The National - News

Three face charges in used car fraud worth Dh600,000

- SALAM AL AMIR

Three men scammed two men out of Dh600,000 after selling them cars using fake documents, Dubai Criminal Court heard yesterday.

Two Armenians, aged 33 and 35, and a 29-year-old Iraqi are charged with forgery, use of forged documents and fraudulent­ly obtaining Dh600,000 in September 2013.

Prosecutor­s said the three forged RTA ownership certificat­es for 38 of the 45 vehicles they agreed to sell to the two Syrian men, aged 51 and 36.

The Syrians told prosecutor­s they agreed to buy 45 cars from the defendants, who said they had bought the vehicles from Copra auction company.

The men paid the alleged scammers for five cars and were given the ownership certificat­es.

“When we went to the company to take the vehicles, they checked the certificat­es and told us that they had been altered,” said the 51-year-old.

Records show that the 33-year-old Armenian accused, who is at large, had registered his name with the auction house’s electronic system and allegedly processed the car sales to the Syrian men under the name of one of the other two defendants.

“We checked who originally bought the cars then sold

The court heard how documents for one car were forged and reused dozens of times by the defendants

them to the victims through our electronic system and we found it was an Armenian man,” said a British witness from the Copra auction house.

He said the cars originally belonged to Dubai Taxi, which offered them for sale by auction.

He said the cars – which included Hyundai Sonatas, Toyota Camrys and Nissan Altimas – were kept in a showroom in Ras Al Khor and given to the buyer after an electronic auction was held.

“When a car is sold and paid for, we hand the buyer an ownership certificat­e, but we leave the name of the buyer empty in case he wants to resell the car. When we checked the ownership certificat­es provided by the defendants, we discovered that they all belonged to one car, but the number of the engines was changed on each one.

“Basically they bought one car and when they were given its certificat­e, they forged 38 copies of it,” said a Jordanian employee of the auction company.

The three defendants were not present in court to face charges and the hearing will be on September 18.

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