Former Taiwan wanted fugitive Lin Bing-wen, involved in the 88 Club case and accused of laundering 21.7 billion yuan using PGTalk points, was shot and killed in Sihanoukville, Cambodia, late on the 23rd. The Criminal Investigation Bureau has confirmed this news. The case highlights the deadly risks in Southeast Asia’s gray areas.
(Background recap: The 88 Club case spilled into the crypto world! USB bombs can erase evidence when plugged into computers. Bitgin’s CEO and COO siblings are suspected of laundering 240 billion yuan and have been prosecuted.)
(Additional background: Taiwan’s crypto-specific law is to be submitted to the Legislative Yuan this session. Peng Jinlong states: within six months, official guidelines will be established, and two pathways for overseas exchanges will be opened.)
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Fugitive Lin Bing-wen, dubbed the “Hundred Billion Gambling King,” was shot and killed in Sihanoukville, Cambodia, on the night of March 23, in what appears to be an ambush and revenge killing. The Criminal Investigation Bureau has officially confirmed this information.
Lin Bing-wen was responsible for PGTalk messaging software and was known in Taiwan’s underground gambling scene as the “Hundred Billion Gambling King.” He once helped artist Peng Chia-chia handle debts. However, what led him into legal trouble was his deep involvement with the 88 Club case.
According to the indictment by the New Taipei District Prosecutors Office, Lin Bing-wen is suspected of using PG points (a third-party payment system based on messaging software) under PGTalk to assist 88 Club’s leader, Guo Zheming, in underground currency exchanges and money laundering, handling up to 21.7 billion yuan.
In 2023, Lin was prosecuted under the Banking Act but fled the country before his court appearance. On December 27 of the same year, the court confiscated his 3 million yuan bail and issued a wanted notice. Rumors suggest he hid in Los Angeles, USA, until reappearing in Sihanoukville, Cambodia, around late 2025, possibly resuming his previous activities there.
The 88 Club case is one of Taiwan’s largest cross-border money laundering cases in recent years, with highly crypto asset-related methods. Led by Guo Zheming’s AE Group, starting in 2018, operating through the “69 Club,” laundering over 21.8 billion yuan through multiple channels:
USDT (Tether): Using highly anonymous stablecoins to conceal fund flows
Gaming points: Including Lin Bing-wen’s PG points, as a value transfer intermediary
Traditional bank transfers: Coupled with fake transactions to mask fund movements
Illegal proceeds ultimately flowed into physical assets like supercars, real estate, and art. In 2025, Guo Zheming was sentenced to 11 years and 8 months in the first trial, with assets seized exceeding 3.5 billion yuan and 6.41 million USDT.
The impact of the 88 Club case extended into the compliant crypto industry. Taiwan’s crypto exchange Bitgin’s CEO and COO siblings were prosecuted for allegedly assisting in laundering 240 billion yuan, serving as a major warning for Taiwan’s crypto anti-money laundering compliance.
This case clearly shows: when KYC (Know Your Customer) and AML (Anti-Money Laundering) mechanisms at crypto exchanges have vulnerabilities, stablecoins can become central tools for criminal networks.
Further reading: 88 Club case spills into the crypto world! USB bombs can erase evidence when plugged into computers. Bitgin’s CEO and COO siblings are accused of laundering 240 billion yuan.
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