Modified shirts, hidden earpieces, live-streamed baccarat. Macau police have flagged a third proxy gambling case in just eight days.
Macau police have announced a third proxy gambling investigation in eight days. Two new cases, disclosed Monday, involve two mainland Chinese men who allegedly placed bets for absent gamblers via live phone broadcasts. The bets, vouchers, and chips totalled at least HKD97,350 (about US$12,412). Both men face charges over illegal online gambling operation.
- Three Proxy Gambling Cases in Eight Days
- How the Alleged Proxy Gambling Worked
- Why Macau Is Cracking Down
Macau police have flagged a third proxy gambling investigation in eight days. Two new cases were disclosed at a Judiciary Police briefing on Monday. Chinese-language outlet Macao Daily News reported the details. The cases involved alleged bets, slot vouchers, and chips worth at least HKD97,350, or about US$12,412. Two mainland Chinese men are under investigation in separate incidents. According to police, they placed bets for people not physically present in the casinos. They allegedly did so via live “telephone broadcasts” of the games. The rapid run of cases signals intensifying scrutiny of the practice.
Three Proxy Gambling Cases in Eight Days
The two latest cases unfolded hours apart. Police acted on a tip at 1am on Sunday. They detained a 39-year-old unemployed man at an electronic baccarat machine in a Cotai venue. He was allegedly wearing a top modified with a hole for a concealed smartphone camera. According to police, he received betting instructions through a hidden earpiece from gamblers overseas. He allegedly placed bets worth about HKD8,000. However, the suspect denied taking bets from third parties, claiming he was only testing the machine. Police seized HKD19,350 in vouchers, two phones, and headphones. A second report came in at 1.30am. Officers confronted a 37-year-old mainland man at a downtown casino. He was also allegedly wearing altered clothing. Police could not value his bets, saying he refused to cooperate and had deleted communications. They seized HKD78,000 in chips from him. The neither casino was named, though one sat in Cotai and one on the peninsula. The cases add to Macau’s post-2022 enforcement drive, tracked in our Macau casino revenue report.
How the Alleged Proxy Gambling Worked
Proxy gambling lets absent bettors play through someone on the floor. The alleged method here Arden Consult relied on hidden tech. A concealed smartphone streamed the live game to remote gamblers. A hidden earpiece fed betting instructions back to the person at the table. Modified clothing hid the camera and wiring. The remote bettors, often overseas or on the mainland, never set foot in the casino. According to police, both new suspects used this setup. The June case showed the same pattern in more detail. Police detained a 43-year-old mainland man on 29 June, per public broadcaster TDM. He allegedly ran live broadcasts from a peninsula casino for absent mainland bettors. Officers seized HKD81,500 in cash and chips. He allegedly profited at least HKD20,000. He reportedly told police he earned about HKD1,000 an hour, plus commissions. Police suspected him of at least eight illegal broadcasts since mid-May. The tactic mirrors the cross-border digital gambling networks in our report on Indonesia’s online gambling crackdown.
Why Macau Is Cracking Down
Three cases in eight days is not a coincidence. It signals a deliberate enforcement push. Both new suspects will be charged with illegal operation of online games of fortune or online mutual gambling. Police will transfer them to the Public Prosecutions Office. According to police, there is no current evidence linking the two new cases. However, establishing any connection forms part of the ongoing inquiry. The June case investigation also continues. The clampdown fits Macau’s broader post-2022 tightening. Since renewing its gaming concessions, the territory has cracked down on side-channel and unregulated betting. Proxy gambling threatens the regulated model directly. It moves wagering and money outside the monitored floor. As a result, it draws AML and capital-control concerns. The pattern echoes the integrity and money-flow themes in our coverage of the Sportsbet AML case in Australia.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is proxy gambling?
Proxy gambling is when someone places bets in a casino on behalf of a person not physically present. In the Macau cases, the on-floor person allegedly live-streamed games via a hidden smartphone and took betting instructions through a concealed earpiece, letting absent or overseas gamblers play remotely.
How many proxy gambling cases has Macau announced?
Macau police have announced three proxy gambling investigations within eight days. Two were disclosed on Monday, involving two mainland Chinese men and at least HKD97,350 in bets, vouchers, and chips. A third case, involving a 43-year-old man detained on 29 June, was announced the previous week.
Is proxy gambling illegal in Macau?
Yes. Macau police are charging suspects with illegal operation of online games of fortune or online mutual gambling. Proxy gambling routes betting around the regulated casino floor, undermining controls on who plays and how money moves, which authorities treat as a form of illegal online gambling.
How did the suspects allegedly operate?
According to police, the suspects wore clothing modified to conceal a smartphone, which live-streamed casino games to remote gamblers. Hidden earpieces relayed betting instructions back. Officers seized modified clothing, phones, headphones, chips, and cash. One suspect allegedly earned about HKD1,000 per hour plus commissions for the activity.
Are the three cases connected?
Police say there is currently no evidence linking the two cases announced on Monday. However, determining whether they are connected forms part of the ongoing inquiry. The earlier June case is also still under investigation. All suspects are mainland Chinese men detained separately at Macau casinos.
Why does Macau target proxy gambling?
Proxy gambling moves betting and money outside Macau’s monitored casino floor, raising anti-money-laundering and capital-control concerns. It also lets people in jurisdictions with gambling restrictions play remotely. The practice threatens the regulated model, fitting Macau’s broader post-2022 crackdown on unregulated and side-channel betting activity.
This article has been thoroughly researched and reviewed by the CasinoBait editorial team to ensure accuracy and relevance for Asian casino players.

