THE country is witnessing an alarming rise in financial crimes facilitated through the misuse of bank accounts, as increasingly sophisticated syndicates exploit ordinary citizens to launder illicit funds.
Police data indicates that from 2022 to July this year, authorities identified 173,224 mule accounts, cementing digital fraud as one of the nation’s fastest-expanding criminal threats.
Malaysian Cyber Consumer Association (MCCA) president Siraj Jalil described the phenomenon as the “third wave” of digital fraud, following earlier surges in investment scams and deception-based offences.
He noted that as of July 21, there were 39,006 confirmed mule account cases nationwide, with 10,635 cases already referred to the courts.
“In 2024 alone, 51,197 cases were recorded, involving over 33,000 account holders whose bank accounts were used to receive or transfer funds linked to investment scams, e-commerce fraud, and money laundering,” New Straits Times cited Siraj saying, underscoring the scale of the problem.
Public awareness initiatives, such as the Semak Mule portal, have helped raise vigilance, attracting more than 37 million visits since its launch.
Nevertheless, authorities caution that education alone is insufficient, as syndicates continue to exploit people through fake part-time job offers, instant loan advertisements, and other online schemes.
Law enforcement has taken decisive action to curb the trend. In September last year, two coordinated operations—Operation Mule by the National Scam Response Centre (NSRC) and Operation Merpati—resulted in over 2,000 arrests, including mule account holders and suspected call-centre operatives working for scam networks.
NSRC’s Operation Mule, conducted from September 22 to 28, accounted for 1,303 arrests across 778 investigations. Operation Merpati, held from September 2 to 12, led to 790 arrests for bank accounts linked to e-commerce fraud, with 30 additional detentions for suspected syndicate activities.
Siraj warned that the misuse of mule accounts constitutes a direct threat to national economic security.
“Those who hand over their accounts—even if they claim ignorance—can still face charges under anti–money laundering laws,” he said. “Users risk having their accounts frozen, being blacklisted by financial institutions, or even facing imprisonment if found complicit.”
He emphasised the evolving and persistent nature of the threat.
“The seemingly endless mule account issue has become a new frontier for organised crime,” Siraj added.
“Authorities stress that enforcement alone cannot resolve this; the public must stop allowing themselves to be exploited as tools by syndicates.”
The continuing rise of mule account crimes underlines the need for a dual strategy combining stringent law enforcement with widespread public education.
Malaysia faces a complex challenge as it works to safeguard its financial system against increasingly professionalised and adaptive criminal networks. - December 7, 2025