The compound was owned by Baofu Land Development Inc., which Huang Zhiyang co-founded in May 2019, using his Cypriot passport.
The Philippine Anti Money Laundering Council identified Huang Zhiyang as the principal financier of Baofu’s acquisition and real-estate development. The Philippine Department of Justice described the company as the “mother corporation,” which oversaw the establishment and operations of scam centers within its compound.
Huang Zhiyang’s whereabouts are unknown, and his lawyer in the Philippines did not respond to a request for comment. Huang Zhiyang did not respond to emails sent to five addresses linked to him in corporate documents.
‘Love Scammer’
Acting on a tip, authorities raided the Baofu compound in early March 2024. Officers from the national police and other agencies freed 875 people, mainly Philippine and Chinese, but also Rwandans, Indonesians and others.
They found firearms, as well as mobile phones and “love scam” scripts used to defraud victims, the state-run Philippines News Agency reported.
The scripts were used by scammers “forced to pretend as handsome-looking men seeking for love interests in social media, to scam lonely females,” according to the Philippines Department of Justice.
Cyberfraud has exploded in Southeast Asia in recent years, according to the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, which said in a recent report that people across East and Southeast Asia lost between $18 and $37 billion from online scams in 2023 alone.
The scammers are often victims too. Many have been lured with offers of legitimate work, but find themselves held hostage and forced to defraud others.
The indictment against Huang Zhiyang and others outlines the plight of one alleged trafficking victim who tried to refuse work in a scam center. He told investigators he was told he had to pay 300,000 Philippine pesos (about $5,000) in order to leave, which he couldn’t afford.
“He was compelled to work as a love scammer,” the indictment states. “He never received compensation for the work that he has rendered. Instead he received beatings every time he failed to meet the mandatory quota.”
Another victim, who had a common Vietnamese name, was told he could not leave until he reimbursed the company for the cost of his travel to the Philippines. He described being beaten and tortured with electrocution when he failed to make his quota.
Multiple Raids
The raid in March 2024 finally led to charges against Huang Zhiyang. But two of his companies had been targeted before as part of investigations into cyberfraud and human trafficking. While neither of the previous raids resulted in charges, he was named in a search warrant.
In May 2023, Philippine police rescued more than 1,000 alleged trafficking victims at a compound owned by Sun Valley Clark Hub Corporation, another company co-founded by Huang Zhiyang.
In February 2023 — just three months before the raid on Sun Valley — authorities swooped in on a company called Hongsheng Gaming Technology Inc., which operated out of Huang Zhiyang’s Baofu Land Development compound. More than 800 trafficked workers were reportedly rescued.