Police nab 10 for call centre fraud scam

Police nab 10 for call centre fraud scam

French, Belgian gang targeted Euro firms

Religious racket: Fake Buddha amulets and items of reverence have been seized from 19 Chinese nationals who were arrested in Chon Buri recently. They were charged with selling the items and souvenirs to tourists at inflated prices. (Photo by Apichart Jinakul)
Religious racket: Fake Buddha amulets and items of reverence have been seized from 19 Chinese nationals who were arrested in Chon Buri recently. They were charged with selling the items and souvenirs to tourists at inflated prices. (Photo by Apichart Jinakul)

Immigration police have arrested 10 French and Belgian nationals in Bangkok for allegedly running a "call centre" scam to lure European companies into paying for fake financial services.

The gang, who were working from a luxury four-storey house in the Thong Lor area, had been under surveillance since Dec 23 last year, following a tip-off from a police informant.

Their behaviour raised suspicions as the suspects arrived to start work at 3pm and left the house around 9pm, according to investigators.

"They're the office hours of countries in Europe as they are between six and seven hours behind Thailand," Immigration Bureau chief Sompong Chingduang said yesterday.

Following a raid on their workplace on Jan 8, all the suspects -- nine French nationals and one Belgian -- admitted to the scam.

They said they had worked in the house for about a month, making phone calls to French and Belgian firms and pretending they were from a Singaporean company offering financial services.

"They claimed they could help clients manage corporate accounts and reduce tax payments," Pol Lt Gen Sompong said.

A check also found nine of the suspects came to Thailand as tourists. Only one of them had a work permit but not in the field applied for, he said.

In two other separate cases, the Immigration Bureau nabbed two Chinese gangs for allegedly running religious scams at Thai temples in Chon Buri, while seven foreigners were arrested fore allegedly travelling on fake passports.

The two Chinese gangs offered religious services to compatriots at the temples and sold them fake sacred objects at inflated prices, police said.

A gang of 13, led by a 24-year-old woman identified only as Li operated out of Phuwanaram forest monastery in Sri Racha district while another gang of six, led by a 51-year-old man named Yibing, worked from Nanthawan temple in Muang district.

At Suvarnabhumi airport, officers arrested seven foreign nationals after biometric technology found them using fake travel documents.

They were four Turkish nationals -- two men and two women -- one Iranian man, one Dominican man and a Malaysian man, the officials said.

Biometric screening has helped the Immigration Bureau arrest a number of suspects travelling on false documents.

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