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Shenzhen couple cheated of HK$428,500 in currency ‘investment’

A mainland woman was arrested last week for cheating two neighbours out of HK$428,500 (MOP 441,500), by falsely claiming that she could help them earn money through currency exchange deals.

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UPDATED: 22 Dec 2023, 5:43 am

A mainland woman was arrested last week for cheating two neighbours out of HK$428,500 (MOP 441,500), by falsely claiming that she could help them earn money through currency exchange deals, Judiciary Police (PJ) spokesman Mark Sou Sio Keong said at a regular press conference on Monday.

The 35-year-old jobless suspect surnamed Lin is from Shenzhen.

According to Sou, a couple and Lin went to a police station on Wednesday where the couple told the police that they had been cheated by Lin out of HK$428,500. The victims said that they are Lin’s neighbours in Shenzhen. Lin told the couple last month that she was engaged in currency exchange activities in Macao which could earn big profits. She urged them to invest in her currency exchange business.

According to Sou, the couple came to Macao with Lin on December 4 and gave Lin a total of HK$428,500 in cash over several occasions. After receiving the money, Lin claimed that she would go to a casino to look for currency exchange clients. She also told the couple that they did not need to get involved in the deals and urged them to gamble in the casino instead.

Sou said Lin gave the couple on several occasions amounts ranging between HK$2,000 and HK$6,000, totalling HK$12,000, as purported returns in their investment, but Lin gambled away the couple’s total investment in two casinos in Zape. When Lin on Wednesday asked the couple to increase their investment, they grew suspicious. Asked by the couple how their investment was going, Lin finally owned up. The couple then accompanied Lin to a police station to report the case later that day.

Lin was transferred to the Public Prosecutions Office (MP) on Friday, facing charges of fraud involving a considerable amount, officially defined as exceeding MOP 150,000, according to Sou.

(The Macau Post Daily/Macao News)
Photo by Macau Photo Agency

UPDATED: 22 Dec 2023, 5:43 am

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