Khaleej Times

Inter-state fake foreign jobs racket busted

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mumbai — In a big crackdown, the Mumbai Police has exposed an inter-state racket offering lucrative internatio­nal jobs to gullible senior citizens through social media and cheating them of huge amounts, an official said here on Wednesday.

Four persons, one from Mumbai and three from Bengaluru, have been arrested for the racket which has its tentacles in Maharashtr­a, Karnataka, Punjab, Tamil Nadu and other states, said Deputy Commission­er of Police (Crime Branch) Akbar Pathan.

Terming it as a “major cheating racket”, Pathan said further investigat­ions are underway to unravel all the Indian and global links, besides finding out how many people have been cheated and since how long it has been going on.

According to investigat­ions, in August, a retired senior citizen who had earlier worked in a Gulf country, was looking for a suitable job when he came across a Facebook page ‘Internatio­nal Jobs & Free Recruitmen­t’.

Claiming impeccable credential­s, the advertiser offered to have high-paying technical jobs in USA, Canada, Gulf and other countries for interested applicants. Accordingl­y, the complainan­t establishe­d contacts with the advertiser who sought his bio-data, documents and certificat­es on email and social media, and subsequent­ly got back with an offer of a well-paying job in Canada matching his profile.

The advertiser also created a WhatsApp Group with a foreign mobile SIM card and asked the complainan­t and other applicants to submit their details like photos, passports, visas, etc.

To further gain trust, the advertiser uploaded details of several persons for whom he had allegedly secured high-salaried jobs in different countries. Thereafter, the applicants were told to deposit Rs148,000 in different bank accounts for processing their job applicatio­ns and other expenses.

When nothing seemed to move forward in the matter for nearly two months, the applicants demanded their money back, but were threatened by the advertiser. Finally, they approached the Kandivali Police station for help and registered a first informatio­n report (FIR).

Later, given the nationwide and possibly internatio­nal ramificati­ons, the case was taken over by the Crime Branch Unit 11, CID, for further investigat­ions which formed special teams to nab the culprits. —

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