- Interpol announces Operation HAECHI V, which lasted five months
- The operation resulted in the arrest of dozens of people, and seizure of millions of dollars
- 40 countries and regions around the world participated
Over the past five months, Interpol and its national partners have arrested more than 5,500 individuals and seized over $400 million stolen through various cybercrime campaigns and fraud schemes. The international law enforcement agency confirmed the news in a press release published late last week.
As per the announcement, the police have been engaged in Operation HAECHI V since July last year. This operation targeted seven types of cyber-fraud: voice phishing, romance scams, online sextortion, investment fraud, illegal online gambling, business email compromise, and e-commerce fraud.
Interpol did not list any names, but it did say that it helped Korean and Beijing authorities dismantle a voice phishing organization that cost more than 1,900 people around $1.1 billion. The operation resulted in the arrest of at least 27 group members, and the indictment of 19 of them.
Stopping payments
It also said it dismantled a crypto scam, in which victims were first coaxed into buying a “stablecoin” called Tether (USDT) from a legitimate service provider. A stablecoin’s value is tied to that of a fiat currency, such as the US dollar, and its value is always the same as its fiat counterpart. Then, the victims were enticed into “investing” that stablecoin, which is where the crooks would steal the funds.
Finally, it used its Global Rapid Intervention of Payments (I-GRIP) stop-payment mechanism to save a business from wiring $42.3 million to the fraudsters. The victim had already transferred the money, but Interpol managed to intercept the majority of the funds, and recover the rest later during investigation.
“The effects of cyber-enabled crime can be devastating – people losing their life savings, businesses crippled, and trust in digital and financial systems undermined,” commented Interpol Secretary General Valdecy Urquiza.
“The borderless nature of cybercrime means international police cooperation is essential, and the success of this operation supported by INTERPOL shows what results can be achieved when countries work together. It’s only through united efforts that we can make the real and digital worlds safer.”
Law enforcement firms in roughly 40 countries and regions participated in HAECHI V.