In a move that had the capital’s constables clutching their hats, Vietnam’s police finally shut the curtain on a scam a size that could eclipse a small nation’s budget-one that dealt out counterfeit digital coins like a magician offers rabbits from a hat.
Inside the Shadowy Scam Smack‑down
On Thursday, the Ministry of Public Security, the sharp‑eyed watchdogs of the country, broke the news that at least seven felons had vanished into the law’s net. The case tied back to ONUS, a local crypto “investment club” that collected the coins of Vietnam’s gullible investors faster than a river can run during a flood.
About 140 souls were hauled in for questioning; the spotlight fell on fintech maverick Vuong Le Vinh Nhan, better known in the internet to the world as Eric Vuong. He and his six merry band of troublemakers were charged with pilfering property and laundering trillions of Vietnamese dong. The platform shut its gates on March 20, leaving consumers dead‑stuck more than a frog on a see‑saw, scrambling for the truth.
The police claim the gang had been meddling with the market for years-since 2018, no less-trading made‑up coins, bailed on supply, skewed demand, and conjured factory‑built profits, all to lure more prey into the network. After the fall, a handful of investors cried out that their dreams were shredded, some losing more than $15,000 in a single night’s turmoil.
A Country Rijeachable for Beastly Crypto Benders
Vietnam’s rags‑to‑rich tales have become a hotbed for retail‑crypto shenanigans. With roughly 17 million digital‑asset owners, Hanoi keeps crypto out of wallets for payments but leaves the guessing game of speculation to a blurry legal loophole. That loophole, folks, makes honest folk float through the market like driftwood while the big sharks swim louder.
It ain’t the first time a slick scheme tricked the mass. Back in 2018, some 32,000 citizens fell for a $658 million initial coin offering-two presses with the same finned trick-launched by a Ho Chi Minh City company, Modern Tech JSC. In 2024, another outfit, “Million Smiles,” was busted with close to $1.17 million sandwiched between a band of nearly 300 potential victims.
Takeaway for the Young and the Reckless
When you squeeze a trench flea into a glossy condo, it often becomes a hot chase. A boom in low‑regulation markets plus regulatory gray sprawls turns Southeast Asia into a circus of quick‑bounce, high‑yield scams. Regulators worldwide are sharpening their knives, and admittedly, Vietnam might tighten its rope for clearer token rules, exchange guidelines, and a fewer blind “sandbox” ventures.
Note: The ONUS fiasco is a reminder that a jurisdiction’s warning system weighs as heavily as any chart pattern. If the authorities switch from a smiley “we’re good” to a hawk on a perch, you’ll see liquidations vanish faster than a hare at a children’s party. That “too‑good‑to‑be‑regulated” slogan is no longer a clever tagline; it’s a stark reality of the counterparty chasm.

Cover image courtesy of Perplexity, BTCUSD chart from Tradingview.
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2026-03-27 13:57