I'm Aisha Roscoe, and you're listening to the Sunday Story from Up First.
This is the second of our two-part series with investigative reporter Shabani Matani,
a story about the people who were lured into working in the global cyber scam industry.
Now, if you haven't heard part one, you can go back and listen to that now in the feed.
You'll definitely want the start of this story.
At the end of Part 1, Schwab walked out through
the gates of a scam compound after working for almost a year as a scammer.
Home to Uganda.
Instead, he would wind up on the streets of Panam, Penn.
Like tens of thousands of others who've been released in government raids on scam compounds across the country,
Schwab needed emergency shelter, food and legal support.
But instead of aid, there would be obstacles almost impossible to overcome.
Amnesty International is calling the current situation in Cambodia a humanitarian crisis,
and says migrants are falling through the crack.
Shabani Matani continues Shwaib's story.
So after Shwaib walked out of the scam compound, he felt optimistic.
His plan was pretty simple.
He would go to the airport and get on a plane, just like when he arrived, minus the Lexus.
Part of the reason Shrive was confident was because he had almost completed his year-long contract.
Before he left the compound, he talked to his boss.