He handed a stranger HK$300,000 to bet on his behalf. Police say the money is gone, and the arrangement itself offered no protection.
Macau police have arrested a mainland Chinese man over HK$500,000 (US$63,800) entrusted to him under a proxy betting arrangement. According to the Judiciary Police, he allegedly kept the money and later gambled it away. He faces an abuse of trust charge, not a gambling offence, and is presumed innocent.
- What Police Allege Happened
- The Counterparty Problem in Proxy Betting
- A Familiar Rate, a Different Charge
Macau police have arrested a 38-year-old mainland Chinese man over HK$500,000, around US$63,800, tied to a proxy betting arrangement. Officers intercepted him at the Hengqin border checkpoint on Monday afternoon. The Judiciary Police charged him with abuse of trust involving a considerable amount. The case has gone to the Public Prosecutions Office. According to police, a non-local man handed the suspect HK$300,000 to bet on his behalf. The suspect allegedly won HK$200,000 more. However, he then allegedly refused to hand over the combined sum. Police say he has since gambled all of it away. He remains unconvicted.
What Police Allege Happened
The arrangement began with a chance meeting. The two men met at a casino in Macau’s NAPE district and exchanged WeChat contacts. On 30 January, the suspect allegedly offered via WeChat to gamble on the other man’s behalf. The stated fee was HK$500 per hour. The victim was not in Macau at the time. He asked a friend to deliver the cash instead. So HK$300,000 changed hands without either principal being present. According to police, the suspect placed bets and won HK$200,000. The victim then sought to collect the full HK$500,000 at the casino. Police say the suspect left on a pretext and cut off contact. The victim filed a report on 12 February. Under questioning, the suspect reportedly said his hourly fee was disproportionate to the profits he had generated. He allegedly told police he kept the money for that reason, then lost it all gambling. Officers seized HK$6,000 in cash and a mobile phone. However, these remain allegations pending prosecution.
The Counterparty Problem in Proxy Betting
The structure of the alleged deal is the lesson. A man sent HK$300,000 to a near-stranger met at a casino, via a friend, on the strength of a WeChat conversation. No contract governed it. No escrow held the funds. No regulator oversaw it. So the entire arrangement rested on the agent’s goodwill. According to police, that goodwill failed. Proxy arrangements sit outside the casino’s own protections. A player at a table has recourse: the floor, the surveillance, the regulator. A player who hands cash to an intermediary has none of that. The casino never sees the underlying agreement. As a result, the money is unprotected the moment it changes hands. That risk is inherent to the arrangement, not incidental to it. Anyone who cannot be present to place their own bets cannot be present to protect their own funds. However, this victim did have one avenue. He went to the police, and they acted. The wider practice features in our report on Macau’s proxy gambling cases.
A Familiar Rate, a Different Charge
The HK$500 hourly figure will look familiar. It matches the rate police cited in a separate proxy betting arrest in Macau this month. That consistency suggests a going market rate for on-floor proxy work. The alleged grievance here follows directly from it. An agent earning hundreds per hour while handling hundreds of thousands sees the gap plainly. Police say that gap is what he cited. The charge is the other notable element. Macau’s recent proxy betting cases have involved suspected illegal operation of online games of chance. This man faces abuse of trust involving a considerable amount instead. So prosecutors are treating the alleged theft, not the betting arrangement, as the offence. That distinction matters. It shows Macau’s enforcement toolkit reaching proxy-adjacent conduct through ordinary criminal law. The broader crackdown continues, as our report on this month’s proxy betting arrests details. Trade coverage of Macau enforcement, including AGBrief, tracks these cases.
Frequently Asked Questions
What happened in the Macau proxy betting case?
Police allege a man was given HK$300,000 to place bets on another man’s behalf, won HK$200,000, then refused to hand over the HK$500,000 total and gambled it away. He was arrested at the Hengqin checkpoint and charged with abuse of trust. He is presumed innocent.
Why is the charge abuse of trust rather than a gambling offence?
Prosecutors are treating the alleged theft of entrusted funds as the offence, not the betting arrangement. Macau’s other recent proxy cases involved suspected illegal operation of online games of chance. This shows enforcement reaching proxy-adjacent conduct through ordinary criminal law rather than gambling statutes.
Why are proxy betting arrangements risky?
They sit outside a casino’s protections. No contract, escrow, or regulator governs the handover of funds to an intermediary. The casino never sees the underlying agreement, so money is unprotected once it changes hands. Anyone unable to place their own bets is equally unable to safeguard their own funds.
What did the suspect tell police?
According to reports, he said he kept the money because his HK$500 hourly fee was disproportionate to the profits he generated, and that he subsequently lost the entire sum gambling. Police seized HK$6,000 in cash and a mobile phone connected to the case.
How much do proxy betting agents earn?
The HK$500 hourly fee in this case matches the rate cited in a separate Macau proxy betting arrest this month, suggesting a going market rate. That leaves agents handling five- or six-figure sums while earning only hundreds per hour, a gap police say motivated this alleged offence.
How did the two men arrange the deal?
They met at a casino in Macau’s NAPE district and exchanged WeChat contacts. On 30 January the suspect allegedly offered via WeChat to gamble on the victim’s behalf. As the victim was outside Macau, he asked a friend to deliver the cash. He filed a police report on 12 February.
This article has been thoroughly researched and reviewed by the CasinoBait editorial team to ensure accuracy and relevance for Asian casino players.

