

John W.
5K posts

@johnwSEAP
Senior Threat Researcher @Infoblox // fmr. nerd @UNODC // Interests in all things #security, #threatintel, #DNS & the @Arsenal // @UCDCCI










Casual Bugatti Chiron sighting on Cambodian TikTok. Starting price around $3 million. Cambodia’s GDP per capita is about $2,800. Via @monyy88887 on TikTok






A Taiwanese man was reportedly shot dead last night in Sihanoukville.













Australian authorities have dismantled a massive money-laundering syndicate linked to Chinese nationals that moved nearly $97 million in illicit funds through the bank accounts of international students. Detailed recently in a Victoria Police podcast, Operation Taipan successfully led to the 2024 convictions of three Chinese men—Tao Zhou, Wei Wang, and Boliang Liu—who are all expected to face deportation after serving their respective prison sentences. The sophisticated operation relied heavily on a "Chinese diaspora app" to contact departing international students, purchasing their bank accounts and ID details for $5,000 under the guise of a legitimate enterprise. This method gave the criminal syndicate access to nearly 220 different accounts, allowing them to quietly funnel illicit cash and cryptocurrency across Melbourne while attempting to evade detection. Detectives eventually cracked the case by monitoring ATM surveillance, tracking the syndicate's "money runners" who would sometimes spend up to an hour aggressively pumping phenomenal amounts of cash into suburban machines. At the operation's peak in April 2021, this single criminal syndicate was responsible for nearly 16 percent of all cash deposits in Victoria, forcing some bank branches to schedule extra cash collections just to manage the sheer volume of notes. The syndicate’s downfall was aided by its own hubris; investigators noted that ringleader Boliang Liu lived a lavish lifestyle, openly boasting on intercepted phone calls about needing $30,000 a week to maintain appearances while purchasing high-end cars and Melbourne real estate in cash. In response to this growing trend, the Australian Federal Police has issued severe warnings to international students being offered money for their financial credentials. The agency emphasized that selling personal data and bank accounts to strangers is not a harmless favor, and can result in direct criminal money laundering charges, immediate visa cancellations, and permanent bans from returning to Australia. theepochtimes.com/world/chinese-…




BREAKING: Singapore dismantles the financial empire of Benjamin Mauerberger, arresting two Singaporeans and seizing $124 million in assets. Mauerberger is a South African who used billions in scam proceeds to take over Thailand's government and is now on the run🧵