So, the White House Just Released Numbers on Trump's Tax Cuts. What They...
Wait, Mamdani Got Cozy With Another Terrorist at a Public Event. The Gracie...
Did You See the Lead Reporter Behind That CNN Article on the NYC...
Fani Willis Wants to Fight Trump on Recouping Legal Fees. This Is What the...
New Poll Could Show Who's Leading In the Texas Republican Senate Primary
Tennessee Bill Would Place Foster Children In Detention Even If They Haven't Been...
Chicago Kids Can't Read, but Their Teachers Can Protest for Iran
Left-Wing Activists Are Training Juries to Sabotage Trump DOJ Cases
Deconstructing the Latest Epstein Mania
Senator Tom Cotton Draws a Line Between True Conservatives and Antisemitic Influencers
Steve Witkoff Reveals Just How Much Weapons-Grade Uranium Iran Had Before Operation Epic...
Parents of Fallen US Soldiers in the Middle East Had One Message for...
NYC ISIS Bombers Had Extra Explosives and Purchased Materials After Operation Epic Fury...
GOP Will Bring SAVE Act to the Floor to 'Put Democrats on the...
That Thing the Left Says Never Happens Just Happened Again
Tipsheet
Premium

Chinese National Pleads Guilty to $27 Million Scam Targeting 2,000 Elderly Victims Nationwide

Chinese National Pleads Guilty to $27 Million Scam Targeting 2,000 Elderly Victims Nationwide
AP Photo/Gillian Flaccus, File

Zhao Wang, aka “Oscar,” pleaded guilty in federal court today and admitted he participated in a $27 million fraud and money laundering scheme targeting about 2,000 elderly victims across the United States. 

Wang, a Chinese national, is the lead defendant charged in a five-defendant indictment unsealed in 2024.

According to public documents, members of the conspiracy operated a series of technical support, bank impersonation and government impersonation, and refund scams targeting elderly victims. 

Victims received unsolicited phone calls, emails, and pop-up ads directing them to call a phone number.  Unbeknownst to the victims, those phone numbers belonged to India-based scam call centers. Once a victim called the call center, members of the conspiracy used social engineering techniques to build trust with victims.  In many instances, the conspirators had victims download commercially available remote desktop software, which the conspirators used to access victims’ computers and to carry on the scams.

One of the most frequent scams was a refund scam.  In the refund scams, victims were told they were entitled to a small refund, for example, from a retailer for an alleged unauthorized charge. While pretending to process the refund, the victim would accidentally be “over-refunded” money.  The conspirators would then instruct the victim to send the alleged over-refunded money through wire transfers or in cash via express mail to members of the conspiracy.  In reality, the victims had been refunded any money and victims were scammed into sending their own money.

Victims were instructed to send the alleged over-refunded money via wire transfers and in bulk cash via express mail packages to members of the conspiracy, including defendant Zhao Wang, in the United States.  When a victim was duped into sending bulk cash in the mail, Wang would provide his India-based co-conspirators a fictitious name plus an address of a retail location that could accept express mail packages.  Those names and addresses would then be relayed to the victims, who were instructed to express mail the bulk cash.  Then, once a victim had sent the cash in the mail, Wang and his co-conspirators would use fake IDs to get the packages of cash sent by the elderly victims.

In his plea agreement, Wang admitted that he obtained the fake IDs personally and provided them to his co-conspirators.  Wang also admitted that he coordinated and oversaw the activities and recruited others, including his co-defendants, to work on his behalf in furtherance of the fraud scheme.

Investigators identified over 2,000 elderly victims from throughout the country, including victims in San Diego, who were defrauded and suffered over $27 million in losses over an approximately two-year period between 2021 and 2023.

In publicly filed documents, Wang also admitted that after receiving the fraud proceeds, he and his co-conspirators laundered the money using cryptocurrency back to their foreign-based counterparts.

Wang admitted that, typically each day after collecting victim packages, Wang’s co-conspirators would deliver the money from the packages to him.  Wang would then coordinate with his foreign-based co-conspirators, who would provide a cryptocurrency wallet that Wang would use to transfer cryptocurrency.  Wang took upwards of 18 percent of the fraud proceeds and transferred the rest via cryptocurrency to his co-conspirators.  Wang also admitted that he laundered the proceeds to promote the fraud scheme by using fraud proceeds to pay co-conspirators and to purchase the fake IDs used in the scheme.

Wang and his four co-defendants were charged by indictment in June 2024.  In August 2024, federal agents conducted a nationwide takedown of this investigation, which led to Wang’s arrest in Las Vegas, Nevada.

A sentencing hearing for Zhao Wang is scheduled for April 3, 2026, at 9:00 a.m., before U.S. District Judge Robert S. Huie.

This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Kevin Mokhtari.

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos