An e-commerce front for organized crime
Law enforcement agencies in Ghana and the United Kingdom have seized approximately $15.1 million cryptocurrency of a sophisticated transnational investment scam. According to a Chainalysis report, the multi-agency operation dismantled an e-commerce “investment platform” that defrauded thousands of victims in both countries.
The fraudulent scheme lured users into running online stores, earning points through trading and building apparently legitimate balances. However, authorities revealed that the interface was in fact a front for a Chinese-Malaysian organized crime syndicate that siphoned millions of dollars from victims and laundered the proceeds through digital currencies.
The investigation began when compliance teams at the cryptocurrency exchange OKX reported unusual activities and alerted Europol. The case was referred to the British National Crime Agency (NCA), which traced operational hubs and front offices back to Ghana.
Raymond Archer, executive director of Ghana’s Economic and Organized Crime Office (EOCO), used a fourteen-day administrative freeze to halt account activity before obtaining a formal court order to enforce the freeze.
“The evolving nature of new threats such as fraud requires a new kind of partnership, based on intelligence sharing and advanced tools,” Archer said.
Investigators from EOCO and the NCA used the Chainalysis Reactor to track the flow of stolen money. The software allowed teams in both countries to view the same on-chain data in real time, revealing that seemingly disparate digital wallets were part of a single, coordinated criminal network.
Authorities identified and consolidated illicit proceeds equivalent to 119.4 bitcoin, 93 ethereum and 2.85 million USDT, spread across nearly 20 different tokens. The fraudsters had initially converted a large portion of the cryptocurrency into dogecoin (DOGE) to fragment and obscure their holdings.
“In this case, EOCO analysts were able to see exactly what we saw in the blockchain data,” said Matthew Perfect, senior manager of fraud threat leadership at the UK National Economic Crime Centre. “That meant that we didn’t just send each other reports, but that we did research together.”
Following the seizure by law enforcement, the digital assets were liquidated through private sector partnerships with Complycrypto and custodian Zodia Custody. The resulting $15.1 million was transferred to a special exhibition account managed by Ghanaian authorities.
Authorities are screening the victims to complete restitution, with some of the money recovered to be repatriated to the United Kingdom to compensate the British victims.
