One Indonesian official is under investigation for posting photographs on social media showing him posing in luxury cars, on motorbikes and even in a Cessna plane.
Another has effectively humiliated his wife in public by declaring she owns numerous fake handbags.
And a third has been suspended over photos suggesting he showered his wife with several gold bars, a new car and a luxury handbag as an anniversary gift.
All three are among the latest targets in a national scandal that Indonesian media have dubbed "Filthy Rich Officials".
The government has now ordered a crackdown on public servants who flaunt their wealth in a country where corruption is endemic and the minimum wage is below $500 a month.
For weeks, social media users have named and shamed one civil servant after another, whose online accounts document lavish lifestyles that appear to be beyond their means.
The social media witch hunt was triggered last month when the 20-year-old son of a senior Jakarta tax official was arrested and charged with physically beating a teenage boy into a coma.
Witnesses later reported that the accused, Mario Dandy Satrio, had driven an expensive Jeep to the scene. Online photos then came to light showing him in luxury cars and on motorbikes, supposedly paid for by his father.
The case caused public outrage and a barrage of online questions as to where or how his father, Rafael Alun Trisambodo, had managed to accumulate so much wealth.
Indonesia's Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati later announced she had removed the tax official from his position and ordered a full investigation into claims he had hidden millions of dollars in wealth and avoided paying taxes.
She also took action after social media users turned their focus towards Indonesia's director-general of taxation, exposing photos of him and his staff riding big motorbikes at an exclusive club. She immediately ordered the club's closure.
But the case has only fuelled a growing public campaign to expose other public servants seemingly showing off their ostentatious lifestyles.
The regional secretary of Riau province, SF Hariyanto, called a press conference this week to explain why his wife had been "outed" on Instagram photos, carrying luxury handbags and wearing designer clothing and shoes, apparently worth more than his government salary could normally afford.
But Mr Hariyanto declared the handbags were, in fact, fake.
"I have cross-checked the allegations. For example, about the handbags that were said to cost hundreds of millions of rupiah. That's not true. These are fake."
He also produced a store receipt that he said showed one bag had cost far less than the real item would, and was instead bought at a Jakarta shopping mall known for its knock-offs.
Though one social media user later posted separate photos suggesting the shoes he claimed to have bought were not the same as those his wife was wearing in the Instagram photo.
"I'm sorry Mr Regional Secretary, the fake Gucci shoes are different from the ones flexed by your wife.
"Those are Gucci Pearl Embellished Platform sneakers, you know.
"Maybe you were in a rush to buy 'evidence' for the press conference," the post said.
Mr Hariyanto also dismissed suspicions about photos showing his wife holidaying in Europe, saying she shared costs with friends and only used public transport overseas.
Since then another official, Esha Rahmansah Abrar, has been suspended by Indonesia's state secretariat, amid an investigation into his wife's social media posts, which appeared to show he had given her a car and several 24-carat gold bars for their anniversary.
Both the Anti-Corruption Commission (KPK) and Indonesia's Financial Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre (PPATK) are investigating his wealth.
Two customs officials in Jogjakarta and Makassar have also been targeted over photos on social media suggesting they too are living suspiciously lavish lifestyles that they cannot afford on their government salaries.
One was later questioned by Indonesia's Anti-Corruption Commission about the apparent discrepancy with an annual wealth report that all public servants submit.
Indonesia's President Joko Widodo has now ordered that all government officials will be banned from displaying public signs of their wealth, according to one government minister, Abdullah Azwar Anas.
"It's clear now from the president that public servants are not allowed to flaunt their wealth," the minister told local media, adding they must comply with their annual wealth report.
He said the government would also continue its program to strengthen financial reforms in order to tackle corruption.
But many Indonesians have lost trust in their government's commitment to tackle corruption since laws passed by Mr Widodo's government before the pandemic weakened the Anti-Corruption Commission's powers and watered down its independence.
One recent study found the disparity in wealth in Indonesia had increased exponentially in the past 20 years, and that the rise in inequality undermined the fight against poverty and slowed the nation's growth.
A report by Oxfam also found "the four richest men in Indonesia have more wealth than the combined total of the [most impoverished] 100 million people".