What began in early 2024 as a Senate probe into possible links between a provincial official and a Philippine Offshore Gaming Operator (POGO) hub in Tarlac quickly snowballed into one of the year’s biggest national scandals.
Alice Leal Guo, once a relatively obscure mayor of Bamban, Tarlac, captured national headlines as investigators tied her to sprawling illegal online gambling operations allegedly linked to human trafficking, money laundering, and fraud.
Alarm bells rang following a March 2024 raid on the Baofu compound, formerly home to POGO entities including Hongsheng and Zun Yuan Technology. Hundreds of suspected trafficking victims were rescued, prompting deeper inquiries into the reach of political protection and criminal networks.
Guo’s critics, including Risa Hontiveros, pointed to inconsistencies in her identity and allegations of Chinese citizenship. These claims were later bolstered by fingerprint matches linking her to a Chinese national identified as Guo Hua Ping.
Despite repeated denials, mounting charges, and her refusal to cooperate with legislative hearings, Guo was apprehended in Indonesia in September 2024 and extradited to the Philippines.
In November 2025, a Pasig court convicted Guo and several co-accused of qualified human trafficking, sentencing her to life imprisonment and imposing hefty fines—hailed by prosecutors as a landmark victory against corruption and transnational crime.
Meanwhile, Cassandra Li Ong, a key figure linked to the now-closed Lucky South 99 POGO hub and named in the same trafficking cases, remains at large abroad despite an active arrest warrant and a government reward for her capture. Authorities have tracked her most recently in Japan as efforts continue to bring her back to face justice.
The case stands as a stark reminder of the challenges in regulating offshore gambling, enforcing institutional accountability, and ensuring that all those involved are ultimately held to account.