China Daily Global Edition (USA)

5 detained in death of grad seeking job

Police say leader of scam, four others all confessed to luring 23-year-old

- By ZHANG YI zhang_yi@chinadaily.com.cn

Five people have been detained in connection with the death of a university graduate who police say fell victim to scammers on a job-seeking website.

One of the five suspects is accused of playing a leading role in the scheme and the other four were detained for suspected unlawful detention, according to police in Tianjin’s Jinghai district on Sunday.

All confessed that they lured Li Wenxing, a 23-year-old university graduate from Shandong province, into a pyramid scheme, the police said.

Early on Sunday morning, 2,000 law enforcemen­t officers were sent out to catch scammers in Jinghai. They reported spotting 301 places in the district, and 63 people, involved in pyramid schemes.

The district government issued a statement on Sunday saying that any whistle-blower identifyin­g such activity would be eligible for a reward of 20,000 yuan ($2,970).

Pyramid scheme organizati­ons often prey on ill-informed victims by promising good-paying jobs or lucrative financial returns.

Victims are lured to what they believe are regular companies, but are then instructed by the scammers — often under duress — to recruit friends and family or borrow money from them, according to the authoritie­s. Mobile phones and identifica­tion documents are often confiscate­d, they say.

Scammers have been known to extort money and even to kidnap their targets.

According to police, a fraudulent employment advertisem­ent was published on Zhipin, a recruitmen­t website, which lured Li to Jinghai on May 20.

Investigat­ors say Li paid the fee to the scammers for the recruitmen­t and was forced to stay in the organizati­on’s dormitory. He was only allowed to move around the organizati­on’s premises, not outside.

Li’s body was found on July 14 in a pond in Jinghai. The autopsy showed he drowned, but the circumstan­ces that led to his death are still under investigat­ion.

According to his family, Li asked his mother in his last call to her not to give money to anyone. Li’s senior high school classmate Ding Xiangcheng said Li discussed the job offer with him before he left for Tianjin.

According to media reports, two of Li’s high school classmates said Li borrowed 500 yuan from them before he was found dead.

The Commission for Political and Legal Affairs of the Communist Party of China Tianjin Committee launched a campaign against pyramid schemes recently.

Zhao Fei, head of the commission, said Jinghai is an area with rampant pyramid scheme activity and that the activities must be eliminated within 20 days.

Recruitmen­t websites hosting unverified company informatio­n are common. The Cyberspace Administra­tion of China launched a campaign last year targeting illegal activities related to recruitmen­t websites, including fraud and offers of jobs from pyramid operations.

The administra­tion shut down 16 recruitmen­t websites in the campaign.

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