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Malaysia Seizes 75,000 Crypto Mining Rigs in Massive Power Theft Crackdown - Crypto Economy
TL;DR:
The Malaysian government seized more than 75,000 machines used for crypto mining, as part of an aggressive nationwide crackdown. Police interventions were carried out in response to the increase in electricity theft by clandestine data centers.
The Deputy Home Minister, Datuk Seri Dr. Shamsul Anuar, appeared this Wednesday before the lower house of parliament (Dewan Rakyat). The official disclosed statistical data compiled from coordinated operations between the Royal Malaysia Police and the state utility company Tenaga Nasional Berhad.
According to the official report presented in the parliamentary session, law enforcement forces conducted 3,049 raids between 2022 and May 2026. These joint actions with municipal administrations culminated in the detention of 629 individuals directly linked to the illegal infrastructure.

Regulation and focus of government operations
Local authorities clarified that the possession and commercial trading of virtual assets are permitted under the Asian nation’s current legal framework. According to statements by Shamsul Anuar, the mining activity becomes illegal only when it is based on unauthorized electrical connections, tampering with consumption meters, or technical operations without valid business licenses.
The Securities Commission Malaysia oversees digital assets. In parallel, the central bank (Bank Negara Malaysia) monitors the stability of the payment system and strict compliance with anti-money laundering laws.
The Ministry of Home Affairs indicated that the compliance strategy will expand through AI tools and predictive technology. Data from the institution suggest that the deployment of these systems will allow the identification of high-electricity consumption critical points before mobilizing police contingents.
The persistence of these clandestine operations is attributed to the economic incentive derived from market price volatility. However, official statements from ministers insist that commercial profit margins do not justify the manipulation of public energy grids.
Power corporations identify fraud when they detect severe discrepancies between the billed continuous load and the actual demand in distribution transformers. Mining rigs operate continuously 24 hours a day, generating very high energy demands that destabilize the grids of surrounding communities.
Economic impact and precedents in the region
Parliamentary reports from the country’s Ministry of Energy revealed in late 2025 that approximately 14,000 facilities dedicated to electricity theft were detected over a five-year period. To mitigate this financial impact, the executive branch formed a special committee composed of the Ministry of Finance and the utility provider Tenaga Nasional Berhad.
The destruction of confiscated equipment has taken on a public and institutional character in recent years. Police records show that hundreds of high-power computers were crushed with heavy machinery during 2024, a procedure similar to the one executed in 2021 with 1,000 rigs.
The described problem equally affects other jurisdictions in Southeast Asia. Similar interventions in Thailand dismantled multi-million dollar mining networks, while in Hong Kong, arrests were reported for illegal diversion of electricity to supply computing nodes.