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‘Phone scam kingpin’ has London properties worth more than £100,000,000 seized in bitcoin bust

Property owned by Chen Zhi in Avenue Road in St John?s Wood, north London Chinese-born Chen Zhi, head of a Cambodian-based multinational company, and Qiu Wei Ren, his alleged co-conspirator, are said to have been secretly operating romance scams and other swindles that defrauded billions of pounds from thousands of victims, including in the UK and the US. US and UK investigators said Chen alone amassed a fortune of at least ?11bn from ?industrial scale? fraud, including a ?12m mansion in north London, a ?100m office block in the City and 17 flats in New Oxford Street and Nine Elms in south London.
Zhi owned a mansion in St John’s Wood that has been seized (Picture: Google Maps)

The UK has seized the assets of two Chinese men accused of running ‘industrial scale’ scams from Southeast Asia.

Chen Zhi and Qiu Wei Ren were both added to the UK sanctions list on Tuesday as part of an international crackdown on fraud, along with a series of businesses linked to them.

Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper said the men were the ‘masterminds’ behind ‘horrific scam centres’ that used forced labour in Cambodia and Myanmar to trick victims across the world.

Chen’s UK assets include a £12 million mansion near Primrose Hill, in London, and 10 Fenchurch Street, an office building in the City of London bought through one of his companies for £95 million in 2020.

Qiu’s assets include seven flats in the CentrePoint Tower at the end of Oxford Street, and 10 flats in the Nine Elms development near the new US embassy in south-west London, in one of the buildings that holds up the development’s ‘Sky Pool’.

All of the properties are estimated to be worth well over £100,000,000 together.

Chen led a network of scam centres in Cambodia and Myanmar that used forced labour to trick victims across the world into handing over their money through fake romantic relationships and fraudulent cryptocurrency schemes.

Chen Zhi and Qiu Wei Ren have both been sanctioned (Picture: PA)

The people working in these centres are often foreign nationals lured into working there with the promise of legitimate jobs and then trapped and forced to carry out the scams under threat of torture.

Through his company, The Prince Group, Chen is said to have built casinos and compounds used as scam centres, as well as laundering the proceeds.

Both men were born in China but hold Cambodian and Cypriot citizenship. Chen also holds Vanuatu citizenship, while Qiu holds Hong Kong citizenship.

Chen owned this office building on Fenchurch Street (Picture: Google Maps)

Cooper added: ‘Together with our US allies, we are taking decisive action to combat the growing transnational threat posed by this network – upholding human rights, protecting British nationals and keeping dirty money off our streets.’

Also sanctioned were Ing Dara and Zhu Zhongbiao, Cambodian directors of the Jin Bei Group; Chinese national Lei Bo; and Cambodian national Guy Chhay.

Both Lei and Guy are directors of the Uni More Group, a company linked to the scam network that has also been sanctioned along with the Cambodian Heng Xin Real Estate Group.

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