Friday, April 24, 2026

Governor Hochul Announces Start of Construction on $61 Million Affordable and Supportive Housing Development in Central Brooklyn

Governor Kathy Hochul New York State Seal

Lebechi East Will Bring 95 Affordable Homes and Community Health Services Hub to Brownsville

Development Addresses Social, Economic and Health Disparities in Central Brooklyn and Furthers Governor’s Commitment to Making Housing More Affordable

Governor Kathy Hochul announced the start of construction on Lebechi East, a new 95-unit housing development in the Brownsville neighborhood of Brooklyn that will provide affordable, supportive apartments and an on-site community health facility for residents and the public. The development will replace a vacant police precinct with modern, sustainable housing and offer health and wellness resources that address chronic social, economic, and health disparities in the surrounding community. Under Governor Hochul’s leadership, New York State Homes and Community Renewal (HCR) has created or preserved nearly 3,000 affordable homes in Brooklyn. Lebechi East continues this effort and is part of Governor Hochul’s $25 billion five-year Housing Plan which is on track to create or preserve 100,000 affordable homes statewide.

“Creating more affordable housing and expanding access to supportive services are central to making New York more affordable and more livable for all,” Governor Hochul said. “Our investment in Lebechi East will help deliver much-needed modern, high-quality apartments to Brooklyn and ensure more New Yorkers have access to critical health and wellness resources.”

Lebechi East, developed by Xenolith Partners, LLC in partnership with Family Services Network of New York, Inc. (FSNNY) and Galaxy GC Group, will provide homes to households earning up to 60 percent of the Area Median Income. The development will include a mix of studios, one- and two-bedroom apartments, 57 of which will be supportive apartments for eligible individuals, including those experiencing homelessness. The development will offer 11 units to accommodate residents with mobility impairments and five apartments for residents with sensory disabilities.

On-site support services will be provided by FSNNY and include individualized case management, counseling, education, job-readiness training, legal services and other individual and family support. Operating expenses for the supportive apartments will be subsidized through an Empire State Supportive Housing Initiative award administered by the New York State Department of Health.

The 11-story building will include a community room, roof terrace, fitness space, play area, and landscaped outdoor areas. The project is designed to meet Passive House and Enterprise Green Communities 2020 standards, incorporating all-electric systems and energy-efficient features, including heat-pump water heaters, LED lighting and Energy Star appliances.

The building will include a nearly 6,000 square foot ground-floor community health care facility also operated by FSNNY that will offer primary and preventive health and wellness services to residents and the surrounding community.

In addition, the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) facilitated the transfer of 38,000 square feet of development rights and 6,200 square feet of underutilized land adjacent to its Howard Houses campus to help make this project possible. This is the first instance of NYCHA utilizing the Transfer of Assistance flexible tool from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to ensure that at least eight units will be set aside for existing NYCHA residents at Howard Houses.

State financing for Lebechi East includes Federal Low Income Housing Tax Credits from HCR that are expected to generate approximately $24 million in equity and $13 million in subsidy. The development also benefits from $522,000 in Clean Energy Initiative funding, a partnership between HCR and the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA). The New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development is providing $18 million through its Supportive Housing Loan Program.

Pelham Parkway Neighborhood Association May Event Tuesday May 12th 7 PM


This month's PPNA meeting Tuesday May 12th 7 PM at Bronx House 990 Pelham Parkway South 

 

Chinese National Arrested at JFK International Airport on Federal Charges for Illegally Photographing Military Aircraft at Nebraska Air Force Base

 

Tianrui Liang, 21, of China, has been charged by complaint for conduct related to illegally documenting Air Force planes located at Offutt Air Force Base in Bellevue, Nebraska, announced United States Attorney Lesley A. Woods and Assistant Attorney General for National Security John A. Eisenberg.

Offutt Air Force Base is a key base in the Air Force’s Strategic Command.  Liang was allegedly present at Ellsworth Air Force Base in South Dakota in the days leading up to his visit to the Air Force installation in Nebraska. Liang crossed the Canadian-United States border on March 28, 2026, from Vancouver, Canada, to Washington on a valid B1/B2 visa.

A complaint affidavit filed in the District of Nebraska alleges that Liang drove to New York after being confronted by the FBI in Nebraska.  The FBI obtained an arrest warrant for Liang who was subsequently arrested at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York.

Following Liang’s arrest on April 7, Liang appeared in a federal magistrate court for the Eastern District of New York on the Nebraska federal charge.  The magistrate judge released Liang and refused a government request for a stay to allow federal prosecutors in Nebraska to appeal the release to a federal judge in the District of Nebraska.  Federal prosecutors in Nebraska then successfully appealed Liang’s release and he was then taken back into federal custody on April 10, 2026, by order of the Chief District Court Judge for the District of Nebraska.  Liang is presently in the custody of the United States Marshals Service and is being brought to the District of Nebraska for further proceedings in the case.

“Any individuals who unlawfully attempt to acquire sensitive information about military aircraft located in the District of Nebraska will be held maximumly accountable under federal law,” said U.S. Attorney Lesley Woods.

The criminal complaint is only a charge. Liang has not been convicted and is presumed innocent until proven guilty. If convicted, he is subject to a term of imprisonment of up to 1 year.  The investigation into whether more serious charges are implicated by the facts in this case is ongoing.  The arrest warrant was pursued to prevent Liang fleeing the country while the investigation was ongoing.

NYS Office of the Comptroller DiNapoli Announces Victory in Shareholder Rights Lawsuit Against BJ's Wholesale

 

Office of the New York State Comptroller News

First Ruling Since the SEC's Retreat from Protecting Shareholders

New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli, Trustee of the New York State Common Retirement Fund, released a statement today following a United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts ruling granting his request for a preliminary injunction requiring the Fund’s shareholder proposal at BJ’s Wholesale Club Holdings, Inc., to be included on the company’s 2026 proxy materials for a vote by shareholders at their annual meeting:

“I am pleased with the court’s well-reasoned decision rejecting the company’s efforts to diminish shareholder rights and reduce corporate transparency. As trustee of the New York State Common Retirement Fund, I will continue to take action to resist efforts to reduce corporate accountability and diminish shareholder rights impacting the continued value of our investments.”

The BJ’s decision is the first instance in which a federal court has formally ruled in a shareholder proponent’s favor since the SEC’s recent change in policy, and establishes that companies may not wantonly exclude shareholder proposals. It sets a significant precedent for how courts may treat company-initiated exclusions for the remainder of the 2026 proxy season and beyond.

The Fund’s shareholder proposal, submitted under SEC Rule 14a-8, sought “an assessment of risks of deforestation associated with [BJ’s] private label brands[.]” After BJ’s moved to unilaterally exclude the proposal from its 2026 proxy materials, the Fund filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts on March 2, 2026.

The company, among other things, argued in court that shareholders as a whole have no right to legally challenge a corporation’s unilateral decision to preclude shareholder proposals and that even general proposals intrude on the company’s management prerogative. Following the SEC’s Nov. 17, 2025, announcement that its Division of Corporation Finance would stop substantively reviewing virtually all no-action requests from companies seeking to exclude shareholder proposals during the 2025–2026 proxy season, investors have been forced to seek relief in federal court.

If the company had prevailed on its broad claim, coupled with the SEC’s policy, shareholders would have been left with no avenue to compel a company to bring important issues impacting investment value to vote at corporations’ annual meeting. 

The case is DiNapoli v. BJ’s Wholesale Club Holdings, Inc.No. 26-cv-11075 (D. Mass. March 2, 2026). The Fund is represented in this matter by Grant & Eisenhofer, and Berman Tabacco serves as local counsel.

Thursday, April 23, 2026

ICE Arrests Illegal Alien Charged with Possessing Child Pornography Who Was Released by Sanctuary Fairfax County

 

Fairfax County refused to honor an ICE detainer and released this criminal back onto the streets

The United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) released the following statement after U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrested an illegal alien charged with possessing child pornography after Fairfax County sanctuary politicians RELEASED this pedophile from jail.

Roni Mendez-Escobar, an illegal alien from Guatemala, was arrested at-large in Fairfax County following his release by sanctuary politicians. He was previously arrested in October of 2025 for 15 felony counts of possession of obscene material and 2 felony counts of possession of child porn with intent to distribute.

Roni Mendez-Escobar

Following his arrest, ICE lodged a detainer on October 23, 2025 requesting Fairfax sanctuary politicians NOT release this child predator from jail. Disturbingly, Fairfax County sanctuary politicians released Mendez-Escobar on October 27, 2025 without notifying ICE.

On April 22, 2026, ICE Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Washington D.C arrested Mendez-Escobar after a court appearance in Fairfax County.

“This sicko has been charged with multiple counts of possession of child pornography and possession of child pornography with intent to distribute. Despite these heinous crimes, sanctuary politicians in Fairfax County, Virginia REFUSED to honor ICE’s detainer and RELEASED a child predator from jail without notifying ICE,” said Acting Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis“Thanks to our law enforcement, this dangerous criminal is off our streets once again. This is yet another example of the recklessness of sanctuary policies that put politics above public safety.”

Mendez-Escobar was previously deported THREE times in 2015 before illegally entering the United States a fourth time at an unknown place and time.

This is not the first example of sanctuary policies endangering residents of Fairfax County, which has become a hotbed of illegal alien crime in recent months:

  • Earlier this month, Misael Lopez Gomez, an illegal alien from Guatemala, was arrested and charged with murder and felony child abuse after bludgeoning his own 3-month-old daughter to death.
  • In March, Anibal Armando Chavarria Muy, another illegal alien from Guatemala, was arrested and charged with second degree murder after fatally stabbing a man inside his home.
  • In February, Abdul Jalloh, an illegal alien from Sierra Leone with more than 30 prior arrests, was charged with murder after fatally stabbing 41-year-old Stephanie Minter at a bus stop.

Six Defendants Charged With Participating in Violent Spree of Carjackings and a Home Invasion Robbery in Queens, Brooklyn, and on Long Island

 

Defendants Allegedly Stole Luxury Vehicles, Cash, and Other Valuables During a Three-Week Span

Earlier today, at the federal court in Brooklyn, an 11-count indictment was unsealed charging Leny Cruz, Brandon Corona, Eddie Nunez, Jose Ramos, Savion Jones, and Justin Kenny with variously committing carjacking, attempted carjacking, Hobbs Act robbery conspiracy, being a felon in possession of ammunition, and interstate transportation of stolen property. Nunez was arrested yesterday in Mount Vernon, New York, arraigned this afternoon before United States Chief Magistrate Judge Vera M. Scanlon, and ordered detained pending trial.  The other defendants are in state custody in New York City and Suffolk County and will be arraigned at a later date.  

Joseph Nocella, Jr., United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, and Bryan DiGirolamo, Special Agent in Charge, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, New York Division (ATF), announced the charges.

“As alleged, these defendants used violence to threaten and intimidate, turning their victims’ everyday routines into terrifying ordeals,” stated United States Attorney Nocella. “Armed carjackings and robberies strike at the core of community safety, and our Office will continue to work tirelessly to protect our community from violent predators.” 

“The pattern of violent carjackings and home invasion robberies alleged in this case is exactly the type of gun-related violence ATF and our partners are working to stop,” stated ATF Special Agent in Charge DiGirolamo.  “Through coordinated enforcement and timely intelligence sharing, we are disrupting those responsible and preventing further harm.  This case reflects the impact of strong partnerships and a shared commitment to protecting our communities.  Special thanks to the diligent efforts of ATF/NYPD’s Strategic Pattern Armed Robbery Technical Apprehension (SPARTA) Group, NYPD’s Queens Robbery Squad, USAO Eastern District NY, Suffolk County DA and Suffolk County Police.”

As set forth in court filings, between July 12, 2025, and August 2, 2025, the defendants engaged in a sprawling and violent carjacking and robbery scheme, among other crimes, which involved stealing numerous luxury vehicles, cash, and other possessions from several victims.

On July 12, 2025, Cruz and Ramos carried out a carjacking of a BMW M240i from the driveway of a home in Malba, Queens.  Less than a week later, on the evening of July 17, 2025, Cruz and Corona carried out a carjacking of another victim’s BMW M3 in the parking lot of a smoke shop in Queens, New York.   Several hours later on July 18, 2025, Corona and Nunez carried out an armed carjacking of a BMW 540 stopped at a red light on Prince Street in Flushing, Queens, pistol-whipping the victim.  The following day, on July 19, 2025, Corona shot a victim twice in the leg on Blake Avenue in Brooklyn.  Then, on July 24, 2025, Corona and Nunez carried out carjacking of a BMW X5 luxury SUV from another victim in Bayside, Queens.

On July 30, 2025, Cruz engaged in an attempted home invasion robbery of an individual in Orlando, Florida, who was involved in drug trafficking.  Cruz then fled from Florida to Brooklyn in a stolen vehicle used during the robbery.  On August 2, 2025, Cruz, Jones, and Kenny engaged in a home invasion robbery of a residence in North Amityville, Long Island, where they entered the residence with firearms and stole a large quantity of money.

The charges in the indictment are allegations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.  If convicted of all charges, Cruz, Corona, and Nunez face up to life imprisonment; Ramos faces up to 30 years’ imprisonment; and Jones and Kenny face up to 20 years’ imprisonment.

Scam Center Strike Force Takes Major Actions Against Southeast Asian Scam Centers Targeting Americans

 

Charges Against Two Chinese Nationals, $700 Million in Cryptocurrency Restrained, and Seizure of Telegram Channel and 503 Scam Websites Are Latest Milestones

The Department of Justice, through U.S. Attorney Jeanine Ferris Pirro and Assistant Attorney General A. Tysen Duva of the Criminal Division, together with its partners, today announced a series of coordinated actions by the Scam Center Strike Force against Southeast Asian criminal organizations operating scam centers that have defrauded Americans of billions of dollars.  

The Scam Center Strike Force’s actions include criminal charges against two Chinese nationals who managed a cryptocurrency investment fraud compound in Burma and attempted to open another compound in Cambodia, the seizure of a Telegram messaging app channel used to recruit human trafficking victims to a scam compound in Cambodia in order to work a law enforcement impersonation scam, and the seizure of 503 fake invesment websites, among other actions.

Additionally, the Strike Force has continued to identify funds involved in money laundering from scam centers, seeking to seize and forfeit the same, and collectively the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the Department’s Criminal Division, and their partners have restrained more than $700 million in cryptocurrency alleged to be tied to money laundering from cryptocurrency scams.

Also today, in a coordinated interagency action, the Department of the Treasury announced  sanctions against Cambodian scam center operators, and the Department of State announced rewards for information leading to the seizure or recovery of proceeds related to the Tai Chang scam center in Burma.

“The President’s Executive Order Combating Cybercrime, Fraud, and Predatory Schemes Against American Citizens establishes a clear, whole-of-government strategy to confront cyber-enabled crime and transnational scam operations – bringing together law enforcement, intelligence, diplomatic, and financial tools in a unified effort,” said U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro for the District of Columbia. “Building on that direction, the Scam Center Strike Force launched in November 2025 has delivered real operational results and reflects the kind of focused action this strategy demands. Together, these efforts are driving a coordinated campaign to disrupt and impose consequences on the transnational criminal organizations behind these schemes.”

“Today we announce significant milestones in that fight,” Pirro continued. “We have charged the Chinese bosses who ran a scam compound in Burma, where trafficked workers were beaten and forced to steal from Americans. We have seized a Telegram channel that was luring workers into a forced labor compound in Cambodia where they were ordered to pose as U.S. banks and NYPD to steal American’s life savings. We have taken down more than 500 websites used to steal people’s savings. And my Office continues to work to identify funds stolen from victims, having now caused restraint of more than $700 million in cryptocurrency involved in money laundering from U.S. victims of fraud. This Administration is lock-step in combatting these scams, and we are not done.”

“The Department’s Criminal Division is proud to partner with U.S. Attorney Pirro’s office on the latest enforcement actions of the Scam Center Strike Force to stop foreign-based criminal networks that exploit vulnerable Americans,” said Assistant Attorney General A. Tysen Duva of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division. “Fraudsters who target Americans from overseas may believe that they cannot be reached, but the Department of Justice and our Strike Force partners are working to ensure that these criminals cannot operate with impunity, no matter where in the world they reside.”

Joining today’s announcement were FBI Co-Deputy Director Christopher G. Raia, U.S. Secret Service’s (USSS) Assistant Director Brent Daniels, Department of State’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL) Senior Bureau Official Chris Landberg, and Department of the Treasury’s Assistant Secretary for Terrorist Financing Jonathan Burke. 

“Eliminating fraud is a top priority for the Trump Administration,” said Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent. “Treasury will continue to target fraudsters and scam centers that steal billions of dollars from hardworking Americans, no matter where they operate or how well-connected they are.”

“The FBI remains committed to protecting Americans from fraud, holding perpetrators accountable, and leveraging partnerships, intelligence, and enforcement to safeguard the public,” said FBI Co-Deputy Director Christopher G. Raia. “These joint actions represent a significant blow to transnational criminal organizations preying upon our American citizens.”

“The Scam Center Strike Force has been a collaborative effort since its formation,” said Assistant Director of Field Operations Brent Daniels of U.S. Secret Service. “The Secret Service is proud to be a part of this group, which is dedicated to pursuing the criminal networks that rely on our online and financial infrastructure to target American citizens.”

“The Department of State, in support of the Department of Justice’s Scam Center Strike Force, is announcing two reward offers under the Transnational Organized Crime Rewards Program to disrupt cyber scam centers in Southeast Asia and hold accountable those who prey on Americans online,” said Senior Bureau Official Chris Landberg of the Department of State’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs. “Under the leadership of Secretary Rubio, the State Department, together with our partners, will continue to protect the American people from cybercrime, fraud, and predatory schemes perpetrated by these insidious scam centers.”

Background: Cyber-Enabled and Cryptocurrency Investment Fraud in Southeast Asian Scam Centers 

Cyber-enabled and cryptocurrency investment fraud (referred to by the scammers as “pig butchering”) is among the fastest growing and most financially devastating forms of cybercrime targeting Americans. In these schemes, victims are cultivated over time and deceived into depositing funds into fraudulent investment platforms that appear to show substantial returns. In reality, all victim funds flow directly to the scammers. The scam continues until the victim runs out of money or discovers the fraud, at which point the scammers cease contact. 

According to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), investment scams became the most commonly reported crime type in 2023, with cryptocurrency investment fraud comprising 83 percent of that category. Reported losses from these scams rose from $3.96 billion in 2023 to $5.8 billion in 2024. Reported losses rose 24 percent in 2025 to over $7.2 billion, according to IC3’s newly released 2025 annual report. Those figures, based largely on victim reports, are believed to significantly underrepresent actual losses, as most victims do not report to law enforcement. According to the United States Institute of Peace, a conservative estimate of the annual value of funds stolen by scam syndicates worldwide approached $64 billion as of the end of 2023. 

Many of these schemes are run out of industrial-scale compounds along the Burma-Thailand border and in Cambodia. Criminal syndicates often lure workers to Thailand with promises of high-paying technical jobs, then seize their identification documents and traffic them to work in scam compounds. Within the compounds, trafficked workers are frequently forced to conduct fraud operations against victims in the United States and elsewhere under threat of violence. Public reporting on these compounds has documented beatings, electrocutions, and murder. 

Criminal Charges: Shunda Compound, Min Let Pan, Burma 

The Strike Force unsealed criminal complaints and arrest warrants against two Chinese nationals in connection with cryptocurrency investment fraud operations at the Shunda compound in Min Let Pan, Burma: two managers in the compound, Huang Xingshan, also known as “Ah Zhe,” and “Huang Xing Saan” and Jiang Wen Jie, also known as “Jiang Nan.”  They are charged with wire fraud conspiracy. 

Aerial surveillance photo of the Shunda compound in Burma, where forced-labor conducted fraud operations under threat of violence.

Aerial surveillance photo of the Shunda compound in Burma, where forced-labor conducted fraud operations under threat of violence.

The Shunda compound operated from at least January 2025 until approximately November 2025, when it was seized by the Karen National Liberation Army of Burma. The compound used scam websites and mobile applications disguised as legitimate investment platforms to defraud victims, including Americans. Workers within the compound were trafficked individuals who were held against their will and forced to defraud victims under the threat of violence and torture. 

The FBI deployed personnel to Thailand following the compound’s seizure. Working with Thai authorities, FBI agents reviewed thousands of mobile devices and over 1,300 desktop computers recovered from Shunda. Agents also interviewed tens of former compound workers. That investigation identified a hierarchical organization of Chinese operators running the compound and supported the charges against the two defendants.

Phones seized from the Shunda compound.

Phones seized from the Shunda compound.

According to the investigation, Huang served at Shunda as a high-level manager and enforcer and personally participated in the physical punishment of trafficked compound workers. Jiang served as a team leader directly supervising workers who specifically targeted American victims. Under Jiang’s supervision, one of the people under his command successfully defrauded a single American victim of over $3 million utilizing a fraudulent investment platform. The theft was celebrated within the organization as a paradigm of success.

The interior of one of the buildings in the Shunda compound in Burma.

The interior of one of the buildings in the Shunda compound in Burma.

After the Shunda compound was seized, Huang and Jiang relocated to another scam compound located in Cambodia where they attempted to continue their cryptocurrency investment fraud operation. In early 2026, Huang and Jiang decided to return to Burma, traveling through Thailand. 

Huang and Jiang were arrested on immigration charges by Thai law enforcement in early 2026 in Thailand. The case is being investigated by FBI’s New York Field Office with substantial assistance from the FBI Legal Attaché in Bangkok and Thai authorities.

Telegram Channel Seizure 

The Strike Force conducted a first-of-its-kind seizure of a Telegram channel with more than 6,000 followers that was used to recruit individuals to travel to Cambodia under false promises of high-paying employment. Once there, recruited workers were held against their will and forced to defraud victims, including Americans, as part of a sophisticated law enforcement impersonation scheme. 

The Telegram channel included postings for jobs in Cambodia that were specifically for workers who spoke with “American” accents, would work a night shift (i.e., during U.S. daytime hours), and some specifically sought attractive female candidates. The Telegram channel was connected to a scam compound in rural Cambodia near the Thai border. 

The Telegram channel that was used to recruit individuals to work in Cambodia.

The Telegram channel that was used to recruit individuals to work in Cambodia.

A job post on the Telegram channel.

A job post on the Telegram channel.

Once at the scam compound, the scam workers specifically targeted U.S. persons. In the fraud scheme, victims received cold calls from individuals posing as bank representatives, including impersonators of JPMorgan or other U.S. bank customer service agents, warning them that their bank accounts had been used to purchase firearms from an actual U.S. gun store website. Victims were then transferred to individuals posing as “NYPD detectives” or other supposed law enforcement, and later sent to the “New York Supreme Court” or other purported prosecutorial officials. Through sustained pressure conducted over WhatsApp and Microsoft Teams, victims were induced to disclose their bank account information and ultimately transfer their savings to the scammers.

Individuals posed as bank representatives, worked from a script, and told their intended victims that their bank accounts had been used to purchase firearms from a gun store website.

Individuals posed as bank representatives, worked from a script, and told their intended victims that their bank accounts had been used to purchase firearms from a gun store website.

The Telegram seizure case is being handled by FBI’s Miami Field Office, USSS Headquarters, and investigators at the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia. As part of the Strike Forces’s efforts at public-private collaboration on the scam center threat, after being alerted by law enforcement, JPMorgan Chase, Microsoft, and Meta voluntarily took internal investigative measures to combat the fraud operating on their systems and occurring under their names.

503 Web Domain Seizures 

The Strike Force announced the seizure of more than 503 .com web domains identified through the Operation Level Up initiative as having been used to defraud U.S. victims. The seized domains all were disguised as legitimate “investment platforms,” which victims reported to law enforcement were causing them to unknowingly deposit cryptocurrency funds and view supposed “returns” on what they believed were legitimate investments.

Operation Level Up, established in January 2024, by FBI and USSS is an ongoing proactive initiative to identify and notify victims of cryptocurrency investment fraud. As of March 2026: (i) Operation Level Up has notified 8,935 victims of cryptocurrency investment fraud; (ii) 77% of those victims were unaware they were being scammed; (iii) the estimated savings to victims is $562,726,245 of monies they otherwise would have sent to their scammers; and (iv) ninety-three victims have been referred to an FBI victim specialist for suicide intervention due to the devastating nature of these scams. Some victims have reported to law enforcement that—prior to being notified by the FBI about the scam—they were in the process of liquidating their 401K, selling their home, or obtaining a sizable loan. One elderly victim was surviving on disability pay; he had already paid the scammers $1,200 and would have cut into money he needed for food to pay more. Each of the 503 .com domains seized was identified by a victim contacted by Operation Level Up and involved in laundering that victim’s cryptocurrency funds.

Visitors to these domains are now informed on a splash page that it has been seized by law enforcement. The investigation was conducted by the Operation Level Up Initiative, with the FBI’s Detroit and Phoenix Field Offices handling the seizure with support from investigators at the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia and the U.S. Marshals Service.

Examples of the seized domains that were disguised as legitimate investment platforms, causing victims to unknowingly deposit funds.

Examples of the seized domains that were disguised as legitimate investment platforms, causing victims to unknowingly deposit funds.

Examples of the seized domains that were disguised as legitimate investment platforms, causing victims to unknowingly deposit funds.

Restraint of Cryptocurrency Involved in Money Laundering from Scams

The Scam Center Strike Force continues its work to identify, seize, and forfeit funds involved in money laundering related to scams, so that funds can be returned to victims whenever possible. Under leadership from the FBI and the USSS, more than $701,962,392.15 million in cryptocurrency has been identified as allegedly involved in laundering of funds stolen from victims of cryptocurrency investment fraud and restrained through voluntary actions of cryptocurrency providers, as well as U.S. legal process. The Strike Force is working tirelessly to forfeit funds with its goal of returning funds to victims, and it continues to support victims who have lost homes and life savings to these schemes. FBI San Francisco, San Diego, Washington, Seattle, Phoenix, Nashville, and Honolulu Field Offices, and the USSS Headquarters, San Francisco, Nashville, and Washington Field Offices investigated these matters and conducted associated seizures.

State Department Rewards and Actions Related to Tai Chang

Consistent with the Strike Force’s whole of government approach, in a coordinated action, the Department of State today announced a reward of up to $10 million  for information leading to the seizure or recovery of proceeds from fraud and money laundering schemes associated with the Tai Chang scam centers in Burma’s Karen State.

The Strike Force also announced the seizure of the latest domain used by the Tai Chang scam centers, fortuneprimeglobalirts.com. The domain was a new iteration of the centers’ fraudulent investment platform and was launched after the Strike Force seized its predecessor domain, tickmilleas.com. The latest seized domain was designed and functioned similarly to its predecessor scam investment website. Visitors to the domain are now informed on a splash page that it has been seized by law enforcement, and victims are encouraged to submit complaints to the FBI. The Tai Chang scam centers were subject of web domain seizures by the Strike Force and designations by the Department of Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) announced in November 2025.

FBI’s San Diego Field Office is investigating the case in conjuction with the FBI Law Enforcement Attaché in Bangkok. Tips should be sent to them at TaiChangTIPS@fbi.gov.

Treasury Department Sanctions 

Also in a coordinated action, the Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) today announced new sanctions against individuals and entities perpetrating cryptocurrency investment fraud schemes against Americans using forced labor and violence in Cambodia. The sanctions target Cambodian Senator Kok An, Cambodian businessman Rithy Raksmei, several associates, and their respective business empires, including holding companies for scam center operations.

About the Scam Center Strike Force 

The Scam Center Strike Force was officially launched by U.S. Attorney Pirro in November 2025 to address the growing threat posed by Chinese organized crime syndicates operating scam centers primarily in Southeast Asia. The Strike Force targets cryptocurrency investment fraud, cyber-enabled fraud, human trafficking, and money laundering operations that have cost American victims billions of dollars.

On March 6, 2026, President Trump signed an Executive Order directing the Administration to prioritize cybercrime, fraud, and predatory schemes draining American families of their life savings. Through the Executive Order, President Trump is unleashing every available tool to stop foreign-backed criminal networks that exploit vulnerable Americans through cyber-enabled fraud. The Scam Center Strike Force is a critical node in executing the mission outlined in the President’s Order.

The Strike Force’s founding partners are the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia, the Department of Justice’s Criminal Division, the FBI, and the U.S. Secret Service, who have now been joined by numerous additional law enforcement agencies as well as the U.S. Attorney’s Offices for the Districts of Alaska, Rhode Island, and Western Washington. The Strike Force works in collaboration with other agencies, including the Treasury and State Departments. The Strike Force works in strategic partnership with private industry and calls on all U.S. businesses to take more proactive steps to protect users from scam operations.

The Scam Center Strike Force will use every tool available to help secure Main Street Americans from these scams. With its interagency and public partners, it will educate Americans on how to identify these scams, prevent generational wealth from flowing from America into the pockets of Chinese organized crime, and work with unwavering focus to return stolen funds to victims. 

An indictment or a complaint is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

If you have been defrauded out of your money by a Southeast Asian Scam Center scheme, please contact the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center at ic3.gov.  

Wanted Poster for Jiang Wen Jie

Wanted Poster for Huang Xingshan

BRONX MAN INDICTED FOR MURDER OF GIRLFRIEND, CRITICALLY WOUNDING HER TEENAGE SON WHEN HE CAME TO HER DEFENSE

 

Bronx District Attorney Darcel D. Clark today announced that a Bronx man has been indicted on Murder and Attempted Murder charges for fatally stabbing his girlfriend and then stabbing her 16-year-old son as he tried to protect her. 

District Attorney Clark said, “This was a horrific act of domestic violence. A family has lost their mother, and their brother has suffered terrible injuries. We are working with them to deal with the trauma inflicted by the defendant.” 

District Attorney Clark said Juan Rivas, 45, of Sherman Avenue, the Bronx, was arraigned today on second-degree Murder, Attempted Murder second-degree, first-degree Manslaughter, first-degree assault, two counts of second-degree Assault, third-degree Assault, two counts of Endangering the Welfare of a Child, and fourth-degree Criminal Possession of a Weapon before Bronx Supreme Court Justice Margaret Clancy. Remand was continued. He is due back in court on July 21, 2026.

According to the investigation, on February 28, 2026, at approximately 6:30 a.m. inside an apartment in 956 Sherman Avenue, the children of Yesenia Hall, 42, heard her arguing with the defendant and then screaming. They ran to their mother’s room and found defendant with a knife and Hall bleeding. Her 16-year-old son attempted to protect his family, pushing his sister out of the room and trying to stop the defendant. Defendant stabbed Hall and her son multiple times. Hall was pronounced dead at NYC Health+Hospitals Lincoln, and the boy remained hospitalized for approximately one month.

District Attorney Clark thanked NYPD Detectives Joseph Graziadio and Corey Simpson of the 44th Precinct and Patrick Curran of Bronx Homicide and responding NYPD Police Officers Francisco Ferreira and Mathew Kelly of the 44th precinct for their work in the investigation.

An indictment is an accusatory instrument and not proof of a defendant’s guilt.