The Jordan Harbinger Show - 833: Nathan Paul Southern and Lindsey Kennedy | Sourcing Cyber-Slavery
Episode Date: May 9, 2023Nathan Paul Southern (@NathanPSouthern) and Lindsey Kennedy (@LindsAKennedy) are investigative journalists working to bring awareness to the growing issue of cyber-slavery in Southeast Asia f...acilitated by Chinese triads with links to local government and law enforcement agencies. What We Discuss with Nathan Paul Southern and Lindsey Kennedy: Aided by corrupt government and law enforcement agencies, organized criminals hold thousands of people in modern-day slavery in Southeast Asia, forcing them to run cyber-scams worldwide. Victims are lured by promises of lucrative online trading jobs, and abducted against their will when they arrive — for a minimum of six months — to work as cyber-slaves. These captives are beaten, electrocuted, and tortured if they try to escape or don't make enough money. Suicides, with victims jumping from balconies to their death, have become commonplace. The Cambodian Prime Minister's nephew has been implicated in the human trafficking trade, which is why embassies have been ignored when they plead for intervention. What those of us in the Western world can do to fight back against these organized crime groups and ensure their dirty deeds can no longer be done dirt cheap enough to turn a profit. And much more... Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/833 This Episode Is Brought To You By Our Fine Sponsors: jordanharbinger.com/deals Sign up for Six-Minute Networking — our free networking and relationship development mini course — at jordanharbinger.com/course! Like this show? Please leave us a review here — even one sentence helps! Consider including your Twitter handle so we can thank you personally!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Coming up next on the Jordan Harbinger Show.
You cannot have tens and tens of thousands of slaves
in enormous slavery scam compounds
just on the countries bordering China right next door.
You cannot have that without some form of permission from the Chinese state.
There is a strong relationship there,
but it does change and it's complicated and understand.
And there are Chinese police trying to stop the Chinese government,
but there are ties with the government to these organized crime groups are incredibly strong.
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Today on the show, no kids in the car for this one.
Got some very graphic and disturbing stories of human trafficking, suicide, violence.
This is a heavy-duty one.
I'm not going to lie, guys.
The growing issue here is of essentially cyber slavery in Southeast Asia being run by
Chinese triads with links to government and police in the region.
Wait, what?
Yes.
So this is about the pig-butchering scam.
If you remember, we did a show about that a while ago, those texts you get,
where people are talking to you, they try to be your friend, and then they dot, dot, dot,
cryptocurrency scam.
Well, turns out that the people running the scam are actually victims many times themselves.
Thousands of people, possibly hundreds of thousands of people are currently being held across
Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, and in other countries in a modern-day slavery situation.
They're being forced to operate sophisticated cyber scams throughout the world.
And these scams take place essentially in closed casinos, casinos that closed due to the
pandemic. Gambling operators quickly repurpose these for online criminal activities. So these folks,
throughout Asia and beyond, they're offered lucrative online trading jobs or service jobs.
And then when they arrive, they're held against their will for upwards of six months,
sometimes years at a time. Captives are beaten, electrically shocked, tortured if they try to
escape where they don't make enough money. People have killed themselves in these situations.
Victims have jumped from balconies or out of windows to their own death. It's not that
uncommon. These operations are run by Chinese organized crime groups known as triads many times.
Local police and governments, they turn a blind eye. There's essentially a high-rise building
that looks like an apartment block, but it's got a fence around it. You can't get out.
It's really, really insane. Sometimes they arrest people who try to speak out, who escape.
They treat them as people who overstayed their visa. The scams initially targeted Chinese
speakers, both in mainland China and elsewhere. Now they increasingly recruit English speakers
to target higher value marks in the United States, India, Europe, Australia, the UK.
My guest today, Nathan and Lindsay, good friends of mine, actually,
they've been to the centers, they've spoken to the victims,
they've been threatened by the guards and the security.
This isn't just an organized crime trend,
but it's an enormous humanitarian disaster
that pretty much nobody outside the Southeast Asia region
really seems interested in.
They've been writing investigative journalism all over,
but I wanted to help them spread this message to as many people as possible,
and that's what we're going to chat about today.
really, really a wild tale. Come and get a load of what the scam textures are really living like
behind barbed wire walls, and you'll look at these scams in a completely different way.
Here we go with Nathan Paul Southern and Lindsay Kennedy.
When I first heard of the pig butchering scam, which was essentially, it's like a scam call,
somebody bilks you out of money. I mean, I really thought scam calls and fraud that
bilk people out of their life savings were bad. But I had no idea that it's,
just gets so much worse. And I did an episode on the pig butchering scam. It's episode 737.
To refresh people's memory, that was, it's like these, you'll get a text from somebody and they're
like, oh, hi, Tom, can I come get my dog? And you're like, oh, wrong number. Then they try to make
friends with you a dot, dot, dot, cryptocurrency investment scam or romance scam. And I wanted to
teach my audience how to fight back against this. And the more I researched this after the show,
the more I found that actually all parties on both sides, essentially, are victims.
So can you speak to this a little bit?
Because I didn't realize it just got so much worse than stealing someone's life savings.
Like, that's just, you're just scratching the surface there.
Yeah, so pig butchering in itself has been gone on for a long time, right?
It's just a really, really horrible type of scam where you just like build up that relationship,
usually through that romance angle, like you said, get really, really close.
And then you start bringing in something like crypto,
Or it could be something like investing in gold.
But you know, you've built up this close relationship.
People get close and then all the life savings go in and you never get that cash back again.
That's nothing new.
That's just a development of scams you would expect to see, right?
Especially with like growth of the internet and how easy it is to contact people on social media.
But what changed around about the time of COVID was the forced aspect of it.
The people who were forced to do the scams themselves.
So you had, in Cambodia, for instance, you had an enormous amount of,
news real estate used by Chinese gangsters normally for casinos or online betting venues, which
were just sitting there empty. So that kind of led to this natural progression of, oh, wait a minute,
we could really maximize our profits if we just force people into this work, force them to get in
touch of people all around the world and do this pig-butchering, but they're also not getting paid.
So then you have this massive modern slavery aspect of it, but you can just keep churning out
a bigger and bigger workforce and not worry about having to get a decent pay.
or conditions for these people as well.
I think a lot of people that have been scammed quite rightly think,
what kind of person could have done this to me?
Like, how could someone do that when I've poured my heart to them,
where I've told them I've got like a, you know, a terminal illness
or all these awful stories that you hear, that that's the thing.
It is very hard to find people who will do that willingly.
So increasingly people are forced into it under threat of beatings or torture
or being sold to one of the companies that might be even worse.
And that's kind of something to bear in mind is that someone doing that to you won't let go
of that attempt to get money out of you
because their life is also on the line at the other end.
Initially, I was so surprised
that there were enough sociopaths
that you could recruit that would do this.
Like, that was one of the questions I had
is I just thought, gosh, there's so many more evil people out there
than I thought, because I get these by the dozen,
and so does everybody that you know
all over essentially the whole world.
There must be tens of millions of psychopathic people
doing this as a job.
And that was disturbing.
But now with what you're telling me, and we're going to unpack all this. So for people who are
confused, we're going to get, we're going to just sort of start from square one on each one of these
categories because we heard Chinese gangsters, casinos, special economics. I mean, it's just,
there's a whole lot going on. These people, the, one of the reasons they get good at it and they're so
aggressive and they pursue it and they have so much time is because they are literally going to die
in captivity or at least be beaten and tortured if they don't do this to somebody that they don't
know. So it's like being in, I have a.
hate using this analogy because it's really horrible, but it's almost like when you hear about
concentration camps and you think, how could people do this to each other? They were prisoners too.
Well, exactly. They were prisoners too. And it's like, are you going to steal food from somebody else
who's starving to death? Yeah, because you're starving to death. You are too. And your choice is to
either get shot in the next morning's roundup or collaborate. I mean, that's really, those are
your choices. And these people are in a very similar kind of situation, even if it's not
wartime here. So this is the other side of the scam. It's even more horrifying than the scam itself,
but by a wide margin. So first of all, how are these people lured into, where is it, Cambodia and
Lao and Vietnam in the first place? I mean, how do you find yourself in a place where you can't get
away? There's a few different ways this can happen, right? But there are some people that do
kind of broadly know what kind of work they're getting themselves into. They might not quite realize
quite how bad it is, but they have an inkling. But a lot of people, they see a job for,
It might be a job in sort of admin or in customer services or basically anything that's computer-based.
They're basically told, as long as you can use a computer and you can talk to people,
you know how to use a bit of social media, you've got a job basically with us.
And then when they say, well, why is the money so high?
It seems like it's so much higher than it would normally be in Cambodia or Laos or Myanmar.
They're told, oh, well, it's in a casino complex or it's in a special economic zone.
And these places have their own kinds of rules.
So don't worry about that.
There's lots of really well-paid people.
Current victims are encouraged to recruit from their own network of friends.
under duress and tell them they've got this great job and, you know, don't worry about all these
reports you hear about scams and things. This isn't one of them. So there are lots of different
ways people are tricked. We actually spoke to really recently. We were coming back from the Golden
Triangle Special Economic Zone in Laos, which is also called Kings Romans, which is basically this
bizarre place that's a kind of lawless zone of its own that's built around a casino, a couple
of casinos owned by this Chinese gangster called Jaue. As we were leaving, we went in, because you can
go in kind of as a tourist and leave back into Thailand, which is across the border. As we were leaving,
we met a couple of people who'd just been released for various reasons. It'd finally been released
after three or four months of being told they couldn't leave. And they were just so desperate to get
out of there. And we kind of helped and get across the river and get to safety in the next town over.
Well, one of the women told us that she had been told that she had a job in Thailand. There's
very little evidence that there's any scam compounds in Thailand. And Thailand was generally seen
as a safe place to go for work. So she was like, okay, that's great. She was told me if she'd been
told it was in Cambodia or Laos, no way would she have gone. But when she lands it in Bangkok,
she was immediately taken to the north of the country to Chiang Mai and then to Changrai, which is
right on the border across the river from Laos. And then they were told, oh, your job is actually
just in that building over there, like across the river. And then they're taken into Laos that way.
So by the time all this is happening, you're so confused about where you're going or what country
you're in and why you're crossing the border into another country and you've already spent,
you know, all your money getting there or taking out loans or allowed them to pay for your
flight, so you already in debt to these people, that it's very frightening. So all of this
can just happen and get out of hand very, very quickly, I think.
I took from one of your articles, I'm just going to quote it verbatim here.
It's a trafficking account, and one of you wrote, one of you wrote,
it quickly became clear that this was not a normal employer.
The agency are gangsters and have people working every step of the way,
every checkpoint they pay a bribe, she explained via an interpreter.
They gave me a fake Burmese identity card, and I had to pretend I couldn't speak.
Once in Mongla, which is another sort of casino area, I guess.
mafia enclave and me and my yeah a mafia enclave wow that's a okay we're going to unpack that in a second
her excitement at the big city lights evaporated when she discovered the agent had fled with her first month's
paycheck and she was not allowed to leave the club which doubled as her accommodation unless
accompanied by an armed guard they were afraid we would run away she says the PR girls because i guess
they said you're going to be working in PR like social media marketing or something the PR girls
were mostly Thai, says Apple, which is a very sort of on-the-nose nickname, but almost all the sex
workers were local girls from the Thai-Yai ethnic minority, most of them children as young as
13 who had been sold by their parents and were forced to sleep with Chinese, Burmese, and
ethnic Wa men who visited the club looking specifically for little girls, some of whom were so
mentally damaged by the ordeal that they would cut themselves. To keep them skinny for the
weekly bikini show, the women and girls were only allowed to eat twice.
a day, but a cabinet of methamphetamine, cocaine, and ketamine were provided free of charge.
The drugs stopped us getting hungry, she says. I mean, barf is the only reaction any reasonable
person can have to this kind of thing. And I know people were like, wait a minute, I thought we were
talking about scams. What is going on? Sex trafficking. That escalated way too quickly for me.
This is kind of where there's a smoke, there's fire kind of thing, right? Where you have
scam call centers that are already breaking a law and you have illegal gambling or legal
in these zones gambling, it's kind of like, why not have wildlife trafficking, illegal
locking, sex trafficking of minors? These places where this is going on are seemingly
totally lawless. Can we talk about why these places aren't having the fear of God put into
them by the governments in the area? So a few things. So first of all, you know, sex trafficking,
I think that's something that more people have heard of, right? The idea that you get lured into a job
and you think you're going to be a waitress and it could, you know, whether you're from Eastern Europe or
you're from Thailand and you end up as a forced sex worker, right?
That is something that's quite known now.
Basically, that lead the foundation for what we're looking at now,
where they use the same tactics to recruit people,
but in so many of these villages and, say, Vietnam,
where they've historically got these sex workers from,
people are starting to get wise to that after decades of education saying,
hey, listen, these jobs as waitresses,
you're probably going to end up in forced sex work, right?
So they're like, oh, no, no, I know what to look out for with that.
And now it's changed.
And now it was changing it's grown to this just terrifying scale where these organized crime groups dotted mostly around Southeast Asia but other places that me and Lindsay have documented as well, which we can go into, have found ways that you can just be completely above the law.
So this all really, really kicked off in Cambodia.
And Cambodia is in a way as safe and stable country for a lot of people.
or people go backpacking and have nice holidays there
and the worst thing that probably happens to you
is having your phone stolen out of your hand in a tic-tick, right?
And it's safe.
So people don't expect it to be a, you know,
like organised crime run hellhole,
but at the same time, it really, really is.
And there's so much to that.
And a lot of it is basically from this kind of post-war country
that fought the Cameroos and then the Vietnamese for it for decades.
And one of the ways that they tried to maintain stability,
when Hun Sen, his longest running prime minister in the world, took over in the 1990s,
was he created something called the patronage system in the country,
which essentially means that any government worker at all has to pay a certain percentage of their income
to the next in the chain of command.
So that goes from teachers to soldiers to police officers.
So the police officers will be speak to, say they get paid $116 a month.
They will be expected to pay half of that to their sergeant.
And their sergeant needs to pay half of their salary to the next person up.
So, yeah, you can try to take on a few extra shifts.
And if you work in the traffic department, then obviously you'll pull a few more motorbikes or cars over for some bribes.
But if you're really, if you're really, really struggling to make rent and pay your boss, then what you're going to do is you're going to let the trucks full of luxury timber go through.
You're going to let the trucks full of meth and heroin go through.
Or you're going to start getting involved more directly in things.
and that's why we know police and military that are directly involved in selling weapons and so on.
This is a natural progression of that, where you're able to have huge compounds where the landlords are paid off and that money trickles down.
Rather than it being an act of corruption from some bad apples, as they say, it's an inherently corrupted criminal system.
And at the same time as that, it's similar kind of networks operating different places.
Me and Marr's different because it's in a full-scale conflict.
so you can get away with even more there.
But one thing that we've looked a lot at
is how the Chinese have their
building road initiative, right?
It's a massive infrastructure project
where they're spending billions and billions of dollars
around the world to build railways, bridges, roads,
and huge, huge development.
I mean, a lot of that means that minerals
in Africa, Latin American Asia,
are just put on a train and sent straight to Beijing,
but there's a lot of money coming into these different countries.
But at the same time, a lot of organized crime groups
have piggybacked off that,
especially in Southeast Asia, and have made themselves sound like a legitimate organization that you can trust.
And they get in there through places like special economic zones where the Chinese government organizes a unique deal with the host government where you don't pay tax,
you don't have too much oversight.
So these criminal groups can come in and just set up enormous compounds where thousands and thousands of people can be held against our will and barbed wire.
And you can see it from the road and no one stops it because the entire state.
system has been criminalized is in essence what a true mafia state is. Okay, so the special economic
zones, I want to sort of highlight this because I think people are still like, but wait, why doesn't
the government of Thailand go in and get their people or Vietnam or is it just because of
corruption? The special economic zones, they're kind of like these self-governing statelets.
They're conduits for human trafficking and all this other illegal activity for the reasons that you
mentioned, but they're deliberately in many times between the border. So like you leave, let's say,
Lao to go to Thailand and there's, I don't know, 400 yards or meters or whatever. And in that,
or 1,400, what do I know? And in that little space, there's a couple of buildings and they just happen
to be casinos and they're not governed by the law of those countries because they're not actually
in those countries. Am I close? Yeah, it varies from country to country. And yeah, how
corrupt the government of that country is, right? The worst one is the one we were talking about
that's in Laos that is run by a Chinese gangster and he has leased that land for 99 years. Now, in most
places, or most places in Southeast Asia, there's a little bit of uncertainty about how much
oversight the local authorities or police have, whether they can go in, whether they can
exercise any kind of authority and power there. But this one in Laos, this is complete
Wild West territory. The guy runs it like his personal playground. We saw what we're pretty sure
were Laos soldiers that he had hired as his personal bodyguards guarding the place,
like guarding the outskirts, but also him.
Salwa walked past us up in front of one of his casinos when we were there last time,
which was, gave us a bit of a fright because we were writing about him.
They kind of just don't do what they want.
And when you speak to people in Laos or police officers, authorities,
they all say, oh, we're not allowed to go in there because that's China.
And it's like, it's on your territory.
It's in your country.
There's absolutely no international legal precedent for you not being able to go in there.
That's insane.
enough people believe it and there's enough uncertainty that he gets away with it. So in Thailand,
again, in this particular SEC, a bunch of Thai people, some of them children, were tricked
into going to work in this SEC. And they were kept against their will. They were tortured.
Some of the girls were basically threatened that if they didn't make enough money, they'd be
solved into sex work. And the authorities in Thailand weren't influential enough to talk directly
to Zawai and his people. They had to go and find someone on the Laos side who had enough
connections with the business people who run this place, well, the gangster really who runs this
place, that they could go and ask as a personal favour, can we possibly just retrieve this one girl
because it's making such a massive scene back in Thailand over the border? That is the kind of power
these individual gangsters have. Well, technically the Lao government and police have complete
authority over this place. But it doesn't matter if that's technically the rule under international law.
If you are scared of these gangers because you know they're a lot more powerful than you,
and you know that the government has such strong links with them,
that they have given the land of the country to them for 99 years.
It doesn't matter what is technically, correct?
It matters what you feel.
And when you're a lal cop on $190 a month,
are you really going to risk walking up to these armed guards
to try to make an arrest?
And you wouldn't get the warrant from the higher-ups in your district anyway.
So it's really not in anyone's interest that push this.
They're too scared.
They're not powerful enough.
and they know that these guys have considerably more sway than the local government or even the
centralized government.
You wrote that Laos can't do anything here.
If Lao police go inside, they need to leave their guns.
This is a quote from somebody who I think worked nearby.
Even if they kill someone, the Lao government has to ask permission to come into Kings Romans.
They have their own law.
And again, Kings Romans is a casino complex inside one of these special economic zones, SEZ.
But they're casinos, right?
So people are going, wait, wait, wait, I thought you said scams.
This is a casino.
were these casinos and why why is it now a scam center?
That's a little confusing.
A lot of these places followed the same process, especially in Cambodia.
Cambodians aren't actually legally allowed to gamble.
So most casinos get set up along border areas or in areas designed primarily for Chinese tourism, right?
So you have these places that either serve Chinese tourists or along the Thai border to serve Thai tourists
or the Vietnamese border to serve Vietnamese tourists, especially Senecaville, which is the really, really famous,
famous and about infamous I guess.
Infamous, yeah.
On the coast in Cambodia,
which serves mostly Chinese tourists.
There was a huge amount of investment in that place.
So it went from being a quite a sleepy little town
to suddenly being completely overrun with like something,
I think it was like 200 casinos or something completely crazy.
And these are mega casinos as well, a lot of them.
So you suddenly had all this investment
and that was meant to attract all of this tourism.
A lot of it just became sort of like a way of laundering money
and then attracted all those other kind of vice as well.
So, you know, all this kind of a new,
prostitution industry and then inevitably like drugs and wildlife trafficking and everything else
that springs up around these places. But then very quickly during COVID, there wasn't any tourism
coming in. Cambodia closed its borders really quickly. I mean, China has only just opened its borders
at all to incoming or outgoing tourism. So there weren't really any Chinese tourists coming in.
There weren't even any Thai or Vietnamese tourists really coming across the border. So you suddenly
had all these enormous casino complexes that didn't have any way of making money. So they
tabbled with different things. They tried sort of illegal online gambling.
they tried video link gambling
and then they basically realised that
the best way of making a ton of money
would be to repurpose these huge buildings
that have enormous dormitories for all the staff
into scam centres that are very
and casino have incredible security right as well
so it's very easy to lock people inside
and have people outside not noticed
for a long period of time
especially if they're not any visitors
to some places that are relatively remote
so that's how it began really
but now it's got to the point where scam centres
make so much more money than anything else
You know, we've heard about construction companies that have pre-designed, replicable designs for scam centres.
They roll it all over the country where you have things like the base level of the compound is a kind of small casino for appearances sake.
And then you have eight floors of dorms for dorms in scam center rooms for people to work and sleep in.
The second to top floor is a complete black art room with no windows because that's your torture room where you take people when they're failing at their jobs.
And then the very top floor is like a luxury apartment for the scam boss owner, basically.
And you make a lot more money designing these places than designing any other kind of building in Cambodia, which is just insane.
That is crazy.
And you see this. It's not like it's hidden away.
I mean, some of them are a little bit more difficult to find.
And so some of these scam compounds are enormous skyscrapers that look like huge apartment blocks.
And there's maybe 13 or 14 of them.
And you can have several thousand people in there.
And we can kind of spot them because the barbed wire, the clothes hanging on the balconies.
And we can know, oh, that's a huge, huge scam compound, right?
And we'll go in, we'll try and get as close we can, try and talk to people and see what's going on.
But then the ones that Lindsay are talking about, these new purpose-built ones are a lot smaller that are just popping up everywhere.
Not just in Cambodia.
The same model has been replicated in the Philippines, in Myanmar, and in Laos as well.
And you go to, there's one city on the Thai border in Cambodia called Poipec, where we see no police last time we were there.
at all. Absolutely no police. And we were up all night going around the different streets that we thought
might have scam centres and you just see them. And it's the entire city is just run by these places.
And you look up and the blacked windows just signify every single one that's a scam center.
And some are full streets of just that. And you see the barbed wire. You see the blacked out windows and you know it's exactly that.
There's no police around. The only police are Thai and Chinese gangsters. They're the only people that are running
the entire city. And it's calm, right? It's not like there's shootouts every day. Like, sometimes
that stuff happens, but it's usually actually quite calm. And you talk to the local people
and they know exactly what's happening. They're scared, but there's nowhere that you can turn to.
There's nothing you can do because the amount of money at these places, mate, it's just absolutely
insane. It's like a narco state, but it's a scam state. Yeah.
You're listening to The Jordan Harbinger Show with our guests, Nathan Paul Southern,
and Lindsay Kennedy. We'll be right back. If you're wondering how I managed to book all these
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Instead of producing drugs and them owning the whole local government and all the authorities,
it's just a scam state where it's like, yeah, we know your daughter got kidnapped or killed or
somebody got shot here, but we're not going to send cops because those are the gangsters
territory. We're not going to rock that boat because they kick up a million dollars a week to
whatever governor is in the area who kicks that up to the president's kid. And nobody's interested
in your kid's death or the insecurity that you find yourself with the forced labor jobs or the
human trafficking. It's just wildly insane. That's the benefit of trafficking people in from other
countries as well. Like, no, I was going to kick that much of a fuss up for like a foreign
nationals that I don't know in that centre. There was more of a fuss when briefly some of these
places tried to use local people. And then obviously, then it was like, well, no, there's
way too much attention. There's going to be people protesting outside. But when you start just bringing
people in from abroad, no one's fighting their corner in the country and they don't have any power
in that country. The same kind of thing happened of sex work trafficking, like in the early days as well,
and it still does in certain countries where they tell you, you can try and leave this brothel if you
want, but bear in mind, you don't have a passport, you're not legally in this country,
you will be arrested for illegally being here. And that is what happens, especially in Cambodia.
I mean, we were trying to help one girl that was taken into one of the compounds a little while
back. And a few weeks ago, she got in touch with me to see if there was anything that I could do.
And I was asking around different kind of NGOs, different international police organizations
that are involved in the country, like there's anything we can do here, asking some police contacts,
No, no, we know that compound.
There's no getting anyone out of that.
And then she messages me saying,
they're going to traffic me to Myanmar at 10 o'clock tomorrow night.
And once you go to Myanmar, the chances of getting you out are just so,
so much smaller because you're in a full, you know, conflict zone at that point.
And I phoned up every possible contact we had.
So I just thought, like, lost a few people who had been in contact, you know,
and just trying to do what you could to get her out.
And everyone, like, loads of people pulled together.
I put it on Twitter like, look, she's going to get sent out tomorrow.
Can people please just rally?
Can we just get us one gyrill out of this compound?
So, like, drove out to the compounds, middle of nowhere,
like terrifying little border town of just one casino right on the Thai border
where it's just a dirt track that leads over into Thailand
with absolutely, like, you know, no border patrol whatsoever other than in one certain point.
And when I was phoned up trying to help,
she messaged me saying cancel whatever rescue you have going on.
I said, what do you mean? I even say I was going to do it.
They know a journalist who's been speaking to the police and the authorities.
They know that you've been trying to push from my release.
And they said they'll beat me again.
They'll torture me again.
If you come tonight.
And she explained that it's just a few weeks back.
One person escaped from the compound.
And when they did, the police dragged the person back into the compound.
And they then tortured that person in front.
of everyone else who's been trapped inside this scam center.
But we got really, really lucky, and I think it's just because it went quite up the chain,
and we had the Thai authorities, and we had, like, Thai police,
and we had, like, a local militia who, in a weird sense, kind of befriended near the Myanmar border,
and they were waiting with guns, and there's a Thai police officer called.
Literally, his name is Big Joke, and he was waiting because he's looking to raise his profile,
and he wanted to arrest these guys when we crossed in Thailand,
and something happened where it went senior enough up,
and the Cambodian police where someone made a decision she leads.
So they came in and they got her just a few hours before I got there.
And then when she gets sent back to the safe house, I'm thinking,
okay, she's finally safe.
But no, then the police invite in the people who had been holding her captive to the police station
to continue to threaten her, say that you owe us money.
And then the police would say, well, it sounds like you owe them money.
It sounds like we've got a situation here.
You're going to have to pay them back the money.
And they were denying her the right to speak to,
her embassy, then they started saying they were going to charge her for illegally working in the
country and then they weren't a drug tester and all of these different threats. Eventually enough
pressure again from international agencies, some are really helpful, others less so, and then
got her to Prom Penh. Now she's stuck in a different police station and we don't know how long
she'll be there, but at least she's kind of safe right now. But it goes through each stage of like
government bureaucracy and police where either they want a payment to let this one person go or
they know that the biggest employers in town is the huge scam compounds and you don't want to
piss them off. So even though it's just one person, that's enough to bring the human traffickers
into the police station and allow them to continue to threaten the person that you just rescued.
The only reason that you rescued her is because someone big enough just said, right, take her out.
She's causing a bit of a problem.
That's so sad and it makes it seem really hopeless.
I mean, your articles have a lot of examples of Malaysian nationals who,
say they paid a broker to go work in a casino and now they're stuck in these scam jobs.
Children as young as 13 and 14, girls mostly, obviously for the sex trade, which is disgusting.
And they're relying on, or I should say they're using and leveraging the fact that there's
the pandemic, there's increased job insecurity, financial desperation, weakened enforcement.
Kids are on the internet, learning, using the internet to talk to each other.
So they've got recruiters on there as well.
They're falsely recruiting these people.
but then they're stripping them of their passports.
They're taking their identity documents.
They're moving them from country to country.
They're putting them in debt bondage, like you mentioned,
forced labor, beating, sexual abuse.
I mean, it's crazy.
And I know that you've seen a lot of this stuff firsthand.
How did you even get wind of this?
And then how did you, frankly, get the stones
to go out there yourselves?
I don't think I would do that.
Right.
It seems dangerous.
So we've been based, both of us been based in Cambodia for quite a long time.
And then Cambodia did this.
It was kind of incredible. Cambodia didn't really get a COVID outbreak until a year into the rest of the world's COVID outbreak, basically. So it was about April, 2021, where they had their first community outbreak. And we started being really confused by the fact that there seemed to be many outbreaks around the same time at all these different casino towns. And we couldn't put our finger on why there were outbreaks all these casino towns at first. We'd figured out as much as we're pretty sure people are being trafficked illegally and they're not going through all the normal entry points and not being tested for COVID on entry. And we think that's why.
There'd been a few kind of outbreaks, right?
But around the same time,
a couple of other really amazing journalists
that we know that we're friends with
were also looking at specific compounds
where they'd got murmurs
that there were people inside being kept there
against their world.
And then it just all kind of exploded.
We realized that, yeah,
all of these casino places
have been repurposed as scam centers.
And then one by one, it just turned out
there were just more and more of them all over the country.
But at this point, everyone's attention
had been on Cambodia,
not there was like masses of attention outside Cambodia,
but all the attention that had been
had been on Cambodia. We then happened to be travelling around Southeast Asia working on an unrelated
project that was to do with wildlife traffic and environmental crime. And we realized that a lot of places
we were visiting, like Laos, like the Thai-Mirma border, a lot of these places were also having
the same things happen. And not only were they also having these big scam centers emerge,
but people seem to be being moved and being sold from place to place, from scam center to scam
centre in this kind of network within Southeast Asia. So we kind of realized that a lot of these
places were linked and a few of the same names kept coming up. So some of the investors, there's a
couple of dodgy people like Broken Tooth, his name comes up a lot. Wangokwai is a Chinese
gangster, he's a member of the 14K triads. He's already been in trouble enough times in China that he'd
left Macau where he originally had interesting casinos and then ended up in Cambodia with interesting
casinos and there's now a chief investor in Shwako, which is an absolute hellhole of a casino lawless
gambling town, angster town in Myanmar.
So we saw all these things kind of starting to connect up.
Around this time in Cambodia,
the Cambodian government had had enough pressure
from enough different people that it was quite embarrassed.
It had also been downgraded in this report
called the TIP report, which is trafficking in person's report.
And if you get downgraded to a certain point,
then you start actually losing access to international funding and things.
So they were downgraded because they were doing absolutely nothing
about this modern state crisis.
So they panicked.
They'd made a big show of closing down a few of the most
notorious places like this place called Cairo and Synnecville.
But then it became really obvious, really quickly, that actually people were just being
sold to other companies or moved around and moved out of the country.
We then also, we were trying to figure out how money was being laundered from, because a lot
of it ends up in cryptocurrency.
Okay.
But we were trying to figure out where else, how else it might be being laundered.
And we did a visit to a few places in the Balkans.
We had a few hints that there might be connections.
But when we got to Croatia and Montenegro, we found out that,
It didn't seem to be that the money was necessarily the only thing moving through these areas.
There'd also been a few cases before COVID had even started of small scale scam compounds inside private houses that had been busted.
And where like sort of just like 90 people rather than the thousands of people you get in Cambodia, like 90 Taiwanese people have been held against their will doing these kind of online scams.
And they seem to kind of match up with where casino owners with serious gangster connections in Southeast Asia had open new casinos in Europe.
So there seemed to be all these connections around the world with the same kind of people doing the same kind of scams at online gambling and illegal activity and running their money through casinos.
And it's just insane the scale of this basically.
Did I hear that there's illegal scam sites running in Europe that had illegally trafficked Taiwanese people?
Yes.
That were transported from Taiwan tricked by an influencer or a job ad or whatever to go to Eastern Europe held there against their will in Eastern.
in Eastern Europe. Yeah, in the Balkans in Croatia, which is obviously, again,
like big, beautiful country that people go on fancy holidays, right? It doesn't feel like
some of this would happen. But also, to make that even more mental, the Taiwanese police
had done a joint raid with the Croatians to get to release, I think it was in 2019,
to release some of these Taiwanese people that were held against their will. They were then
supposedly brought back to safety in Taiwan and Taiwan. What actually happened is a few years
later, a few of them turned up on the Vietnamese border being trafficked into Cambodia to
clearly work in a different scam centre. So we don't know what happened to them in the interim.
The Taiwanese police have not been helpful. We're talking to us about their case. But clearly
they weren't looked after and they were able to be sold on or re-tricked into this industry,
which is just completely insane. Wow. It was in Croatia and in Montenegro. So we went out to the
sites in both that it had happened. And there was maybe only about four locations or so.
But like Lindsay was saying, there's certain key figures and their names keep pop.
and up all around this that's usually within the casino or the gaming industry or something
similar. And the guy that we were looking at there and we can't find a definitive link for just,
you know, he's just near everything at the right time is a guy called Paul Fuhr, a kind of triad linked
guy who is now living in Malaysia and owns an enormous casino. And we talk about this
scary level of corruption and how could you possibly have thousands of people stuck in a compound
and people are like, oh, well, that's in Cambodia and that's in me and Marmere, and that's different.
But hey, you still had 93 people in just one place in Croatia,
maybe 100 in the other place in Montenegro.
And it just so turns out that you can also, there's also a place where people like Pulpheur
can develop such close relationships with the government of Montenegro
that they end up getting offered positions like Ambassador to San Marino.
So even though you're not a Montenegro citizen and you're a triad-length clear gangster
that owns casinos, you can just come in,
creating new relationships of the government, and then it explains pretty easily how these places
can set up essentially anywhere. So we've seen it in the Balkans, we've seen it in Cambodia,
Myanmar, Laos. I think there are some now developing in Thailand, the Philippines, and Malaysia.
It's not just something that's popped up, and then there'll be a bit of attention and go away again.
This is a new, enormous crime type that I don't think is going anywhere, but I don't think
there's enough international attention and really, really addressing it.
like we were saying that these big raids happened last year
when enough international attention was put on Cambodia,
but it took us a long time of pushing stories and articles about this.
It took a long time for NGOs, different journalists,
all pushing this in the world just weren't really clinching to it.
And maybe it's because it sounds quite unbelievable because of the scale of it,
or maybe it's just a part of the world that it's in
is never going to be more important than the people who are being scammed
in the developed world, right?
And there's a disparity there.
Yeah.
But when that happened,
Cambodia shut down a few places, made a big song and danced about it, and then it's all just
grown massively again since. So there's no sign of this stopping. And since they did their
little sham raids where actually a bunch of people arrested for labour and immigration offences
rather than the actual traffickers, since they've done that, they'd been bumped back up again
on financial regulation awards. So Cambodia's kind of out of the woods of getting financially
blacklisted because of a few different sham rates. So they just did enough box ticking
everyone can kind of go back.
But the thing is, though, like, going back to your question, though,
of, like, why we do it is because, I mean, yeah,
a lot of this has been really scary,
and the short answer is probably that we're idiots.
But, like, there have been a lot of times when, you know,
you push and you push and you push to try and get people to care about some of this stuff,
and you meet with enough agencies in Cambodia or internationally,
or you put enough stuff and you don't know if it's making any difference.
And then suddenly something will happen that shows you,
like when Cambodia was downgraded in this tip report, right?
Which actually had a big impact on their poll.
internally at the time.
Like, these governments are worried enough.
Like, something can hurt them, whether it's financial,
whether it's reputational, like something can bother them enough
that they will at least try to perform as if they're adjusting their behavior.
And so you always have a little dangling bit of hope
that something will be the magic bullet that will change this industry in some way.
It does make sense.
It's, man, it's just so, it is shocking.
And I think you're right that it doesn't get as much attention
because this is a part of the world where people are like,
where is this? How many people can it possibly be? But yeah, they're scamming us. They're still
criminals. You know, and looking at some of the numbers, the largest cohorts of victims appear to be
from Vietnam and Taiwan. So Taiwan says about 5,000 citizens have been recorded as traveling to
Cambodia and not returning. Five thousand. Police said they've identified at least 370 as it
like confirmed being held against their will, but of course victims say the number is likely a lot
higher, there's one escape woman who says, in fact, she swam across the river to safety in Thailand.
She said over 300 other women were still trapped in the one building where she was and had been
forced into prostitution after responding to a job advertised by an Instagram influencer.
So how many people do we think are actually trapped here?
Because if there's 5,000 just from Taiwan that the government has confirmed and then there's
300 in the one building where the one person escaped, has anyone done the math on this?
I mean, even the Cambodian government admits there must be at least hundreds of thousands of people in Cambodia alone.
Hundreds of thousands.
100,000 is what they roughly estimated last year.
The Global Anti-Scan organisation, which is tracking a lot of this, thinks there's about half a million people in South East Asia.
Half a million.
Yeah.
And again, just like emphasising that thing, you can just see it.
You know, there's so many cities now that's this growing up.
You just see it like absolutely everywhere.
And even the countries that you expect to be a bit better,
like a bit more, maybe slightly less corrupt, maybe a little bit more organized places like Thailand,
you know, which aren't in the same bracket usually as Cambodia and Laos and Myanmar.
I mean, when Lindsay was talking earlier about those people that we were in touch with when we were at King's Romans who had just gotten out,
there was one guy who was a Nepalese.
So increasingly Indians and Nepalese are being targeted because the English language skills is a really good skill and people are desperate for work.
So, you know, easy to get over and put to work.
the Nepalese guy who had just been released from this trafficking scam compound
where he was in for months and was on a really bad state,
the ties wouldn't let him in when he got on the boat over from Laos
because he'd overstayed his re-entry visa because he'd been trafficked into a compound
and then they were saying, no, no, no, you need to go back.
And we tried to explain to him as like, no, no, no, if he goes back,
he's going to be put inside a trafficking compound.
And they said, well, he's not got the legal right.
coming to Thailand. It was like, hold him here, phone the Nepalese embassy, make a case,
do something. Don't put him on that boat. And Lindsay, you said, just put him on a boat to a place
further down the shore of Laos. So he'd still be in the country, but he wouldn't be in King's Roman's
compound. And I think it's like pointed at the phone number, the anti-trafficking phone number
that is on the wall of this border post police station and said, can we phone that? Can we talk to them?
This is trafficking. They said, that's not a real number. It's just up there. It's
year. Wow, it's not a real, and even a real number of real agency, nothing. No one answered
when you go. That's so horrified. So what happened to this guy? Well, actually, we did manage to
keep in touch with a mutual concept and they did eventually let him back out the other way. And I know
that he managed to get back to his embassy in Vien Chen and by Laos. Yeah, so he was incredibly
lucky in the situation. I think he'd already paid his exit from this place. And the company he was
working with had been spooked because they'd been, they'd been a kind of like semi-raid on them.
wasn't like a serious ray, but they've been a bit spooked by something. So I think they weren't
taking any chances that week. I think a different week he would have been very unlucky.
That's so awful. Other escape stories are just really harrowing. Another guy walked through
rice patties for two days, sugar cane plantations and jungle with a guide, thankfully, who
steered him away from landmines placed more than 40 years ago during Cambodia Civil War. So even
if you escape and even if you get out of the town with no cops and you walk into the jungle
and you don't get eaten by something while you're there,
you get to walk for days and days,
hopefully going towards the border
and maybe step on a landmine.
And a lot of people escaping on the Vietnam side.
There's a river near to one of the places that people were being kept.
A lot of guys had jumped into this river to try and escape,
and there was quite a people who drowned,
trying to get away into Vietnam last year.
A guy that we interviewed,
this Chinese guy who's absolutely lovely
and is now spending a lot of his time back in China
trying to sort of educate other people on how to not get caught up in the same thing.
He tried to break out in the middle of the night.
He'd made this whole plan.
And he jumped from one building to another building and lost his footing as he jumped onto a lower roof and fell and broke his spine.
He was basically crawling across the ground thinking he was going to die and at dragging himself, tried to drag himself to the road.
And he said the guards were just pointing out the window laughing at him because I thought he was a goner.
So they were just watching him.
They thought they were watching him die and they were just like laughing at him.
and he managed to crawl to the road
and a Cambodian
Tuktik driver
I don't know if you're familiar
with Tuktik's like these kind of little
Yeah those little tiny like motorcycle
Rikshah
Yeah
So like a local Cambodian
Tukkid driver saw him
and basically rescued him
Put him in the back and took him to a hospital
And then there was at that time
There was a network of
Like local Chinese business people
And volunteers who were all
just helping Chinese people
Who escaped in these places
And he was really lucky
And he was kind of helped
To get out the country
of process for three or four months and when I spoke to him last he was about to have surgery
on his spine but like yeah the ordeals that people go through to try and escape are just
horrific and increasingly more and more people just decide to kill themselves yeah you know
breaking your spine and crawling away is as it's fucking orbo as that is like that's one of the
luckier stories and and you you have to have so many things go right for you to be able to get out
whether it's enough people putting enough annoying pressure or they're just so happy
to raid your one compound to
make a headline that day. There's
a lot of things that need to go right and they
usually don't. So there's
just constant stories, especially
in Cynetteville and also
at Bavet on the Vietnam border
where people just jump out
of the window. No one feel well that they'll kill themselves
because they just cannot take it anymore.
These people are worked sometimes up to 18
hours a day. They're tortured
regularly. They're tased.
They're sexually assaulted. They're beating and
humiliated in front of everyone. But
also on top of that, they know that they are stealing people's entire life savings.
So it's like one of the worst forms of slavery in that way because it's not even like you're
being enslaved and that's all that you need to worry about.
You also don't need to feel an immense level of guilt at the activity that you're doing
as well.
So people hate themselves as well as being tortured on a daily basis.
And it's really, really hard for a lot of people to come back.
from that as well.
This is the Jordan Harbinger show with our guests, Nathan Paul Southern and Lindsay Kennedy.
We'll be right back.
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for the rest of my conversation with Nathan Paul Southern and Lindsay Kennedy.
The heartlessness of this is particularly striking. There's one piece that you wrote and it said it was
after he was trafficked a second time that, his name is Sorretton, suffered his most significant trauma.
He was working at a fictitious loan company that tricked consumers into sending money by telling
them it was the only way to access a larger loan. One victim, a middle-aged man from Eastern
Thailand who needed the cash to pay for his mother's medical care, called the office on video to
plead for his life savings back. When a supervisor refused, the man picked up a handgun, pointed it
at his head and pulled the trigger. There was just silence after we heard the gunshot, said Soratan,
who was stationed next to the monitor and watched the entire incident. The boss just walked away.
They have no feelings because they're human traffickers. That is one of the most effed up things that
I've probably ever read, and it's just so bad. I mean, the romance scams. This guy need, his mother's
needed medical care and they scammed him. And then he's like, look, man, I need the money.
And they were like, we don't care. And then he killed himself on camera. I mean, just, and that's
happening times a million all the time. I know they're doing romance scams, loan scams, the pig
butchering cryptocurrency scams and stuff like that. It's, it's weird. This is a weird sort of
set of crimes because even the Chinese government is cracking down or trying to crack down on
this because it's their own citizens being trafficked. It's their own citizens being scammed.
But it's also Chinese gangsters that are doing it. And China needs Cambodia.
an ally because Vietnam is kind of closer to the United States, which is a little ironic,
and they need this counterbalance. But also, it sort of expands Chinese influence in this weird
way. Can you speak to this a little bit? Because it's kind of confusing. It's like China wants
it to stop, but not really. They kind of just want to point the canon at other countries instead.
Yeah, I think it's important to remember sometimes that like, I think we often think of the Chinese
government as like one homogenous mass with one purpose. It's like any government, right? There's
people within that. There's going to be people or sectors within that or even regional
governments within that who have their own ties to businesses or their own ties to sort of
gangsters or whatever. And their aims might not always align. But what is true is that there
are a lot of Chinese gangsters like the Broken Tooth guy mentioned before who did time in
China and then left China and sort of in shame, but then have set up places around the world
where as part of their business empire, which is often a criminal business empire, they
It also set up cultural groups that might be like a Chamber of Commerce or it might be like a called the Hongmen associations, which are basically the idea of them is they promote Chinese interests and they bring Chinese businesses together.
And they always go out of their way to do certain things like advocating for the reunification of China and Taiwan, that kind of thing, right?
And being very anti-Hong Kong.
And there are occasionally sort of like some signs that they might get involved in sort of like violence against like Hong Kong pro-democracy protesters abroad, that kind of thing.
They're very useful to the Chinese government or to sectors of the Chinese government.
And one thing that we are really, really scared about right now is it turned out, it came out last year that the Fuzan government, well, the Fuzian Police Department, I think, in China, which is a place in China.
They've set up 54, I think, so far, sort of illegal police stations around the world in all these different countries, secret police stations, which they said were partly to tackle local crime and things like scatians.
and online gambling and deal with their citizens and persuade them to come home if they break the law.
There have been quite a lot of signs they've actually been quite involved in trying to influence
politics in different countries and that they also are sometimes used to, let's say a Chinese
student is found to have said something it wasn't very flashing about China during a history
lesson at uni, then they maybe bring them in and just have a quiet word with them,
remind them they're an ambassador for China and they know where their family live.
And it's very, very sinister. But these, a lot of these places have cropped up pretty much everywhere
we've seen the scam stuff, right? So they're in Cambodia, they're in Croatia and Montenegro.
They're like everywhere you see the scams. So we're still trying to like figure out exactly
what their relationship is with these scam guys and whether they are kind of furthering the
interests of the larger figures while helping to keep down any smaller players, that kind of thing.
We're all very concerned that there's two of these in London and one in Glasgow, which are our two
homesomes, but also where they seem to have been set up, the one in Glasgow has been set up above
a Chinese restaurant that has been linked to the triad since the 80s.
Known triad restaurant, yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
And like the ones in London seem to have been set up in the business premises of Chinese business
owners who, at least one of them, has some pretty dodgy connections with Chinese gangsters
in London, people who have been done in the past for massive money laundering, for brothel
keeping for like drug trafficking, but it's sort of the whole cohort really.
So we're still trying to tease out exactly what this relationship is between these sort
of envoys of the Chinese government and police around the world and these pretty
horrific local gangster that run businesses.
And that's going to take us a long time to figure out.
But yeah, it is really scary.
It can almost sound like a little bit conspiratorial saying like, I was just going to say
it sounds like a conspiracy theory, like, oh, the Chinese have secret police stations.
And it's like people right now are like, oh, come on, Red Scare propaganda.
But the police stations are, I mean, we went to the police station in London yesterday.
It's in Croydon.
And then we followed some addresses linked to these scam sites where they're just used as basically a dropbox for thousands of companies registered that run these scam operations in Cambodia.
So you just go to these doors and you just see piles and piles of letters all addressed from people saying like, most likely, please, going to have a money back.
And also the tax man saying, who the hell is this company we need money?
And there's just thousands of letters and these dead addresses, right?
And you can look this up quite easily about the Chinese police stations.
And the main concern has been that political like, right?
And then there's one in Chinatown in New York, for instance,
and that's got quite a lot of high-profile attention.
But the relationship between organized crime groups and the Chinese state has been a pragmatic thing
for the Chinese government for decades.
And you can even see it when the Brits were leaving Hong Kong.
There was basically that conversation between the Beijing government coming in
and the current, the triad gangs that were inside the territory.
And there was a really high murder rate.
Hong Kong was a very violent place at that time.
And they had a word with them saying, listen, you can operate.
You can do your illegal gambling.
You can do your prostitution.
You can do loan shark in.
But you've got to bring the violence down.
We want tourists to come here.
We want banks to come and settle here.
Keep this place safe.
And you guys control the vice and we'll let you operate.
And from that, they've also said in more recent years,
also there's a protest that's a pro-Hong Kong one.
Can you go out and just beat the crap out of the protesters
who are fighting for Hong Kong?
And the guys who go and attack these people on the street
are at the triad, the Chinese mafia.
But it's now expanded where China have said
to organize crime groups increasingly,
listen, we don't want you creating any instability
in our country. And that goes for drugs
and for violence, for moving weapons.
But we will turn somewhat of a blind eye.
If you go and operate in different partner countries
that we have around the world where you can do some criminal activity, but the exchange for that
is you don't take the piss too much. If we say calm down on some things, you do that, but also
you act as a pro-China mouthpiece through semi-legitomized Chinese business organizations, and then
we won't look too heavily into what you do in the special economic zone that we give you.
So there is a relationship between Chinese organized crime and the Chinese state at some level,
because you cannot have tens and tens of thousands of slaves in enormous slavery scam compounds
just on the countries bordering China right next door.
You cannot have that without some form of permission from the Chinese state.
There is a strong relationship there, but it does change and it's complicated and understand.
And there are Chinese police trying to stop it in Chinese government,
but there are ties with the government to these organized crime groups that are incredibly
strong. There's also been a mark shift over the last couple of years of these places, primarily
targeting Chinese speakers on the Chinese mainland, to targeting Europeans and Americans,
Australians, but also Chinese speakers in these countries. So I think there probably has been
a point at which the Chinese government's had a bit of a word with people and been like,
you're embarrassing us back home. Can you change your target audience to other people around the
world? I think that's probably an arrangement that's been reached. I wondered about that because I was
thinking, do they just scam Chinese people? And then either the population got so
educated that these are obviously scams that it didn't work or but there's a there's a lot there's a lot of
people in china right so i feel like you'd never run out of victims or yeah my question was or did they say
hey look if you're going to steal from people don't do it in a place where they then report it to us
and we have to do something about it and we can't do it to chinese people in Canada because i get we all
get these scam texts but for some reason and i don't know i don't think i'm alone on this but i
definitely got more of them in chinese which is weird because while i can read mandarin they don't know that
And why am I getting voicemails from them in Chinese?
Why am I getting Mandarin texts?
Why are they always Asian women?
Some of it is probably targeted because I do podcast episodes like this where the CCP is,
I mean, I've had agents of them come after me for various things or try and trick me to do things.
But a lot of it's just scammy stuff.
And I found that, you know, if you do an image search on the Chinese internet, you can find
the picture that they sent me, even if it's not in the United States or the rest of the world,
internet. But some of it is definitely just in Chinese. And on previous episodes of the show, on the
episode that we did about the pig butchering scam, which again was episode 737 with Winston Sturzel for people
who want to go check it out, we actually crafted a response text in Chinese that said something like,
actually this number belongs to, and I can't remember if it's like the minister of agriculture,
secretary of the agriculture, lose my number. And it's all in Chinese. And a lot of times people
would respond and they'd be like, wow, I'm really sorry. It's a wrong number. Please forgive me.
and they'd use all these honorable terms.
But now I'm like, crap, what if the person texting me
is actually just in a cage, you know, essentially somewhere in Cambodia,
now I'm scaring them for no reason.
Like maybe I got off their phone list,
but I'm not really doing anything to help them.
I've started saying that to people.
I've had the normal text come in.
And sometimes it starts off as, hey, do you fancy earning a bit of money working part-time from home?
You know, it's not always, hey, I think you look really good-looking.
Oh, thank you, ridiculous model,
that would obviously talk to me in real life.
Don't be so hard on your show.
Sometimes it's just,
it's quite like the part-time work ones.
And I've just started saying,
are you enslaved in a Southeast Asian compound?
Wow.
And I've met victims from saying that.
So at first they go, no, I don't know what you're talking about.
And I go, no, it's okay.
I'm a journalist.
I've written these pieces.
I understand your situation.
Are you allowed to leave?
Are you in touch with your family?
And I've had maybe, you know, three or four people
who have responded saying, yes, I am stuck.
I don't know where I am. I was brought here. I was brought there. And then they would give you a little bit of
details and they'd say, I'm very, very scared, I'm being beaten. I might be in Thailand, but maybe
I'm in another country nearby. I don't know. My boss is coming. I need to go. And then maybe
they've got in contact once or twice more and then the contact usually goes dark. Wow.
So people have actually responded to that. So I mean, I would urge people to say that.
The next time someone tries to come out and say, like, are you being held against your will?
And just spread this around the world as much as we can that people are victims on that other side.
totally agree with that, but I would also say, though, just to be a little bit careful.
And if, like, it's better to say to people, like, here's a number you can call it.
Here's Gassos number.
He'd speak to them, for example.
Because, like, I've heard from Gassot, actually, that there's been a few rare occasions where I think maybe someone's boss was standing over their shoulder when someone's asked that question.
And then they've said, I'm here.
I'm not allowed to leave unless I get this money.
And then someone's felt obliged to just put some money into the system because, and then it becomes part of the scam, you know?
Part of the scam, yeah.
So it's really difficult.
So I think that, I think it absolutely right.
to like speak to someone like a human being, ask them if that's happening, ask them if you can help,
give them the right numbers or website addresses or whatever, but definitely never ever
hand over any money. I mean, they are really, really good at doing it. And there's a line that all
of the scammers use, which is there's no unscammable person. There's just the wrong script.
And that Vietnamese girl that I spoke about earlier that we luckily helped get out of a compound
a few weeks ago, she had her phone taken off her when they knew that I was trying to get people
involved. And then when she was in the police station, she was now talking to me on Instagram,
so we communicate that way. Previously, we were speaking on telegram on her phone, but they,
the scammers now had her phone and they got in touch and said, what are you doing? Who are you?
And I explained, well, I know you guys are human traffickers doing scams like blah, blah, blah,
and they were like, no, no, no, brother, we're not. This lady, she owes us money.
And she wanted to come work here as a job to pay off some of the money. This is a labor dispute.
No one's been hurt.
And like, if you weren't as aware of it, you could even look at that and go like,
you guys are pretty convincing.
Like, yeah, like maybe this is a labor suite.
Maybe you should get her back.
Maybe she shouldn't leave.
But it gets into your head really quickly.
They're really, really, really effective at it.
And what was interesting was they changed effortlessly between the Cambodian language,
Chinese and English, because there must have been probably about six or seven people in the
room, all messaging to each of my different queries.
And then they would pass it and I would translate it on Google Translate.
But it was so fluid and so well written the way that they were explaining the situation.
So, yes, and that's the thing to bear mind.
Anyone can be scammed.
People aren't idiots, right?
These people find really vulnerable people who are a bit down their luck or are having a rough time who can be incredibly intelligent.
And it goes that other way for the people who get brought in to be the victims who are forced to do it.
They're not always people from some really rural part of some very faraway country that might not have heard.
about these kind of things. A lot of them have, and some of them are really intelligent people
with, like, you know, degrees. One victim we spoke to recently was from India and had a really
good degree in engineering, really, really smart, intelligent person. I was just looking for a new job
and just got convinced. These people can, like, can trick anyone. He thought he was coming to be
a construction engineer. Wow. Yeah, and he arrived and they said, how good are you using a computer,
that's all that matters. And he was like, where would that matter? Right. He's like, hey, you know,
guys know, you guys don't seem to understand engineering very well. Oh, wait a minute. I'm in a kid.
Yeah, God, it's so horrible.
So, okay, so people on both ends are actually victims.
If we get a scam call, yeah, I was going to say, what do we reply with?
Can we give them a hotline?
Can I put that in the show notes?
You know, hey, are you being held against your will?
If so, here's a place that you can text when you are away from your boss using, I don't know,
a hidden app or something like that.
Yeah, absolutely.
Global anti-scam organization is probably the best one.
We can, like, we'll give you a few links that you can put to the bottom if people
do want to just have a few links to just have a few links to just.
a few links are just, you know, respond to, like, talk to these people, talk to these people.
Yeah, because I think, you know, we had thousands of people responding with,
I'm an official in the Chinese Communist Party, don't ever text me again,
which was kind of entertaining because the people get freaked out, or they don't care.
A lot of them don't care because they're like, whatever, I'm in Cambodia,
you can't touch me, and I'm not Chinese anyways.
Or you can tell someone else's typing because the language gets really weird,
and then they're just cursing at you, and you're like, this is the boss.
This isn't the scammer.
This is somebody else who's got worse English and is really angry,
because I've had that happen too, but I would love to figure out how we can mobilize the Jordan
Harbinger Show Army to when they get these, they're now just create, they're just awareness machines
where it's like, hey, if you're stuck somewhere, here's how you report it and here's how
you maybe try to get out of there and people have escaped. Because they might not know that people
have escaped. They might not know that people are actually looking for this and that there's
international attention on this issue and that if they can escape where they are, if they know
where they are, they can get home. They might not even know that.
Yeah, absolutely.
What can we even do besides that?
Because it seems like if there's 100,000 people being held against their will,
where do you begin to chip away at this problem?
A lot of pressure could be put onto, you know,
people's governments in the developed countries
that they might be listening to this podcast on.
You know what I mean?
We were talking about these Chinese police stations,
but a big aspect of them is that these business people or officials
or whatever they are have really tight relationships
with the host government.
And the one who runs,
runs the one in Croydon in London, was pictured with two of the last few Prime Minister,
Theresa May, Boris Johnson at constant events with them.
The one who runs the one in Glasgow has been pictured several times the former First Minister
of Scotland, Alex Sattman, who is a sexual-assaulting, horrible person anyway, so he's stupid
enough to get involved with them.
But there's a kind of cohort of politicians who might now be very, very vocal about being
cautious of taking money from Russian officials and oligarchs and want to crack down on that
cash. But we were talking about it for years, right? We're talking about the dangers of Russian money
for a long time. And it took the Ukraine war for governments to actually really start to take that
a lot more seriously. China is getting so heavily involved in so many countries because it has
the capital to invest into governments, to really favourable relationships. I think we need a
we need a conversation, a lot of developed nations about our relationship with China and about
what the consequences of that are. There should be a lot more countries in the world right now
speaking out about this, especially considering how many of their own citizens are being scammed
out of their life savings, but it's very difficult to find. So Cambodia's had issues in the past,
like for a long time it was seen as a place that people went to for child sexual abuse,
for example. And the fact that there was such an international outcry and people did put pressure
on their politicians to bring it off with Cambodian politicians and there was a lot written about
it and people shared those things. That embarrassed them hugely and they have worked really hard
for the last 15 years to completely clean that side of the country up. I mean, it's never going
to completely disappear, right, but it's certainly not any more than any other country now.
So I think that when an issue becomes big enough that it starts to embarrass a country like Cambodia,
which does rely on tourism and does have relationships with lots of other countries that
economic relationships with lots of different countries.
Having that kind of pressure put on them
can actually make a big difference to policy making.
So it's not kind of a hopeless case.
Thank you very much. What's next for you to,
I mean, you're always off on some sort of adventure,
if you can call it that. What are you going to be doing next?
Right now we're finishing up a investigation for an NGO
into small arms trafficking around Southeast Asia,
which has been fun.
And then we've just got a few more projects,
mostly again, kind of remaining around the South East Asia.
area for the next year, looking at the scam compounds, looking at human trafficking, looking
at the links to other form of organized crime. And then we've got the Cambodian elections coming
up in July. It's pretty obvious what way it's going to go. You know, there's no other party.
Just kind of trying to put all that together because Cambodia, once this prime minister wins
this election, he'll pretty soon be passing over power to his son. Oh, it's that kind of
election. He's been powerful a long time. So we'll be monitoring how that kind of changes and how organized
crane grips all the belt. Wow, really, really unbelievable. Small arms trafficking sounds interesting
as well. I mean, we have, we're obviously interested in the same stuff. The difference is you are
right there with front row seats, court side seats to a lot of this. Are you worried about your safety?
I mean, you guys live in Cambodia and here you are like, here's a criminal and look at this criminal,
and this politician's involved in crime. And look at this place over here. There's tons of crime.
I'm going to go there and myself and look at it. It's like, what, how are you safe doing that?
I mean, just in case my mum listens to this, everything's under control.
We've got, like, protocols for everything.
But, no, I mean, that, yeah, it is nerve-wracking sometimes.
I think also, though, like, I mean, you know, we're in different kind of dangerous situations.
It's like, you know, places in South East Asia, like scam compounds where the guys come out holding their tasers, staring me up and down, ready to do something.
Or in Afghanistan when the Taliban's, you know, looking for a little bit of a scrap.
And it's all a bit scary, but also just bearing in mind all the time that you are a,
like white western journalists, you're still at risk, but the risk that we take are nowhere
near what local journalists in places like Afghanistan or in Southeast Asia take all the time.
It's a lot less problematic for a government there to disappear, a journalist or to arrest
the journalists. It's from that country. We have the benefit of embassies making a load of
noise or, you know, NGOs being really vocal. So, yeah, it's.
It can be a bit dangerous, but it's not nearly as dangerous for us as it is for local journalists
and geo-invest scares who are really risking their lives.
We can actually leave the country when we have something sensitive coming out,
whereas our Cambodian colleagues cannot a lot of the time.
That's a good point, although that's not going to make your parents feel better.
Thank you too very much. Really interesting.
We'll have to have you back on sometime.
I'm sure there's a lot more we can talk about.
But again, I really appreciate your time, and you're doing really important work.
I mean, most of the stuff that I've read about this is from you guys.
and so I think you're probably on the cutting edge of this horrific sort of stuff.
And I think but for your guy's work, we wouldn't necessarily know how horrible this really is.
So hopefully that leads to the unwinding of some of this, at least in the long term.
Thank you.
I really hope so much.
Now I've got some thoughts on this episode.
But before I get into that, here's a preview of my conversation with a former Homeland Security agent
who reluctantly got involved in chasing down global child trafficking.
Did you know that there are more people enslaved right now than there ever were before in history?
Here's a quick listen.
30 million slaves in the world, is that correct?
I mean, that's insane and is correct.
Ten million of those are children who are either enslaved labor, organ harvesting or sex trafficking.
The traffickers are trying to get these kids into our country and into our black sex market
because that's where you can make the most money.
Again, we are the demand.
We drive this.
It's a $150 billion a year business.
by most estimates.
The amount of money made every year
selling children.
With that money,
you could buy every single
Starbucks franchise
in the world,
every single NBA franchise,
every team,
and still have enough money
left over
to send every child in America
to college for four years.
That's per year
selling human beings.
We go online in the dark net,
and honestly, Jordan,
it was about 10 times worse
than my mind could have conceived.
The things that people do to children
I could not comprehend.
We helped to rescue a little girl who was smuggled in from Mexico,
taking to New York City between the ages of 12 and 17 years old.
In New York City, she was raped over 60,000 times.
They bring them here and they just have these clients lined up.
And they drive her to this house, this hotel, this bar,
and she's raped, I mean, easily 15 to 20 times within a 24-hour period.
I mean, and this is the life of thousands, tens of thousands of children in the United States.
right now. Just like in the 18th, 19th century, no one's really talking about it. It's too hard. People
look away. They don't want to engage. And that's where I get frustrated. Like, look what's happening
right now. Like, I'm not going to get into the argument, a whole debate with the riot. I'm just
using as an example. But governments are shifting now. People are getting so loud, we're going
to see changes. But I would love to see someday that happen for child rape victims. I'd like to see
something so loud in every country that we have riots and people scream.
screaming because the children don't have a voice, you know, they can't protest, they can't
rally, and they're the most precious in the world, and yet they're being exploited, traffic,
kidnapped, raped by the millions.
For more, including how Tim Ballard became involved with busting child traffickers and
rescuing their victims, check out episode 369 of the Jordan Harbinger Show.
This tale goes even deeper than that, honestly, folks, there's so much that we didn't even
cover because we either didn't have time or can't. We ended up working on something shortly after
I recorded this interview. There's going to be more to come on that as well. You'd be surprised,
right? People think, well, why don't you just call your embassy or get in contact or doesn't your
family know you're missing? Several embassies have pleaded with the Cambodian government to intervene
and have essentially been ignored. These crime organizations are loaded. They have enough to bribe
their way into and out of pretty much anything. Meanwhile, the U.S. Embassy has been quite careful not to
speak out too much about the human trafficking crisis, mostly because they would then have to
downgrade Cambodia as a country in the next trafficking in persons report, which is something
that actually ended up happening already, which means the U.S. government would have to then
cut funding at a time where, frankly, we're concerned about ceding even more leverage to China
who does not care at all about organized crime going on or human trafficking in a country.
One of the most mental things about this whole thing, which newspapers obviously won't
really want to touch either, is that in Cambodia, Nathan and Lindsay are pretty sure, and they didn't
say this on the record, but I got their permission to repeat this. The Cambodian prime minister's nephew
is involved in a lot of this. So of course, the embassies are getting ignored. He's the same guy that was
once accused of trafficking millions of dollars of heroin into Australia, hidden inside timber.
I mean, this guy, there's some charmers running things over there. Now, why do I do this kind of thing?
What's the point? Is it just to bring you a random depressing news article? No.
the most effective weapon against organized crime groups perpetuating scams and abusing workers
is simply making what they do unprofitable. In other words, boosting awareness about the prevalence
and the dangers of online and telephone scams, educating people how to spot the sign so they
don't hand over money in the first place. And look, if the scam doesn't continue the human trafficking
will lessen, and that's the real cost, right? These people who are trapped in these prison camps
being forced to scam old people out of money or not so old people out of money. A continually updated
searchable list of thousands of known scam websites. In other words, if you get a site and you think
you can invest in it, go ahead and search it. So in other words, people thinking about making an
investment can check any sites or links they're using to make sure it hasn't already been identified
as a con. We're going to link to that in the show notes. It's run by an NGO called Global Anti-Sam.
Also, whether smoke, there's fire. It's not just human trafficking. These same places have
illegal logging, wildlife trafficking. We did an episode on that, episode 545. Kings Romans Casino,
other special economic zone casinos have a lot of that wildlife trafficking, a lot of the logging
goes on around it, the human trafficking, the scamming, the sex work, the sex work with minors being
trafficked. It's all one sort of disgusting Sodom and Gamora over there. And Rachel's episode,
again, episode 545, super interesting. She won undercover as a prostitute to uncover wildlife trafficking.
So go ahead and get in on that. Also in the show notes, we'll include the URL, the website that
you can send when you get a scam text, and you think that person might be
forced into the scam work. You can simply ask them. Sometimes they'll tell you the truth,
and you can send them to this organization, and hopefully something can be done. This is a matter of
international pressure and exposure, and that's all we can really do here. Big thank you to Nathan and
Lindsay. Again, all links to their work will be in the show notes at Jordan Harbinger.com.
You can also search any show, any answer we've ever given on this show. Jordan Harbinger.com
slash AI is our AI chatbot. Transcripts in the show notes videos on YouTube. I'm at Jordan
Harbinger on Twitter and Instagram. You can connect with me on LinkedIn. And hey,
advertisers, deals, discounts, all the ways to support the show at Jordan Harbinger.com
slash deals. Please consider supporting those who support the show. And yes, I'm teaching you how
to connect with other people using the same software systems and tiny habits that I used to manage
all my relationships, manage my network of folks, dig the well before you get thirsty folks,
make those relationships before you need them, Jordan Harbinger.com slash course. Many of the guests
on the show subscribing contribute to that course. Come join us. You'll be in smart company.
This show is created in association with Podcast One.
My team is Jen Harbinger, Jace Sanderson, Robert Fogart, Millio Campo, Ian Baird, and Gabriel Mizrahi.
Remember, we rise by lifting others.
The fee for this show is you share it with friends when you find something useful or interesting.
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