Interpol has recovered $439M of stolen funds, including $97M in cryptocurrencies and physical 0 recovered funds came from global operations to crack down on cybercrime, which claimed $40.9B in illegal crypto funds last 1 operation, codenamed HAECHI VI, involved law enforcement agencies from 40 countries across multiple continents between April and August 2025, targeting seven major categories of financial cybercrime: investment fraud, romance scams, phishing , money laundering linked to online gambling, sextortion, e-commerce fraud, and business email compromise 2 has recovered $97M in crypto Interpol has announced the recovery of $439M in criminal proceeds following a multinational operation targeting cyber financial 3 the seized assets were $97M in cryptocurrencies and physical 4 blocked more than 68,000 bank accounts and froze nearly 400 cryptocurrency wallets as part of the 5 the seized wallets alone, investigators recovered around $16M in illegal digital 6 Portugal, the police dismantled a syndicate accused of siphoning funds from social security accounts intended for vulnerable families.
Forty-five suspects were arrested, and losses amounting to $270,000 were traced back to 531 7 Thailand , the Royal Thai Police officers seized $6.6M in stolen assets linked to a transnational business email compromise scheme that tricked a Japanese corporation into transferring funds to a fraudulent Bangkok-based 8 network was allegedly run by Thai and West African 9 notable successes involved the recovery of $3.91M in the United Arab 10 retrieved the funds after a Korean steel company identified forged shipping documents and flagged the fraudulent 11 stop was made possible through Interpol’s Global Rapid Intervention of Payments (I-GRIP) 12 mechanism enables law enforcement agencies to freeze criminal proceeds in real 13 efforts against cybercrime Aside from Europe and Asia, African nations have also intensified cybercrime 14 in 2025, authorities across 18 African countries and the United Kingdom conducted Operation Serengeti 2.0, which led to 1,209 arrests and the recovery of $97.4M.
Criminal infrastructures, such as 25 illegal crypto mining centers in Angola and a $300M online investment scam in Zambia, were also dismantled. A separate operation, Operation Red Card, conducted between November 2024 and February 2025, resulted in 306 arrests across seven African 15 authorities arrested 130 suspects, including foreign nationals, who were allegedly involved in cyber-enabled investment and casino 16 Africa and Zambia also reported large-scale arrests connected to SIM box fraud and malware-driven scams, respectively. “While many people believe that funds lost to fraud and scams are often irretrievable, the outcomes of HAECHI operations demonstrate that recovery is indeed possible,” Theos Badege, the Director pro tempore of Interpol’s Financial Crime and Anti-Corruption Centre, 17 Jun Hyeong, the head of South Korea’s Interpol National Central Bureau, also noted that the country has played a leading role in international cooperation.
“Operation HAECHI has time and again demonstrated the power of unified global action in eradicating cyber-enabled financial crime,” he 18 have also pointed out that cryptocurrencies have accelerated the globalization of financial 19 Larratt, the Director of Investigations at Chainalysis, stressed the effectiveness of cross-border 20 cited Operation Destabilise, which is a joint effort by the UK, France, and the 21 dismantled a Russian money laundering network and resulted in $25.5M in cryptocurrency getting recovered. “These outcomes are only possible when governments, regulators and private companies share intelligence and act together,” he added.
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