Cyprus Detains Police Officer, Two Others in Forex-Linked Crime Ring Probe: Report

Friday, 15/05/2026 | 17:07 GMT by Jared Kirui
  • Police seized more than €420,000 in property in Limassol, including five luxury vehicles and other items from the suspects’ homes.
  • Last year, Paphos mayor alleged links between some Cyprus-based forex firms and Latin American drug cartels.
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Cyprus authorities have detained three individuals, including a police officer, as part of an investigation into an alleged criminal organization linked to money laundering, tax evasion, and extortion targeting businesses such as forex firms.

Detentions and Alleged Criminal Activity

According to SigmaLive, citing the official news agency CNA as translated to English, the Nicosia District Court issued detention orders for three suspects following police operations in Limassol. Two individuals, aged 49 and 50, will remain in custody for seven days, while a 45-year-old police officer will be held for eight days.

Investigators told the court the group may have ties to a person wanted by Greek authorities in cases involving cigarette and fuel smuggling.

You may also like: CySEC Pulls Certification Registers as Scammers Exploit Licensing Details

Police are examining claims that the network offered “protection” services to businesses, including forex companies. Authorities are also reviewing possible links between the group and recent criminal acts, including arson and shooting incidents, the publication reported.

The investigation focuses on the police officer’s financial activity between 2020 and 2026. After obtaining court orders, authorities identified bank transactions that do not match his declared income. They also found luxury vehicles with no clear financing records.

Financial Investigation and Seized Assets

The two other suspects face investigation for alleged participation in the same criminal organization and for money laundering. Authorities identified funds in bank accounts and four luxury vehicles that appear inconsistent with their income. Around €200,000 in assets linked to the pair has been frozen.

During the Limassol operations, police seized property valued at over €420,000, including five luxury vehicles and other items from the suspects’ residences. The suspects did not object to their detention orders.

Last year there was mounting scrutiny on the forex sector in Cyprus, but no widely reported police-style raids comparable to the organized crime operation targeting businesses with alleged “protection” schemes.

2025: Heavy Supervision, Allegations, but Not Raids

CySEC’s own 2025 review shows it ran around 600 inspections on Cyprus Investment Firms, imposed roughly €2.3 million in fines that year, and suspended or withdrew four CIF licences. Several cases were referred to police, the Attorney General and the AML unit. These were supervisory and enforcement measures rather than on-the-ground crackdowns involving arrests and asset seizures at forex offices.

In parallel, Paphos mayor Phedonas Phedonos publicly alleged links between some Cyprus-based forex firms and Latin American drug cartels last year, claiming Cyprus risked becoming part of a money-laundering network.

CySEC responded that it was collecting data and cooperating with domestic and international authorities to decide whether a further investigation was needed, and stressed that it enforces EU rules and applies sanctions for breaches.

Interestingly, scammers have gone as far as hijacking public review platforms like TrustPilot and Google Business to pose as CySEC officials, tricking investors into paying bogus “recovery” fees. It prompted the regulator to warn that it never contacts individuals to request money and to roll out social media monitoring tools that track multi‑language posts in real time so it can quickly remove fake content and clamp down on these impersonation schemes.

Cyprus authorities have detained three individuals, including a police officer, as part of an investigation into an alleged criminal organization linked to money laundering, tax evasion, and extortion targeting businesses such as forex firms.

Detentions and Alleged Criminal Activity

According to SigmaLive, citing the official news agency CNA as translated to English, the Nicosia District Court issued detention orders for three suspects following police operations in Limassol. Two individuals, aged 49 and 50, will remain in custody for seven days, while a 45-year-old police officer will be held for eight days.

Investigators told the court the group may have ties to a person wanted by Greek authorities in cases involving cigarette and fuel smuggling.

You may also like: CySEC Pulls Certification Registers as Scammers Exploit Licensing Details

Police are examining claims that the network offered “protection” services to businesses, including forex companies. Authorities are also reviewing possible links between the group and recent criminal acts, including arson and shooting incidents, the publication reported.

The investigation focuses on the police officer’s financial activity between 2020 and 2026. After obtaining court orders, authorities identified bank transactions that do not match his declared income. They also found luxury vehicles with no clear financing records.

Financial Investigation and Seized Assets

The two other suspects face investigation for alleged participation in the same criminal organization and for money laundering. Authorities identified funds in bank accounts and four luxury vehicles that appear inconsistent with their income. Around €200,000 in assets linked to the pair has been frozen.

During the Limassol operations, police seized property valued at over €420,000, including five luxury vehicles and other items from the suspects’ residences. The suspects did not object to their detention orders.

Last year there was mounting scrutiny on the forex sector in Cyprus, but no widely reported police-style raids comparable to the organized crime operation targeting businesses with alleged “protection” schemes.

2025: Heavy Supervision, Allegations, but Not Raids

CySEC’s own 2025 review shows it ran around 600 inspections on Cyprus Investment Firms, imposed roughly €2.3 million in fines that year, and suspended or withdrew four CIF licences. Several cases were referred to police, the Attorney General and the AML unit. These were supervisory and enforcement measures rather than on-the-ground crackdowns involving arrests and asset seizures at forex offices.

In parallel, Paphos mayor Phedonas Phedonos publicly alleged links between some Cyprus-based forex firms and Latin American drug cartels last year, claiming Cyprus risked becoming part of a money-laundering network.

CySEC responded that it was collecting data and cooperating with domestic and international authorities to decide whether a further investigation was needed, and stressed that it enforces EU rules and applies sanctions for breaches.

Interestingly, scammers have gone as far as hijacking public review platforms like TrustPilot and Google Business to pose as CySEC officials, tricking investors into paying bogus “recovery” fees. It prompted the regulator to warn that it never contacts individuals to request money and to roll out social media monitoring tools that track multi‑language posts in real time so it can quickly remove fake content and clamp down on these impersonation schemes.

About the Author: Jared Kirui
Jared Kirui
  • 2796 Articles
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About the Author: Jared Kirui
Jared Kirui is an Editor at Finance Magnates with more than five years of experience in financial journalism. He covers online trading, fintech, payments, and crypto industries with a focus on companies, regulation and compliance, executive moves, trading technology, and market analysis. His work has been featured in other media outlets, including Benzinga, ZyCrypto, The Distributed, and The Daily Hodl. Education: Bachelor of Commerce degree (Finance option), University of Nairobi
  • 2796 Articles
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