Inside Cambodia scam compound raid by Thailand army.

    by Lee_yw

    18 Comments

    1. The scam works like this. A victim receives a phone call or message claiming they are under investigation for a serious crime, often money laundering or drug trafficking.

      The scammer then transfers them to a video call with someone dressed in a police uniform, sitting in what appears to be an official government office. The scammer tells the victim they must stay on camera for hours, days, or even months while investigators “clear” their name.

      Eventually, the victim is pressured to transfer money to prove their innocence. In some extreme cases, the victims lose millions of dollars and suffer untold trauma.

    2. Staying on live camera for months? How is that even possible? It is not suspicious for the victim? For hours maybe thats okay but weeks or months nonsense.

    3. Relevant_Flatworm_13 on

      I mean you would have to be pretty thick to think that every office in a police building has a massive mural on the wall behind every desk.

    4. ShadowMancer_GoodSax on

      Thank you Thailand. Back in the 70s we rescued them from genocide, 2026 you are taking care of Cambodia for us.

    5. isnortmiloforsex on

      If you think Indian call center scams are bad, Cambodia is on a whole different level. Everyone from the government to large private entities are involved in running scam centers with extremely diverse scams. They even lure and kidnap Korean and Chinese people to run the scam for them.

    6. “Now folks, we know you’ve been money laundering, we need you to sit here on camera for several months, do not leave for more than a min away from the camera so we may watch you at all times.”

      What fucking moron falls for this?

    7. WorldofLovecraft on

      The passport pic is particularly haunting as it could indicate the scammers withheld the documents of those working there as a classic measure to keep foreign workers against their will.

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