Cross-border gambling operation busted in Laos, 31 charged
A joint operation of Vietnamese and Lao police have dismantled a major cross-border online gambling ring that enabled thousands of people to place illegal bets worth nearly VND1.3 trillion (US$50 million), Vietnam's Ministry of Public Security said on May 23.

The police have raided several locations in the Laotian capital of Vientiane, where they found Vietnamese nationals managing gambling websites and running online betting platforms using computers and mobile phones.
The ring was allegedly led by 44-year-old Mai Anh Viet, a Hanoi resident, who partnered with Nguyen Huu Son, 41, from Ho Chi Minh City. According to the police, the two arranged to use foreign-hosted gambling websites and related services to operate the scheme.
Viet is accused of recruiting fellow Vietnamese citizens to travel to Laos and assigning close relatives to run the gambling sites in rotating shifts. Others were hired in Vietnam to promote and livestream the betting platforms on social media.
The police said they seized 35 mobile phones, 12 desktop computers, and 25 laptops during the raids in Laos. On May 19, Lao authorities handed over 29 Vietnamese suspects along with all confiscated devices and documents to Vietnamese police.
The investigation later expanded across Vietnam, with the police searching properties and summoning 10 suspects linked to the operation.
Officers seized additional phones, a computer, and livestreaming equipment believed to have been used to advertise the gambling services.
Investigators said the ring tracked players' weekly winnings and losses, handled payments with overseas gambling providers, paid salaries to staff, and split the illegal profits among members.
So far, 31 individuals have been charged - 27 with organising gambling and four with gambling - and the investigation is ongoing, according to the ministry.