penetration and young demographics make it a ripe target market |
| Infrastructure Ready? | Partial — Algeria banned cryptocurrency trading in 2018 (Finance Law Article 117), which limits direct crypto losses but does not prevent scammers from targeting Algerians through foreign platforms or directing them to fake investment sites |
| Skills Available? | Partial — CERT-DZ and the national gendarmerie have cybercrime units, but blockchain forensic capabilities are limited; no Chainalysis or TRM Labs subscriptions are publicly known |
| Action Timeline | Immediate — Public awareness campaigns are needed now; blockchain forensic capacity building within 12 months |
| Key Stakeholders | CERT-DZ, Direction Generale de la Surete Nationale (DGSN), Bank of Algeria, Ministry of Post and Telecommunications, social media platform operators in Algeria |
| Decision Type | Tactical / Educational — Algeria needs public awareness campaigns about pig butchering scams and should develop law enforcement capabilities for blockchain tracing |
Quick Take: Even though Algeria bans cryptocurrency trading domestically, Algerian citizens remain vulnerable to pig butchering scams that operate through international platforms. The DOJ’s enforcement model — combining blockchain forensics with stablecoin issuer cooperation — offers a template that Algerian authorities should study. Immediate priorities are public awareness campaigns targeting young, digitally connected Algerians and capacity building for CERT-DZ in crypto transaction tracing.
Sources & Further Reading
- D.C. Scam Center Strike Force Seizures of Cryptocurrency Tops $580 Million — U.S. Department of Justice
- 2024 IC3 Annual Report — FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center
- UN Report Details Grave Abuses Against Those Trafficked Into Scam Centres — OHCHR
- Tether Acknowledged by DOJ for Support in $61 Million Seizure Linked to Pig Butchering Fraud — Tether
- The Scam Center Strike Force: A Whole-of-Government Response to Global Crypto Fraud — TRM Labs
- Billion-Dollar Cyberfraud Industry Expands in Southeast Asia — UNODC
- Operation Level Up — FBI
- China Executes 11 Linked to Myanmar Scam Operations — Al Jazeera





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