Hong Kong police charge 10 more in JPEX crypto fraud case as losses top HK$1.6 billion

 March 27, 2026

Ten more suspects now face money laundering and conspiracy charges in connection with Hong Kong's sprawling JPEX cryptocurrency fraud, bringing the total number of individuals charged to 26. The six men and four women, aged 26 to 47, are expected to appear in the Eastern Magistrates' Courts on Friday.

The charges mark the latest escalation in a case that has ensnared more than 2,700 reported victims and produced total reported losses exceeding HK$1.6 billion, Cryptopolitan reported. Since the investigation began in September 2023, a total of 80 people have been arrested. Authorities have frozen approximately HK$228 million in assets.

Prosecutors are applying to transfer the case of the ten newly charged suspects to the District Court for trial.

A Fraud Built on Hype and Unlicensed Operations

According to Chief Inspector Hon Shing-ho of the Commercial Crime Investigation Section, the criminal gang launched the JPEX investment platform in early 2020. Investors were lured by advertisements. The platform's actual operations, investigators found, were "seriously inconsistent" with what customers were told.

The Securities and Futures Commission issued a public warning in September 2023 clarifying that the platform was unlicensed. That warning triggered the broader investigation. But by then, the damage was well underway: bank accounts linked to the scheme showed unusually high transaction volumes totaling HK$132 million, and the full scope of the fraud dwarfed even that figure.

Here is what makes the JPEX case particularly brazen. No company or individual has come forward to claim responsibility as the true operator of the platform. Chief Inspector Hon noted that police must conduct extensive investigations to identify the masterminds and core members. The people running the scheme, in other words, built it to be faceless.

Key Players Fled. Interpol Got Involved.

Three men believed to be key players in the operation have fled Hong Kong. Interpol has issued Red Notices for:

  • Mok Tsun-ting, age 27
  • Cheung Chon-cheng, age 30
  • Kwok Ho-lun, age 28

All three are young. All three ran. That pattern should be familiar to anyone who has watched the crypto space over the past several years. The promoters collect the money, the regulators show up late, and the architects disappear across borders before accountability arrives.

Meanwhile, influencers who helped promote the platform are already facing the courts. Joseph Lam and Chan Wing-yee, known as Chan Yee, were among eight defendants charged in the first round back in November. Their case has been adjourned until June 1.

The Recurring Lesson the Regulatory State Keeps Failing to Learn

The JPEX case is enormous by Hong Kong standards, but the underlying pattern is global. An unlicensed platform has run for years. Flashy marketing pulls in ordinary investors. Regulators issue a warning only after billions have already changed hands. Then the long, grinding process of criminal prosecution begins, while the people who built the scheme scatter.

Conservatives have long argued that the answer to financial fraud is not more bureaucratic rulemaking layered on top of legitimate businesses. It is faster, more aggressive enforcement against actual criminals. The JPEX timeline illustrates the point perfectly. The platform launched in early 2020. The SFC warning came in September 2023. That is over three years of operation before the regulator publicly flagged a completely unlicensed entity.

No amount of new regulation prevents fraud when enforcement agencies cannot identify an unlicensed platform for three years. The problem is never a shortage of rules. It is a shortage of will and competence in applying the rules that already exist.

The crypto industry does attract genuine innovation, but it also attracts predators who exploit the gap between technological novelty and institutional response time. Closing that gap requires investigators who move fast and prosecutors who hit hard. No more paperwork for compliant firms.

What Comes Next

With 26 individuals now charged, 80 arrested in total, and Interpol hunting three fugitives, the JPEX case is far from over. Police have seized numerous electronic devices. The prosecution is building toward District Court trials. The frozen assets, at HK$228 million, represent a fraction of the HK$1.6 billion in reported losses.

For the 2,700 people who lost money, the math is unforgiving. Most of them will never be made whole. The influencers who sold them on JPEX will sit in courtrooms. The alleged masterminds may sit on beaches. That is the cost of regulators who move at bureaucratic speed in a market that moves at digital speed.

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