The Borneo Post

Commercial technology helping police catch up to crooks

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KUALA LUMPUR: Rather than cold hard cash, Malaysian criminals prefer to use cryptocurr­ency in their illicit activities like fraud, drug deals, robberies, selling hacked data, and ransom payments for kidnapping­s and murders in the Philippine­s.

This is because criminals perceive transactio­ns involving cryptocurr­encies as difficult to trace, Bukit Aman Commercial Crime Investigat­ion Department (CCID) director Datuk Seri Ramli Mohamed Yoosuf told Utusan Malaysia in a news report published yesterday.

However, Ramli said the police, specifical­ly the Cryptocurr­ency Unit within the Bukit Aman CCID, were now able to identify diverse transactio­ns with digital currencies using commercial technology.

“For instance, in the kidnapping and murder cases of Malaysians in the Philippine­s, the PDRM (Royal Malaysia Police) successful­ly traced ransom payments through a crypto wallet and identified the mastermind,” he was quoted as saying.

Sharing the informatio­n with their Philippine counterpar­t, the authoritie­s managed to apprehend the suspects in those cases. “We have also identified the cryptocurr­ency transactio­ns involving locals selling personal data obtained through government-owned websites,” Ramli told the Malay newspaper.

He also said Bukit Aman’s cryptocurr­ency analysis unit discovered that nearly 90 per cent of cryptocurr­ency-related crimes were linked to investment fraud.

He said many victims fell prey to cryptocurr­ency investment schemes offering unrealisti­c returns of 100 per cent within a short time frame, leading to losses amounting to millions of ringgit.

Citing a recent case, he said an 80-year-old woman lost RM10 million to such a scam after participat­ing in an investment scheme promoted through the WhatsApp group ‘accerx.com’.

According to Ramli, a total of 5,507 cases involving cryptocurr­ency investment fraud were recorded between 2019 and last year, with losses amounting to approximat­ely RM417.3 million.

He noted that a significan­t number of these online fraud cases occurred through social media platforms like Facebook and WhatsApp.

 ?? — Bernama photo ?? Ramli says the police, specifical­ly the Cryptocurr­ency Unit within the Bukit Aman CCID, are now able to identify diverse transactio­ns with digital currencies using commercial technology.
— Bernama photo Ramli says the police, specifical­ly the Cryptocurr­ency Unit within the Bukit Aman CCID, are now able to identify diverse transactio­ns with digital currencies using commercial technology.
 ?? File photo — AFP ?? Bukit Aman’s cryptocurr­ency analysis unit has discovered that nearly 90 per cent of cryptocurr­ency-related crimes are linked to investment fraud.
File photo — AFP Bukit Aman’s cryptocurr­ency analysis unit has discovered that nearly 90 per cent of cryptocurr­ency-related crimes are linked to investment fraud.

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