Taiwan indicts 62 over suspected scam centre operator Prince Group

The transnational scam industry has emerged in South-east Asia during the pandemic

Published Wed, Mar 4, 2026 · 12:35 PM
    • On Monday, Taiwan put 33 luxury cars, including Ferraris, up for auction after they were seized as part of the investigation.
    • On Monday, Taiwan put 33 luxury cars, including Ferraris, up for auction after they were seized as part of the investigation. PHOTO: REUTERS

    [TAIPEI] Taipei prosecutors on Wednesday (Mar 4) indicted 62 people linked to the Prince Group, a multinational network accused of running a vast network of scam centres, including the company’s chairman who was arrested and deported to China from Cambodia earlier this year.

    Chen Zhi, who founded the conglomerate the US alleges is a front for a multibillion-dollar online fraud and money laundering operation, was pictured by Chinese state media hooded and handcuffed as he was led off a plane at a Beijing airport in January.

    Taipei prosecutors said in a statement that Taiwan was one of the locations where Chen had funnelled illicit funds via shell companies, buying luxury goods, sports cars and real estate.

    “This was done to conceal and disguise the source and flow of the criminal proceeds,” it said.

    The funds remitted into Taiwan from overseas by members of the group for alleged money-laundering purposes totalled around NT$10.8 billion (S$435 million), where they bought 24 properties, 35 vehicles, and held NT$55.53 million in other assets such as cash, designer bags, and shoes, the statement said.

    More than NT$5.5 billion in assets have been seized in Taiwan, the prosecutors’ office added.

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    Chen’s whereabouts are currently unknown and it was not possible to contact him for comment.

    In November, the Prince Group denied any wrongdoing in a statement issued via a US law firm.

    On Monday, Taiwan put 33 luxury cars, including Ferraris, up for auction after they were seized as part of the investigation.

    “To conceal and disguise criminal proceeds, they exploited Taiwanese nationals to carry out money-laundering activities in Taiwan through online gambling and underground remittances,” the prosecutors’ office said. “This not only seriously disrupted Taiwan’s financial order and social stability, but also damaged Taiwan’s international image.”

    Authorities across Asia, including Singapore and Hong Kong, have also seized assets or detained individuals linked to the Prince Group.

    The transnational scam industry emerged in South-east Asia during the pandemic. It is believed to generate billions of US dollars a year for organised crime using trafficked workers to defraud victims from around the world. REUTERS

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