Singapore Authorities Launch Crackdown on Unlawful Online Gambling and Banking Proxy Syndicates

by Dimitri Dimitrov Published on June 8, 2026
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The Singapore Police Force has initiated a comprehensive criminal investigation targeting 30 individuals implicated in illegal online gambling operations and interconnected financial offenses.

A close-up view of a roll of cash connected to open steel police handcuffs resting over a weathered concrete backdrop.
The operation resulted in the seizure of S$19,000 in illicit funds, with 25 suspects facing separate fraud charges for selling Singpass and banking credentials to criminal networks.

The enforcement action follows a coordinated multi-day operational exercise that culminated in the seizure of nearly S$19,000 in suspected illicit funds.

Operational Sweeps Against Unlicensed Betting Rings

The targeted enforcement drive was planned and executed by the Specialized Crime Branch of the Criminal Investigation Department between May 21 and May 29. Designed to disrupt decentralized gambling operations and cut off the financial networks supporting them, the operation led to the interception and detaining of 21 men and 9 women ranging in age from 17 to 79.

According to official police briefs, investigators established that 5 of the suspects had actively placed remote wagers with offshore gambling operators lacking valid regulatory licensure within Singapore. In these instances, transactional capital was routed through proxy bank accounts actively managed by clandestine criminal syndicates. The individuals face prosecution under Section 20 of the Gambling Control Act 2022, a statutory provision that carries maximum penalties of up to S$10,000 in fines and a six-month prison term for consumers engaging with unlawful gaming providers.

Exploitation of Retail and Corporate Bank Accounts

The remaining 25 suspects are under investigation for allegedly selling or relinquishing operational control of their personal or corporate bank accounts to organized crime networks. Forensic accounts suggest that several of the individuals deliberately misled financial institutions during initial onboarding processes to open accounts specifically to sell the login credentials to unidentified third-party brokers.

These collaborative banking offenses are being scrutinized under a multi-layered legal framework, including the Computer Misuse Act 1993, the Penal Code, and the Corruption, Drug Trafficking and Other Serious Crimes (Confiscation of Benefits) Act 1992. Under the Computer Misuse Act 1993, activities linked to the unauthorized disclosure or sale of national digital identity credentials, such as Singpass profiles, attract a maximum jail term of three years alongside heavy financial penalties.

Furthermore, cheating offenses under the Penal Code involving deception or fraud carry up to 3 years’ imprisonment, while formal money laundering charges under the Confiscation of Benefits Act can result in sentences reaching 10 years and fines maxing out at S$500,000. At the time of the official police briefing, formal indictments had not yet been finalized.

The enforcement push follows Singapore‘s ongoing tightening of its interactive gaming boundaries, anchored by the introduction of the Gambling Control Act 2022 to block overseas online casinos from soliciting local consumers. Police expressed deep concern regarding the growing domestic trend of citizens surrendering account access to third parties, urging the public to immediately flag suspicious proxy activity. Concurrently, individuals dealing with gambling issues are encouraged to seek support from the National Council on Problem Gambling.

Dimitri Dimitrov

Dimitri is an iGaming expert with nearly a decade of experience and a knack for crafting content that speaks directly to the iGaming crowd. He understands affiliate marketing, player psychology, and search algorithms, which enables him to write engaging, data-driven articles.

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