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Giấy phép số 4978/GP-TTĐT do Sở Thông tin và Truyền thông Hà Nội cấp ngày 14 tháng 10 năm 2019 / Giấy phép SĐ, BS GP ICP số 2107/GP-TTĐT do Sở TTTT Hà Nội cấp ngày 13/7/2022.
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Police collected samples of all products from the Mailisa ecosystem sold on the market to support the investigation. On the afternoon of April 3, 2026, the Ministry of Public Security held a press briefing to announce progress and results of police work in the first quarter of 2026, chaired by Lieutenant General Nguyen Quoc Toan, Chief of the Police Office.
The briefing said that after the case related to the Mailisa cosmetics ecosystem was opened and eight suspects connected to it were prosecuted, the Investigation Police Department on corruption, economics, and smuggling collected samples of all products from the Mailisa ecosystem sold on the market to clarify relevant violations and provide a basis for the investigation.
Authorities are coordinating with expert agencies to forensic examine the quality and ingredients of these products to determine possible violations; results are not yet available.
To date, investigators have recovered more than 300 billion VND, 400,000 USD, 300 taels of SJC gold, over 100 land-use certificates, more than 12 vehicle registrations, and other valuable assets for investigation and case handling.
Earlier, on November 21, 2025, the Department for Crime Investigation on corruption, economy, and smuggling prosecuted the case “Smuggling” involving MK Skincare Co. and related units. Eight suspects, including Phan Thi Mai, Director of Mailisa Cosmetics Co., Ltd., were indicted and detained for “Smuggling.”
Based on preliminary findings, from 2020 to 2024, Phan Thi Mai and her husband, Hoang Kim Khanh, allegedly arranged to purchase cosmetics manufactured in Guangzhou, China at low cost for import into Vietnam for profit through the Mailisa beauty chain. Investigators said the purchases did not ensure the quality and ingredients as disclosed, and the required Free Circulation certificate in China was not obtained.
The couple was also alleged to have conspired with Chinese individuals to forge contracts, change the origin of the cosmetics (from Guangzhou, China to Hong Kong) to obtain a CFS in Hong Kong, import the goods illegally into Vietnam, and market them as cosmetics produced in Hong Kong. Authorities said this strategy helped attract consumer trust and sell products at prices many times higher, generating illicit profits amounting to trillions of dong (calculated for only 3 of the 100 main products supplied by the Mailisa system).

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