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Chitchat Dumbfuck UOB Serf Gets Conned By Chinkland Scammers! 1166 Chink Customers Compromised!

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
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SINGAPORE - A UOB employee who fell for a police impersonation scam disclosed the personal information of 1,166 of the bank's customers who are China nationals.

The data divulged comprised customer names, identification and mobile numbers and account balances,
UOB noted on Friday (May 7).

"Their bank account numbers were not disclosed and our IT systems remain secure," it added.

The employee, who was working in Singapore, has been suspended and is assisting police investigations.

Preliminary findings show that the employee had been deceived into handing the information of these Chinese nationals with Singapore-based accounts to scammers who were impersonating police officers from China.

A UOB spokesman said the bank was not able to disclose any details about when the scam occurred and how the employee had been taken in, as the matter is under police investigation.

Similar cases in the past have involved swindlers claiming to be police officers in China telling victims that their credit or debit card details had been used for fraudulent transactions or that their bank accounts were involved in money-laundering activities.

They were then told to transfer their money for investigations. Some account holders then handed over either their banking credentials or cash to money mules.

UOB said it has written to all affected customers and taken safety precautions such as immediately disabling their Internet and mobile banking access and advising them to reset their digital banking access.

The bank has also stepped up monitoring of the affected accounts and set an SMS alert to notify customers of online fund transfers at $1 or more.

Other precautions include posting scam protection notices on the log-in pages of UOB websites.

"UOB is working closely with the Singapore Police Force on their investigations. We apologise to our customers that this has happened, as we have always made it a priority to keep their data secure," the bank said.

https://www.straitstimes.com/singap...ation-of-more-than-1100-customers-to-scammers
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
Go

159 men & 116 women, aged 14-81, assisting S'pore police with Internet love, e-commerce, govt officials impersonation, China officials impersonation, investment, job, sexual services, fake gambling platform & loan scams​

Why the Singapore police is busy.
Belmont Lay |
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May 22, 2021, 02:23 PM

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A total of 159 men and 116 women, aged between 14 and 81, are currently assisting with investigations for their suspected involvement in scams, as scammers or money mules.



The police said in a news release on May 22 that officers from the Commercial Affairs Department and seven Police Land Divisions conducted a two-week operation between May 8 and 21, 2021 to round up these individuals.
The suspects are believed to be involved in 519 cases of scams, comprising mainly of Internet love scams, e-commerce scams, government officials impersonation scams, China officials impersonation scams, investment scams, job scams, sexual services scams, fake gambling platform scams, and loan scams.

Victims lost around S$7.9 million in total.


Don't be a money mule​



The police said they take a serious stance against any person who may be involved in scams, and perpetrators will be dealt with in accordance with the law.
To avoid being an accomplice to crimes, members of the public should always reject requests by others to use your bank account or mobile lines as you will be held accountable if these are linked to crimes.

Penalties​


The suspects are being investigated for the offences of cheating, money laundering or providing payment services without a licence.
The offence of cheating carries a jail term of up to 10 years and a fine.
The offence of money laundering carries a jail term not exceeding 10 years, a fine not exceeding S$500,000, or both.
The offence of carrying on a business of providing any type of payment service in Singapore without a licence carries a fine not exceeding $125,000, jail for a term not exceeding three years, or both.
 
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