The Huione Group’s designation as a primary money laundering concern by FinCEN exposes Cambodia’s acute vulnerabilities as a Southeast Asian cybercrime hub, where lax regulatory oversight and deficient AML/KYC frameworks enabled the laundering of at least $4 billion in illicit proceeds from 2021-2025, including DPRK cyber heists and “pig butchering” scams devastating global victims. This Cambodia-based consortium’s integrated network—spanning Huione Pay’s fiat-to-crypto cash exchanges in Phnom Penh, Huione Crypto’s VASP operations with proprietary USDH stablecoin, and Haowang Guarantee’s Telegram marketplace peddling scam tools—exploited the kingdom’s crypto bans and weak enforcement to layer funds through nested accounts, cross-border transfers, and illicit marketplaces, processing over $2.6 billion in USDT alone while evading detection despite public exposure. Critically, despite the National Bank of Cambodia revoking Huione Pay’s license in March 2025 and U.S. prohibitions severing its financial system access, the absence of robust local crackdowns perpetuates Cambodia’s role in transnational laundering loops, underscoring the urgent need for enhanced cross-border intelligence sharing and jurisdictional reforms to dismantle such infrastructures before they fuel further DPRK proliferation and TCO dominance.​
The Huione Group, based in Cambodia, has emerged as a major conduit for laundering proceeds from Southeast Asian cyber-enabled fraud and international cybercrimes, notably linked to DPRK criminal syndicates. Between 2021 and 2025, it processed an estimated $4 billion in illicit funds using a network of financial service entities that combine fiat and cryptocurrency payment channels with an online marketplace for illicit goods and services. The group lacks effective AML/KYC controls, aiding its role as a critical laundering hub. FinCEN designated it a primary money laundering concern, cutting off its access to the U.S. financial system, but Cambodian regulatory measures appear insufficient or ineffective to mitigate the ongoing risks. This case underscores Cambodia’s vulnerabilities as a regional money laundering hub facilitated by weak financial oversight and illicit cryptocurrency activity.