RM1.15 Million Lost: Two Women Fall to Fake Profits and Fake Police
Two women in Penang saw more than RM1.15 million vanish within weeks after being ensnared by sophisticated investment scams.
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Abstract:Thirteen Chinese fugitives linked to POGO scams arrested in Pasay, Philippines. PAOCC reveals their crimes, raising concerns over illegal entry despite the ban.

In the Philippine Offshore Gaming Operator (POGO) scam hub in Pasay City, Philippines, authorities arrested thirteen Chinese citizens who turned out to be fugitives from their home country. The raid has unveiled a troubling web of transnational crime, spotlighting the persistent challenge of illegal POGO operations in the Philippines.
Raffy Tima reported on GMA‘s “24 Oras” that the Chinese Embassy confirmed the identities and criminal records of these individuals after the Presidential Anti-Organized Crime Commission (PAOCC) provided their names. PAOCC executive director Gilbert Cruz explained, “Ganiyan ang ginawa ng Chinese Embassy, kinuhaan nila ng biometric and then naglabasan na yung mga totoong pangalan nitong mga ’to, and then yung criminal activities nila lumabas na rin doon.” Translated, he meant that biometric checks revealed their real identities and exposed their shady pasts.
These Chinese fugitives are wanted for orchestrating cryptocurrency and investment scams, using a banned messaging app to run their illicit schemes. Their presence in the Philippines, despite a nationwide POGO ban, has left authorities baffled and concerned. Cruz pointed out a glaring security gap: “Especially those with red notice or may blue notice or wanted ng Interpol, automatic pagpasok dito niyan nagre-red alert na agad eh. Since wala silang dokumento nung pumasok dito, malamang puwedeng nag-back door sila or they used other means to get in our country.” In simpler terms, these wanted individuals likely slipped through undetected, possibly via unofficial routes.
The PAOCC is now working closely with the Bureau of Immigration to trace how these fugitives bypassed border controls. The investigation aims to plug these loopholes and prevent further breaches. Adding to the complexity, some foreign workers who fled earlier POGO raids in Bamban, Tarlac, and Porac, Pampanga, have resurfaced in smaller scam hubs in Pasay. This migration of illegal operations underscores the difficulty of stamping out POGO-related crimes entirely.
For now, the PAOCC‘s top priority is deporting these Chinese fugitives back to face justice in their homeland. The arrests highlight a critical issue: despite the Philippines’ efforts to shut down POGOs, determined criminals continue to exploit weaknesses in the system. The Pasay raid serves as both a win for law enforcement and a wake-up call to tighten security measures. As the backtrack investigation unfolds, Filipinos await answers on how these fugitives managed to infiltrate the country—and what it will take to stop it from happening again.

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Two women in Penang saw more than RM1.15 million vanish within weeks after being ensnared by sophisticated investment scams.

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