Inside the Fall of a US$2b Scam Empire: The Wei Family Brought to Justice
After years of ruling northern Myanmar through fraud, violence, and threat, one of Asia's most powerful cross-border crime clans has finally met justice.
Chinese prosecutors have brought charges against the Wei family syndicate, marking the end of the so-called "Four Families" that long dominated the Kokang region's criminal underworld.
On October 9, the Quanzhou People's Procuratorate in southeast China's Fujian Province formally initiated legal proceedings against Wei Huairen (also known as Wai San), a principal figure of the Wei family crime group, and other key suspects.
The charges include telecommunications fraud, intentional homicide, organizing illegal border crossings, and extortion. The case has been submitted to the Quanzhou Intermediate People's Court, The Paper, a Shanghai-based news outlet, reported on Wednesday.
For 15 years, the Wei family operated a rigorous political-military-business scheme that dominated Kokang's criminal underworld. Second brother Wei Chaoren secured political influence as a member of Myanmar's Federal Parliament while third brother Wai San built military power through command of state-authorized border forces.
"What set the Wei family apart was their official border battalion – a legitimate armed force," explained Qiu Xin, head of Quanzhou's Criminal Investigation Division. "Other syndicates had to self-fund and equip their private militias."
The family first expanded through gambling and adult entertainment before recognizing the potential of telecom fraud as Chinese criminal groups migrated to northern Myanmar around 2017. They rapidly developed extensive scam compounds, providing armed protection and services to fraud operations while collecting rents, security fees, and pioneering "resource trading" of human captives.
The syndicate treated Chinese citizens as commodities, with prices for Chinese workers surging from 20,000 yuan (US$2,806) to over 300,000 yuan (US$42,000). Those wanting to return home faced ransom demands reaching several hundred thousand yuan.
The family's brutality was exemplified by Chen Dawei, Wai San's nephew and designated successor. In a particularly gruesome incident, Chen randomly selected a victim surnamed Ma for human sacrifice during a sworn brotherhood ceremony with a scam park owner.
"After shooting and killing this person, you knelt and worshipped. How did you feel during the ceremony?" investigators asked Chen.
"Should I have (had) any feelings?" he responded.
When pressed that he had killed a living person, Chen shrugged: "I didn't feel anything."
The Wei family developed sophisticated "pig-butchering" schemes that combined fake investment platforms with psychological manipulation. They created large group chats to lure victims, operating pyramid-style operations that evolved from multiple scammers targeting one victim to individual fraudsters harvesting dozens simultaneously.
The younger generation built social media personas as "successful entrepreneurs" to legitimize their schemes, using concepts like "blockchain projects" and "trust funds" as camouflage. Their operations became so efficient that single fraud rings generated hundreds of millions of yuan.
Family members, particularly the younger generation, flaunted luxury brands, sports cars, and overseas properties. They frequently traveled by helicopter and treated high-priced golf outings as routine leisure activities.
Police estimate the Wei family's fraud operations involved 6 billion yuan (US$830 million), while its gambling business handled about 10 billion yuan (US$1.38 billion) – together worth more than US$2 billion.
The prosecutions conclude China's campaign against the Kokang criminal networks in Myanmar that had long exploited Chinese citizens, with all four major family syndicates now facing justice in domestic courts.
Editor: Wang Xiang
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