Senior Prince Group Figure Arrested in Japan Amid Global Crypto Fraud Crackdown

June 22, 2026
Senior Prince Group Figure Arrested in Japan Amid Global Crypto Fraud Crackdown
  • A senior figure tied to Cambodia’s Prince Group, Hu Xiaowei (also known as Hu Shi), was arrested in Osaka, Japan, on suspicion of submitting false residency information to Japanese authorities.

  • The case could lead to further arrests and shed light on how transnational crypto fraud networks operate across borders and exploit regulatory gaps.

  • Reporting relies on WuBlockchain’s X account for the arrest, with Crypto Economy Flash News providing context and warnings about verification and financial guidance.

  • Authorities indicate more charges, extradition questions, and links to sanctioned entities may emerge as the investigation unfolds.

  • The Osaka arrest is linked to ongoing efforts to dismantle pig-butchering networks and curb their use of cryptocurrency for illicit proceeds.

  • Pig-butchering involves online relationship-building to gain victims’ trust before steering them to fake investment platforms, often via social media or dating apps.

  • Tokyo police have not commented publicly on the arrests.

  • Prince Group denies wrongdoing, stating its businesses are legitimate and employ millions worldwide, while defending sanctions and indictments as unfounded.

  • The group had publicly denied criminal allegations in November 2023 through a statement arranged by a U.S. law firm.

  • Hu Shi is described as an alleged senior figure in the Prince Group, with investigations ongoing and no conviction at this stage.

  • The case is part of a broader international crackdown: U.S. sanctions on 146 Prince Group-related entities in 2025, followed by UK designations in 2026, and a major Bitcoin-forfeiture pursuit tied to Prince Group founder Chen Zhi, valued at around 127,271 BTC (about $15 billion).

  • The Prince Group, led by chairman Chen Zhi, is accused of running international fraud operations and pig-butchering scams that use fake dating apps or social media to build trust before directing victims to fraudulent crypto platforms.

Summary based on 20 sources


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