Taiwanese actor arrested for fraud: 82 people were deceived to go to Cambodia in 3 months, making a profit of NT$50 million

source: Overseas network

Taiwan police intercepted Taiwanese people who went to Cambodia at the airport (data map)

According to Taiwan's "Zhongshi News Network" report, people in Taiwan have recently been lured to Cambodia to engage in telecom fraud activities . The Taipei District Prosecutor's Office said on August 9 that it had carried out two large-scale arrest operations a few days ago, and brought nine suspects to the case. After the interrogation, they were allowed to detain six people. The suspects also included Li Zhenhao, who starred in the movie "Jiaotou".

According to Taiwan media, Li Zhenhao once served as an extra in "Jiaotou". He was in Zhongshan District, Taipei City. He originally ran a hotel, but his business was affected by the epidemic. He also joined when he learned that "human trafficking" was profitable. He deceived 82 Taiwanese people to Cambodia in 2019, and for each person he introduced to Cambodia, he could get a commission of US$22,000 from the fraud gang. He has made a profit of nearly 50 million New Taiwan dollars (about 11.25 million yuan).

North Inspection said that it has recently received intelligence that there are fraudulent groups recruiting various staff such as gaming customer service, head-to-head loans, etc., to lure Taiwanese people to go to Cambodia to engage in fraudulent work. The Northern Procuratorate assigned prosecutors to actively investigate and detained the suspect surnamed Lin and other three people on May 5, and rescued the three victims who were going to the airport.

On July 5, the Northern Procuratorate directed more than 100 police officers to search, summoned and detained 6 people including Li Zhenhao, and interrogated more than 10 victims. In two waves of arrests, the Northern Procuratorate applied to the court for permission to detain six suspects surnamed Lin and Li.

The Northern Inspection also called on the public to be vigilant when applying for jobs online, and to carefully evaluate job advertisements with high salaries that are unreasonable, so as not to be deceived and fall into traps or fall into fraudulent jobs. (Overseas Network Li Meng)