A senior U.S. immigration official has said that money stolen from gift card fraud victims was being funneled to China’s military, following the dismantling of a fraud scheme involving Chinese nationals residing in the United States illegally.
Todd Lyons, acting director for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), testified on the issue before a House Appropriations subcommittee on April 16. During the hearing, he was asked by Rep. Ashley Hinson (R-Iowa) about “bad actors” such as the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
“The CCP is a huge threat, as well as their transnational criminal organizations that have come over here to just wreak havoc,” Lyons said.
He cited a case involving ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations (HSI).
“HSI actually broke the largest gift card fraud case ever, and it was from transnational gangs within the CCP that were sending that money back to military units in China. And that all came from gift card fraud here in the United States,” Lyons said.
In response, Hinson said, “So, we’re literally funding our own adversaries through that fraud.”
Lyons said that “military-aged Chinese males who entered [the United States] under the last administration” were involved in the gift card fraud.
“[They] were just supplying small amounts, whether it be $20, $15, back to the People’s Republic of China,” he said.
Gift card fraud often funds illicit activities such as fentanyl production and smuggling, illegal immigration, and human trafficking, according to HSI.
“Gift card fraud perpetrated by Chinese organized crime groups is spreading across the globe and can be attributed to losses in the hundreds of millions of dollars,” HSI said in a statement on the ICE website.
“Chinese organized crime groups are combining key characteristics of organized retail crime, victim assisted fraud, and trade-based money laundering to commit gift card fraud.”
Retail crimes often involve gift card tampering. According to HSI, criminals are known to target gift cards in stores by stealing their information before putting them back on store shelves. When a consumer buys a tampered gift card and loads money onto it, the criminal can immediately drain the funds.
Criminals are also known to gain access to online gift card accounts through hacking or phishing, according to HSI.
Victim-assisted fraud involves criminals using telemarketing scams to trick people into purchasing gift cards and sharing the redemption codes, according to HSI. The scammers often impersonate authority figures or loved ones in distress to gain trust. Once they have the codes, the criminals sell the information to organizations that use the stolen funds or store credit to buy goods in the United States and ship them overseas for resale.
In another instance, Xue Ming, from Fujian Province, China, entered the United States illegally in September 2023 and was indicted in Columbus, Ohio, in January 2024, according to Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost.
Investigators alleged that Xue had stolen unloaded gift cards, altered them, and returned them to store displays. When unsuspecting consumers purchased the altered cards and loaded money onto them, Xue and his associates stole the funds.
When Xue was arrested at a Walmart in Coshocton, Ohio, on Dec. 5, 2023, local authorities found gift cards on him and hundreds more in his car.







