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Scam Syndicate Arrested Involving Luxury Bungalows, Fake Love and RM140,000 in Fines
Abstract:Twenty eight foreign nationals have been convicted and fined by a Malaysian court following their involvement in a sophisticated online fraud operation that combined romantic deception with fake investment schemes to prey on victims in South Korea.

Twenty eight foreign nationals have been convicted and fined by a Malaysian court following their involvement in a sophisticated online fraud operation that combined romantic deception with fake investment schemes to prey on victims in South Korea.
The Tawau Magistrate's Court in Sabah handed down fines of RM5,000 to each of the 28 accused after they entered guilty pleas to charges of criminal conspiracy in online fraud. The convictions brought the total financial penalties to RM140,000, with all fines reported to have been settled. Those unable or unwilling to pay faced a default sentence of up to four months imprisonment. Following the court proceedings, all 28 individuals were transferred to the Immigration Department and are pending deportation.
The group comprised 27 Chinese nationals, including one woman, and a Vietnamese woman. Their ages ranged from 21 to 59. The charges were read in Mandarin before two magistrates across separate proceedings, with the accused pleading guilty in both sessions.
The story of how they came to be standing in a Malaysian courtroom began weeks earlier, on the night of May 6, when officers from the Commercial Crime Investigation Division at the Tawau district police headquarters, working alongside the Strike Force and Task Force of the Internal Security and Public Order Department, descended on four luxury bungalows in Bandar Sri Indah, Batu 10, Jalan Apas.
What police found inside was not what the properties' upscale exteriors suggested. The bungalows had been converted into a fully operational scam centre, functioning simultaneously as a workplace, training facility and residential quarters for syndicate members. The suspects are believed to have entered Sabah specifically to carry out the fraud operation, having established the compound as a base from which to conduct coordinated attacks on foreign targets.
The syndicate's methods were layered and deliberate. Operatives used platforms including WhatsApp, Telegram and KakaoTalk (the latter being a messaging application with a dominant user base in South Korea) to approach victims and cultivate relationships. Some victims were drawn in through manufactured romantic interest, a tactic commonly referred to as love scamming, in which fraudsters build emotional bonds over time before steering conversations toward financial opportunity.
Others were approached with what appeared to be lucrative investment offers involving the purchase of everyday consumer products online. Once trust was established and funds transferred, the investments proved entirely fictitious. The victims had been engaging not with legitimate opportunities but with a scripted operation designed from the outset to extract money and disappear.
During the raid, police seized 33 mobile phones, three laptops and two WiFi modems, all believed to have been used directly in the scam activities. Authorities confirmed at the time of the arrests that investigations were ongoing to identify and locate additional syndicate members still believed to be at large, as well as to map the full extent of the network's reach.
The case drew particular attention because of the deliberate targeting of South Korean nationals. KakaoTalk's inclusion as one of the primary communication tools pointed to a syndicate that had specifically tailored its operations toward a Korean speaking audience, suggesting a level of planning and cultural targeting that went beyond opportunistic fraud.
Tawau police chief Assistant Commissioner Jasmin Hussin confirmed that the charges were filed under Section 120B(2) of the Penal Code, covering criminal conspiracy. The swift movement from arrest to guilty plea to sentencing in just over a week reflected the weight of evidence recovered from the premises.
The convictions add to a growing pattern of foreign operated scam syndicates using Malaysia as a base for cross border fraud. Authorities have signalled that enforcement operations in the region are continuing, with further arrests expected as investigations into the broader network proceed.

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