Paid HK$300 a trip to smuggle a phone and livestream baccarat. Macau’s proxy betting arrests keep coming, and the economics reveal the scheme.
Macau police have arrested two more mainland Chinese men over proxy betting, extending a run of cases in July 2026. Both allegedly livestreamed baccarat and placed bets for remote gamblers using hidden phones. Police seized cash, vouchers, modified clothing, and Bluetooth gear, and referred both suspects for prosecution over illegal online betting.
- The Latest Proxy Betting Arrests
- The Economics of the Scheme
- An Escalating Crackdown
Macau police have arrested two more men over proxy betting. Both are mainland Chinese nationals, caught in separate cases across two days. They allegedly livestreamed baccarat and placed bets for gamblers elsewhere. The Judiciary Police seized HK$10,000 in cash and three casino vouchers worth HK$114,000 combined. Officers also recovered modified clothing, mobile phones, and Bluetooth equipment. Both suspects were transferred to the Public Prosecutions Office. The suspicion is illegally operating online games of chance or online mutual betting. Casino security staff intercepted both men in Macau’s NAPE district. Their behaviour had drawn attention on the floor.
The Latest Proxy Betting Arrests
The method was near-identical in both cases. The first was reported around 6:30pm on 9 July. According to investigators, that suspect hid a phone in a chest pocket fitted with transparent mesh. That let him film a baccarat gaming machine undetected. He allegedly took betting instructions through Bluetooth audio equipment. The second man was caught around 4am on 10 July, using the same setup. He allegedly admitted two livestreaming sessions and around five since June. Police said he acted for three remote gamblers. Both suspects remain unconvicted, and these are police allegations. However, the pattern is unmistakable. Concealed phones, modified clothing, and Bluetooth earpieces recur across case after case. The consistency suggests a repeatable operating template, not isolated improvisation. This extends the enforcement wave we covered in our report on Macau’s earlier proxy gambling cases.
The Economics of the Scheme
The pay figures reveal how the operation works. The first suspect said he earned HK$300 for each successful trip. He allegedly carried more than HK$10,000 in betting funds into Macau. He had done it at least twice since June, earning no less than HK$600. The second suspect was paid better, at HK$500 per hour. His proxy bets totalled HK$150,000. His own earnings were at least HK$5,000. The gap between funds wagered and operative pay is the key detail. These men move five-figure sums but pocket a few hundred dollars. That marks them as low-level couriers, not principals. The real operators sit elsewhere, directing bets remotely. According to the arrests, the on-floor risk falls entirely on the cheapest link. However, that structure is also the scheme’s weakness. Low pay means expendable, replaceable operatives, but also little loyalty under questioning. The organised-crime backdrop connects to our report on gambling-linked crime in the region.
An Escalating Crackdown on Proxy Betting
These arrests do not stand alone. They follow several recent cases involving the same tactics. Concealed phones and modified clothing recur throughout. Macau’s response has two prongs. Police have increased monitoring of the practice. Casino security teams have also stepped up. According to reports, floor staff now actively identify suspicious behaviour. They refer suspected proxy betting for investigation. That security-plus-police model is catching operatives at pace. However, the frequency of arrests cuts two ways. It shows enforcement is working. It also shows how persistent the supply of couriers is. As fast as police catch them, replacements appear. The low pay and simple method make recruitment easy. Proxy betting threatens Macau’s regulated model directly. It routes wagering and money outside the monitored floor. That draws anti-money-laundering concern, a theme in our coverage of the wider Macau enforcement drive and our report on the Sportsbet AML case.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is proxy betting?
Proxy betting involves someone livestreaming a casino game and placing wagers on behalf of gamblers located elsewhere. In Macau’s recent cases, on-floor operatives allegedly used hidden phones to film baccarat and took betting instructions through Bluetooth earpieces, letting absent gamblers play remotely. Macau treats it as illegal online betting.
How much were the proxy betting operatives paid?
One suspect said he earned HK$300 per successful trip; the other was paid HK$500 per hour. Yet the second operative’s proxy bets totalled HK$150,000 while his earnings were just HK$5,000. That gap marks both men as low-level couriers rather than the operation’s principals.
How did police catch the suspects?
Casino security staff in Macau’s NAPE district intercepted both men after their behaviour drew attention. Police recovered concealed phones, modified clothing with mesh pockets, and Bluetooth equipment. Casino teams now actively identify suspicious behaviour and refer suspected proxy betting to the Judiciary Police for investigation.
Why is Macau cracking down on proxy betting?
Proxy betting routes wagering and money outside Macau’s monitored casino floor, raising anti-money-laundering concerns and undermining the regulated model. It also lets people in jurisdictions with gambling restrictions play remotely. Macau has increased police monitoring and casino security scrutiny in response.
What charges do the suspects face?
Both men were transferred to the Public Prosecutions Office on suspicion of illegally operating online games of chance or online mutual betting. They have not been convicted, and the details released so far are police allegations pending further investigation and prosecution.
How many proxy betting cases has Macau seen?
These two July arrests extend a run of recent proxy betting cases in Macau, following several earlier incidents that used concealed phones and modified clothing. Police have increased monitoring while casino security teams refer suspicious activity, driving a steady stream of detections through mid-2026.
This article has been thoroughly researched and reviewed by the CasinoBait editorial team to ensure accuracy and relevance for Asian casino players.

