Abstract:INTERPOL's Operation HAECHI VI seized USD 439M from cyber-enabled financial crimes, exposing global fraud and disrupting money laundering rings.

INTERPOLs HAECHI VI Recovers USD 439M
INTERPOL has announced the success of Operation HAECHI VI (April–August 2025), an international cybercrime operation that dismantled fraud networks and recovered over USD 439 million in stolen government-backed currencies, cryptocurrency, and physical assets. The effort underscores the scale of global financial crime and the effectiveness of cross-border police cooperation.
Global Effort Against Cyber-Enabled Crime
Spanning 40 countries and territories, the operation focused on seven cyber-enabled financial crimes, including romance scams, online sextortion, e-commerce fraud, business email compromise, voice phishing, and money laundering linked to illegal gambling. Law enforcement agencies collectively blocked more than 68,000 fraudulent bank accounts and froze nearly 400 digital currency wallets tied to organized criminal groups.
The seizures included USD 97 million in cryptocurrency and an additional USD 16 million in illicit profits located in digital wallets. These actions marked one of the largest coordinated financial crime crackdowns of 2025.

Major Recoveries Across Borders
Several landmark recoveries highlighted the risks of transnational organized crime.
- In Portugal, authorities arrested 45 suspects who diverted EUR 228,000 from social security funds intended to aid vulnerable families.
- Thailand reported its biggest single-case seizure to date—USD 6.6 million—after dismantling an international business email compromise ring defrauding a Japanese corporation.
- In South Korea, swift intervention using INTERPOLs I-GRIP payment stop system enabled the recovery of USD 3.91 million after forged shipping documents funneled money to Dubai.
Freezing Criminal Assets
The operation demonstrated how rapid intervention and international legal frameworks can facilitate illegal asset seizure procedures. By depriving organized crime groups of illicit financial gains, law enforcement agencies reduced the incentive for further large-scale fraud. Authorities emphasized that victims of scams can, in fact, recover losses with timely global cooperation.
Global Leaders Stress Cooperation
Theos Badege, interim Director of INTERPOL‘s Financial Crime and Anti-Corruption Centre, noted that the results proved international asset recovery is possible. He urged more INTERPOL member countries to collaborate in collective defense against cyber-enabled financial crimes. Similarly, South Korea’s National Central Bureau representative Lee Jun Hyeong emphasized the nations role in fostering global cooperation, stressing that unified action is essential to counter an evolving crime landscape.
The outcomes of HAECHI VI underscore INTERPOLs authority in financial crime investigations and highlight the growing sophistication of international fraud networks. With global cooperation, the fight against cyber-enabled crime shows that prevention and recovery remain achievable despite increasingly complex criminal strategies.
