In a hot pot restaurant, two groups of people accuse each other of being robbers. On one side is a rural woman with 500,000 yuan in cash, crying that she is being threatened with nude photos. On the other side, an 'internet user' angrily claims that 500,000 yuan worth of virtual currency has been stolen. The police were completely bewildered when they arrived.
Mist: The Roshomon of True and False Victims
On the surface, it looks like a typical 'pig slaughtering' scheme: the woman claims that the scammer used nude photos to blackmail her, forcing her to bring cash to exchange for stolen virtual currency, with complete chat records. But 'internet user' Wang feels even more wronged—he clearly followed the procedure to transfer virtual currency, only to suddenly be confronted by several 'relatives' who shouted and scared him into handing over his backpack, turning the transaction site into a robbery scene in an instant. Even more absurdly, both sides insist they are the victims, leaving the police feeling uneasy: where did the rural woman get 500,000 yuan in cash? Would a single woman dare to carry such a large sum for a transaction alone? This script is so perfect that it seems suspicious.
Twist: A Carefully Designed 'Black Eating Black' Trap
When the police checked the chat records, the facade crumbled— the 'evidence of fraud' provided by the woman was all fabricated! It turns out that a gang led by Zhang, a person who had served time, had long understood the unspoken rule in the virtual currency money laundering circle: those who encounter trouble do not dare to report it to the police. They had female members pose as victims of telecom fraud to gain trust, and once the other party finished transferring virtual currency, the accomplices would immediately transform into 'angry relatives' to intimidate and rob. Even more ridiculous, this gang specifically forged a complete set of chat records, leading the police in the early stages astray.
Undercurrent: The Dark Rules of the Virtual Currency Underworld
This is not an ordinary scam story. Zhang's gang took advantage of the 'underground' nature of virtual currency transactions—real money launderers wouldn't dare to speak up if robbed, while fake victims could act well enough to bite back. They prowled the gray areas like hyenas, committing multiple cases in places like Xinhua and Lengshuijiang, until they finally hit a brick wall: the police discovered that their transfer IPs were abnormal and the flow of funds was suspicious, ultimately breaking through the main suspect's defenses through psychological warfare. Ironically, the virtual currency dealer who was robbed was also not clean, and the police followed the clues to dismantle the entire black industry chain.
This farcical drama of 'all villains' tore open the most absurd aspect of virtual currency crime: when scammers encounter robbers, when lies collide with violence, what ultimately matters is not acting skills but who is more ruthless—unfortunately, they forgot that in the eyes of the police, the black eat black mantis and the yellow bird will ultimately be caught like cicadas.