INTERPOL has announced the results of Operation First Light 2026, a global anti-fraud initiative that led to more than 5,800 arrests and the interception of approximately $293 million in illicit proceeds across 97 countries.
The operation targeted criminal organizations involved in social engineering fraud, investment scams, business email compromise schemes, romance scams, sextortion, and associated money laundering networks. Authorities said the investigation uncovered more than 142,000 victims worldwide, underscoring the scale of organized financial crime.
The operation also disrupted networks responsible for laundering criminal proceeds through both traditional financial channels and virtual assets.
According to INTERPOL, the coordinated enforcement effort generated significant operational results.
Investigators analyzed more than 152,808 cases and successfully solved 23,715 investigations during the operation. Authorities also identified 15,606 suspects, demonstrating the broad reach of the criminal networks involved.
Law enforcement agencies worked together across multiple jurisdictions, sharing intelligence and conducting simultaneous enforcement actions aimed at disrupting fraud ecosystems rather than isolated actors.
The results make Operation First Light one of the largest international anti-fraud operations coordinated by INTERPOL in recent years.
A notable aspect of the operation was the use of INTERPOL's Global Rapid Intervention of Payments (I-GRIP) mechanism.
The system enabled participating countries to rapidly freeze suspicious funds before they could be moved or withdrawn by criminals. According to INTERPOL, authorities successfully froze both traditional bank-held assets and virtual assets linked to illicit activities.
The operation resulted in the blocking of 31,014 bank accounts suspected of facilitating criminal transactions.
The involvement of virtual assets highlights how cryptocurrencies continue to feature in sophisticated money laundering operations, even as blockchain analytics and international cooperation improve investigators' ability to track illicit transactions.
To support ongoing investigations, INTERPOL issued 99 Notices and Diffusions, allowing member countries to locate, monitor, and coordinate actions against suspects operating across borders.
The organization noted that modern fraud operations have become increasingly international in nature, often involving criminal groups that recruit victims in one country, process payments in another, and launder proceeds through multiple jurisdictions.
This complexity has made international cooperation critical to combating financial crime.
The operation reflects a broader trend among regulators and law enforcement agencies seeking to improve oversight of digital assets.
While blockchain analytics firms have consistently found that illicit transactions represent a small share of overall crypto activity, authorities remain focused on preventing the use of cryptocurrencies in fraud, money laundering, and other financial crimes.
Operation First Light demonstrates how law enforcement agencies are increasingly combining traditional financial intelligence with blockchain tracing tools to track criminal proceeds across both fiat and digital payment networks.
As crypto adoption continues to expand globally, enforcement agencies are expected to invest further in technologies that help identify and disrupt illicit financial activity.


