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اردو
She Helped a RM12 Million Call Centre Scam Gang Hide Behind 50 Shell Companies
Abstract:Thai authorities have arrested a woman accused of serving as a key enabler in a large-scale investment fraud network that caused losses exceeding 100 million baht across multiple provinces. The suspect, a 46-year-old woman identified only as Thanyarat, was apprehended at an apartment in Saraphi district, Chiang Mai, by officers from the Crime Suppression Division.

Thai authorities have arrested a woman accused of serving as a key enabler in a large-scale investment fraud network that caused losses exceeding 100 million baht across multiple provinces. The suspect, a 46-year-old woman identified only as Thanyarat, was apprehended at an apartment in Saraphi district, Chiang Mai, by officers from the Crime Suppression Division.
An arrest warrant for Thanyarat had been issued by the Phra Khanong Criminal Court on June 9, 2026. The charges against her include colluding in public fraud, feeding false information into computer systems, conspiracy to commit money laundering, membership of a criminal association, and participation in a criminal gang. The breadth of those charges paints a picture of someone deeply embedded in the workings of an organised syndicate rather than a peripheral actor.
Investigators say the scam was carried out through online platforms. The perpetrators built a convincing front by impersonating what appeared to be legitimate businesses, using that credibility to gain the trust of victims before directing them toward fraudulent investments. The operation was not a small, opportunistic setup. According to the Crime Suppression Division, more than 50 companies were established solely to serve as front entities, receiving fund transfers from victims who had no idea they were sending money into a criminal network.
Complaints were received from victims across several provinces, which provided investigators with enough evidence to pursue arrest warrants for more than 50 individuals connected to the syndicate. Thanyarat allegedly played the role of director in one of those nominee companies. Funds transferred into the account under her directorship alone exceeded 3 million baht, according to investigators.
After the scheme drew police attention, Thanyarat went into hiding and eventually made her way to Chiang Mai. Officers tracked her movements and carried out the arrest. During questioning, she reportedly admitted that she had previously worked for both a call centre scam gang and an online gambling operation in a neighbouring country. That background appears to have been directly relevant to her recruitment into this scheme, as she had already learned how such criminal networks are structured and how they operate.
The case illustrates something that law enforcement agencies across Southeast Asia have been warning about with increasing urgency: the industrial scale at which investment fraud syndicates now function. Creating more than 50 shell companies to launder victim funds is not a spontaneous decision. It requires legal knowledge, administrative access, and individuals willing to sign on as nominative directors, often in exchange for payment and with the understanding that they are providing cover for criminal activity.
For ordinary investors, the mechanics of this case are worth understanding. The entry point for the scam was a platform that successfully posed as a legitimate business. Once trust was established, money flowed in. The layering of multiple nominee companies ensured that tracing funds became an extraordinarily complex task for authorities. By the time individual victims realised something was wrong, their money had already been shuffled through a web of accounts.
The lesson here is that the professional appearance of an investment platform, including a registered company name and what appears to be an organised operational structure, offers no reliable guarantee of legitimacy.
Verification through official channels, including checking company registration status, licence credentials, and any prior regulatory actions, remains essential before committing any funds.

Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
