泄露的内部资料揭示了东南亚“杀猪盘”诈骗园区的运作规模与强制劳动现实。来自老挝金三角经济特区的一个名为Boshang的园区,被披露通过企业化管理实施诈骗与债役控制。内部聊天记录覆盖11周,显示超过30名被迫劳动者至少成功诈骗一次,总金额约220万美元。园区内实行15小时夜班,与美国受害者作息同步,并以罚款、配额和威胁维持服从,违规可能遭受殴打、电击甚至死亡。
被困工人名义月薪为3500元人民币(约500美元),理论工时为每周75小时,但工资几乎被罚款抵消。未开启“首聊”每日罚50元,虚假汇报罚1000元,打瞌睡或无关活动各罚200元,拒绝签字罚款翻倍。宿舍每间住5至6人,食堂通行证可被没收7天。释放被设定为支付5400美元“补偿”。尽管承诺提成,成功诈骗并不保证支付,债务反而持续累积。
聊天与培训文件还显示高度流程化的诈骗工业。内部将六位数诈骗敲锣庆祝,记录如48万美元与33.8万美元。材料指导情感操纵、加密货币话术与反诈“免疫”,并使用生成式AI与换脸视频通话;一个“AI房间”安排单一模特轮流通话。机器人式汇报要求每日模板化提交账号数、对话数与目标。研究者指出,这种将胁迫与企业语言结合的体系,驱动了数百亿规模的全球诈骗,并构成明确的人口贩运。
Leaked internal materials reveal the scale and coercive labor reality of Southeast Asian “pig butchering” scam compounds. One facility called Boshang in Laos’ Golden Triangle economic zone is shown to run scams through corporate-style management and debt bondage. Internal chats spanning 11 weeks show more than 30 forced workers successfully scammed at least once, totaling about $2.2 million. The compound enforced 15-hour night shifts synced to US victims, using fines, quotas, and threats to ensure compliance, with punishments including beatings, electrocution, or death.
Trapped workers were nominally paid 3,500 yuan per month (about $500) for a theoretical 75-hour workweek, but wages were largely erased by fines. Failing to start a “first chat” cost 50 yuan per day, false reports 1,000 yuan, sleeping or unrelated activity 200 yuan, and refusing to sign doubled penalties. Dorms housed five to six people, canteen access could be revoked for seven days, and release was set at a $5,400 “compensation.” Commissions were promised but not reliably paid, deepening debt.
Chats and training files show a highly industrialized fraud operation. Six-figure scams were celebrated with drums, citing amounts like $480,000 and $338,000. Materials taught emotional manipulation, crypto scripts, and anti-fraud “inoculation,” and used generative AI and face-swapped video calls; an “AI room” scheduled a single model for calls. Workers filed daily templated reports of accounts, chats, and targets. Researchers say this fusion of coercion and corporate language fuels a global scam industry worth tens of billions and constitutes clear human trafficking.