South China Morning Post

119 held in crackdown on triad-run businesses

One syndicate conned six people out of HK$2m worth of high-end items between March and July

- Clifford Lo clifford.lo@scmp.com

Police have rounded up 119 people in a two-week operation against triad-controlled drug, sex and gambling businesses, as well as fraud activities.

The force yesterday said eight of the suspects were alleged members of a fraud syndicate who used fake banknotes to swindle six residents out of HK$2 million worth of high-end products between March and July.

The victims were approached when they tried to sell items such as luxury watches and wine through online platforms, said Senior Inspector Thomas Anthony Lo of the Hong Kong Island regional anti-triad squad.

Lo said members of the triad-run syndicate arranged face-to-face transactio­ns in a bid to get victims to lower their guard.

“During the meetings, swindlers posing as an appraiser and a buyer claimed the need to take the goods for appraisal and then distracted the victims by showing a bundle of ‘cash’ wrapped in a transparen­t plastic bag,” he said.

The suspects took the valuables but left the bag of “cash” behind.

Lo said the victims realised they had been scammed when they discovered only the top and the bottom notes were authentic.

The rest were bogus, or so-called training notes that had three Chinese characters for “practice coupon” printed on them. Training notes appear genuine aside from the Chinese characters printed across them. They bear no security features such as a watermark and are said to be used by mainland banks for training and counting practice.

After gathering evidence, police arrested three men and five women, recovered HK$240,000 worth of valuables stolen in the six cases, and seized 1,550 bogus notes during the operation codenamed “Rousewit”, mounted between July 21 and Saturday.

During the operation, officers apprehende­d the other 111 people when they raided and shut down five vice establishm­ents and seven gambling dens, and cracked down on 13 drug-related cases on Hong Kong Island.

In one of the cases, officers from the Hong Kong Island regional crime unit confiscate­d HK$1.9 million worth of suspected cocaine in a residentia­l flat that was allegedly used as a drug-producing facility

The 119 suspects, aged 20 to 88, comprised 88 locals, 19 mainland visitors and 12 holders of a recognisan­ce form, a temporary identifica­tion document issued by the Immigratio­n Department that allows the bearer to stay, but not work, in the city.

They were held on suspicion of various offences, including traffickin­g in a dangerous drug, operating a gambling establishm­ent, managing a drug den and running a brothel. Lo said some of the suspects were believed to have triad background­s.

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