
2 arrested in Hong Kong over laundering HK$1.15 billion in case involving stablecoins
A Customs and Excise Department spokesman said on Tuesday that an investigation into the pair found they had repeatedly smuggled cash out of the city. The suspects also made transactions using stablecoins and regular currency, with officers finding the source of funds to be questionable.
The activities of the pair, a 37-year-old local and a 50-year-old non-local, were inconsistent with their background and financial status, the spokesman added.
Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies that are pegged to a reference asset, typically a fiat currency such as the US dollar.
Customs officers raided four residential premises and two companies on Tuesday morning, seizing items believed to be linked to the case, including mobile phones, tablets, and bank cards.
The two suspects, who identified themselves as self-employed and unemployed, were arrested on suspicion of money laundering under the Organised and Serious Crimes Ordinance.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
26 minutes ago
- South China Morning Post
Sex, lies and video games: China's heated debate over sexism, misogyny
A young woman expelled from university for having sex with a foreigner. A man jailed for raping his fiancée after paying her the bride price. And a video game portraying women as gold diggers. Advertisement These are among the cases fuelling heated debate, and outrage, on Chinese social media in recent months over sexism, misogyny and gender stereotypes. The discussion started in April when a court in Datong, Shanxi province upheld the guilty verdict and three-year prison sentence of a man who had raped his fiancée the day after they got engaged. The case centred on whether the bride price he paid of 100,000 yuan (US$13,900) and a gold ring was considered marital consent and a tacit agreement for sex. In June, there was anger over stereotyping and sexism after a Chinese online game originally called Revenge on Gold Diggers shot to the top of gaming platforms on day one. Advertisement Players of the game are male characters being pursued by manipulative women who only want one thing: their money. The backlash prompted the game's creators to change the name to Emotional Anti-Fraud Simulator the day after its release.


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Lost China diver survives 5 days underwater, lives on cave fish until rescued
A Chinese diver miraculously survived five days and nights trapped in an underwater cave, leaving netizens in disbelief and shock. The incident unfolded on July 19, when Wang, a diving enthusiast in his 40s from Furong Town in Xiangxi, Hunan province, central China, went missing just five minutes into a river dive with a friend. The river runs several dozen metres deep, with the entrance to an intricate cave system located around nine metres below the surface. Emergency rescue teams prepare to make a deep dive in search of Wang. Photo: Handout Police immediately launched a search operation and sought help from the Xiangxi Shuguang Rescue Team and special police forces from the city of Baise in the Guangxi autonomous region of southern China. A cave diving team from Baise's special forces carried out two deep dives into the cave, but initial searches proved unsuccessful. During the second dive, rescuers heard what sounded like someone knocking on rocks. They immediately instructed the surface team to shut off the boat engines to improve listening conditions, but the sound did not return.


South China Morning Post
5 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Sex, lies and video games: the heated debate over sexism and misogyny in China
A young woman expelled from university for having sex with a foreigner. A man jailed for raping his fiancée after paying her the bride price. And a video game portraying women as gold diggers. Advertisement These are among the cases fuelling heated debate, and outrage, on Chinese social media in recent months over sexism, misogyny and gender stereotypes. The discussion started in April when a court in Datong, Shanxi province upheld the guilty verdict and three-year prison sentence of a man who had raped his fiancée the day after they got engaged. The case centred on whether the bride price he paid of 100,000 yuan (US$13,900) and a gold ring was considered marital consent and a tacit agreement for sex. In June, there was anger over stereotyping and sexism after a Chinese online game originally called Revenge on Gold Diggers shot to the top of gaming platforms on day one. Players of the game are male characters being pursued by manipulative women who only want one thing: their money. The backlash prompted the game's creators to change the name to Emotional Anti-Fraud Simulator the day after its release. It did not end there. The same month, media reported that a dowdy, 38-year-old cross-dresser had lured hundreds of young men into having sex, which he secretly filmed before selling the videos online. Days later, a 21-year-old Chinese student was expelled from a university in Dalian, Liaoning province for having a one-night stand with a Ukrainian gamer attending an event in Shanghai. The man had posted intimate photos and videos of the student, one of his fans, on social media, calling her 'easy'. Advertisement In the case of the cross-dresser the discussions initially focused on lurid details of the videos. But that shifted to a debate over why the men involved, including the cross-dresser, had their identities protected by the authorities yet the student, a woman, was publicly shamed by the university. According to experts, the intense discussions around sexism and misogyny prompted by these cases are part of a broader phenomenon of 'gender antagonism' that has emerged in China over the past few years. And the echo chamber effect on social media has only amplified these tensions.