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Filipino accused of running off with thousands of dollars from job seekers, employers

Posted on 20 November 2019 No comments
By Daisy CL Mandap

A  photo of Nicdao posted online by one of the complainants 
A Filipino claiming to be a driver in Hong Kong has been accused of fleecing domestic workers and employers alike of tens of thousands of dollars in the guise of helping them process employment contracts for less pay.

The complainants have named the alleged scammer as Alejandro "Alan" Sayao Nicdao in complaints they have filed with the Philippine Consulate, Employment Agencies Administration, and the police.

Ann, who gathered about 10 of the complainants, said they have already been interviewed by officers of the assistance to nationals section of the Consulate and the Philippine Overseas Labor Office. They have also been asked to attend interviews at EAA later this month and early December.
As the alleged victims are said to come from different places, she said the police complaints were filed in different police stations.

The money they lost to Nicdao reportedly range between $2,000 and $30,000. The biggest amount he allegedly skimmed came from a terminated Filipina worker whom he convinced to borrow money from a financing company. Nicdao reportedly gave the Filipina only $1,000 before disappearing.

Ann herself claims to have deposited into a bank account Nicdao was using a total of $9,400 (Php65,000)  sent to her by three friends in the Philippines, after he promised them jobs as domestic workers in Hong Kong.
She later found out that the bank account belonged to a Filipina who was helped by Nicdao to get into China. She reportedly left her ATM card with Nicdao so she could send money to him to pay for her illicit deployment.

Ann says she met the other complainants online after she posted warnings about Nicdao on various sites on Facebook.

Ann says she first met Nicdao when they joined the same tour to China in January this year. He allegedly offered to help find an employer for her friend Merlyn who had just lost her job.
Nicdao reportedly didn’t ask for a lot of money, but managed to get Merlyn a job. That was what convinced her of his sincerity and ability.

“Inabot ng hanggang six months bago siya nakabalik, pero nagawa naman ni Alan ang pangako niya,” Ann says.

Her three other friends from the Philippines who were enticed to apply for jobs through Nicdao were reportedly impressed with him because he referred them to Studio 85, a licensed recruitment agency in the Philippines, where they signed employment contracts. The agency also arranged for their medical examinations.

After collecting the employment contracts back from the applicants and getting their payments, Nicdao allegedly said he would pass them on a Hong Kong-based agency in Yuen Long, and that they should expect to be deployed by Aug. 16.

They never heard from him again.

Ann said that when she started hunting down Nicdao, those who used to hang out with him near the Star Ferry Terminal told her they had heard of similar capers he pulled off on other people.

They reportedly offered copies of his passport and driver’s license in the Philippines, which showed he was 60 years old and lived in Makati City.

Ann says Nicdao told him he was working as a driver in Hong Kong, and sold goods from China on the side. But on hindsight, she said she never saw the guy behind the wheel, or knew exactly where he worked and lived.

ALA Villafuerte is looking into the case vs Nicdao
She is still awaiting confirmation from Acting Labor Attache Antonio Villafuerte if Nicdao has indeed worked as a domestic helper with driving duties in Hong Kong.

From what the other complainants told her, Ann says it appears Nicdao victimized people not just in Hong Kong but also in Macau and the Philippines. And they were not all Filipino domestic workers, but also employers.

Ann says one of his first apparent victims was his own girlfriend who came as a tourist in 2014 and after finding an employer, paid him $2,000 to process her employment contract. Her would-be employer was also charged $6,500 for the job placement that never materialized.

Another employer who reportedly reached out to Ann is an Indian national called Dita who says Nicdao disappeared after charging her a down payment of $2,500 to process her helper’s contract.

Ann says all of the complainants have recorded chats with Nicdao in which he promised to help them process job contracts or asked outright for money. They have also kept receipts of the money transfer they made into the bank account Nicdao was using.
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Judge reserves judgment in biggest fake bank instrument case

Posted on No comments
By The SUN
Bolaños reportedly believed the US$943billion came from Marcos

The fate of a 70-year-old Filipino tourist who presented a fake deposit slip for US$943billion at the HSBC main office in Central in April last year will be known on Dec. 30.

District Court Judge Stanley Chan set the date for his verdict at the close of the trial today, Nov. 20, of Brudencio J. Bolaños, on a charge of using a false instrument.

The charge said Bolaños had tried to convince a bank frontline staff that the instrument  was genuine. If the staff believed this, other people would have been put at risk.
Bolaños, who is being held without bail, has denied the charge. He also chose not to give evidence.

His case involved the biggest monetary value for a spurious instrument to have been presented to a bank in Hong Kong. As in most of the other cases, the bank deposit slip was linked to the fabled hidden treasure of ousted Philippine President, Ferdinand E. Marcos.

Bolaños’ lawyers had earlier tried to halt the trial on the ground that a psychologist’s report stated that he was suffering from “delusional disorder” but Judge Chan rejected the application.
The psychologist said in the report that Bolaños believed former President Marcos had given him the money, and that it was insured in London.

But Judge Chan had said that the evidence so far presented in court, including the testimony of the HSBC executive who interviewed Bolaños, indicated that the defendant knew from the beginning the document was fake.

The judge said he had considered HSBC assistant manager Cheung Wan-yuet’s statement that the bank never issued a receipt for the US$943 billion supposedly deposited in the defendant’s account by a Marcos foundation on Jul 25, 1983.
Bolaños was arrested on Apr 9, 2018 after he and an unidentified companion went to the fifth-floor counters of the HSBC head offices in Central, and presented the deposit slip.

Cheung said she invited Bolaños and his unidentified companion, who she said looked like a Malaysian and spoke Cantonese and English, to the interview room after the counter staff passed the spurious document to her.

When told that the deposit slip was fake, the defendant allegedly insisted on talking to the regional head of global banking, a certain Ms Chen, saying she was  “more knowledgeable and capable” than Cheung.

But when the two men heard the police were coming, they left the room and headed for the lower floors. Cheung said she told the officers the man with the fake document was already on the fourth floor. The police collared Bolaños but his companion escaped.

Judge Chan showed displeasure at Cheung’s testimony, saying the bank executive was “able to give only few details of the case” as she was mostly replying “Sorry, I can’t remember” or “I am not sure.”

When Judge Chan queried whether she asked the two men for their name cards, she replied “No.”  She also said she asked for both their passports but did not photocopy them.

When asked by defense counsel Elizabeth Herbert if she asked Bolaños what the documents were, Cheung said the defendant told her the deposit slip was given by his mother to him after depositing the money in his account.

But Cheung said the bank’s records showed Bolaños had no HSBC account.

The second witness, officer Deng Tsz-teng, said when he arrested Bolaños, the defendant had 10,000 Japanese yen and PhP240.25 in his possession. The defendant had no mobile phone and was in a black business suit and a blue shirt.

The trial first opened on Jul 17 and had to be postponed a few times because some witnesses for the prosecution were not available.
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Bill seeking mandatory insurance for all OFWs comes under fire

Posted on No comments
Former Labor Attache Jalilo dela Torre received a petition
against mandatory insurance during a rally in January

By Daisy CL Mandap

A renewed push in the Philippines for mandatory insurance coverage for all Filipino contract workers abroad has come under fire from migrant groups in Hong Kong who denounced it as another extortionist move by the government.

A consolidated bill tabled at the House of Representatives yesterday, Nov. 19, creating the Department of Filipinos Overseas, provides for expanding the coverage of mandatory insurance, essentially a life insurance, under RA 10022.

Section 46 of the draft legislation provides that compulsory insurance “shall be expanded to cover all overseas Filipino workers, including agency-hires, rehires, name hires or direct hires.”
The provision, which is supposed to promote better protection for all OFWs, also states that the premium payment, which currently amounts to USD144 (HK$1,120) per two-year contract for land-based workers, should be made by the foreign employers.

No contracts will be verified by the labor attaché on site (or a concerned consular official in his absence) without the paid insurance coverage, and proof of payment will be made as a requirement for the issuance of the overseas employment certificate (OEC).

Under RA 10022, only agency-hired OFWs leaving the country for the first time are required to pay for the life insurance.

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Migrant groups in Hong Kong, including those under the newly formed coalition Rise Against Government Exactions (Rage) say the measure will be another burden to OFWs who already face other mandatory fees, including for SSS and Philhealth memberships.

Rage spokesperson Dolores Balladares-Pelaez said that Filipino migrant workers will surely end up paying for the insurance premium because employers already pay for high recruitment fees to hire them.

Apart from this, Hong Kong employers are already required by their government to take out insurance on their foreign domestic helpers so it is not likely they will agree to pay for a second coverage.
“For sure ang mga kababayan natin ang magbabayad niyan dahil hindi ito babayaran ng employers. Worse, baka ma-terminate pa ang ating worker kapag giniit niya na ang employer ang kailangang magbayad nito.”

The sentiment is shared by many members of the online group, Domestic Workers Corner, who said the proposed fee is “sobra na,” citing the mandatory SSS contribution already in place, and the compulsory Philhealth membership due to take effect early next year.

“Patay tayo dyan,” said Elle Zue. Pag pina shoulder yan sa amo malamang wala ng i-hire na Pilipino. Nagkakagulo pa naman dito ngayon.”

Another, Lyn Fajardo, said, “Hindi po ako agree dyan dahil hindi lahat ng amo sapat ang finances para mabayaran pa ang mandatory insurance na yan....meron na kaming insurance dito, sapat na yon...”

Rain Ranin said: “Wala na...parang wag na lang mag abroad, wala nang halaga ang perang pinaghirapan mo sa abroad.”

Another commenter, Leh Capuno said: “Big no. Gipit na nga wala pang mandatory lalo pa kaya kung meron na ganyan. Mas lalo nila nilulubog sa mga bayarin ang mga OFW. Ano pa ang ipapadala sa pamilya sa Pinas kung ganito kalaki ang babayaran naming mga OFW?”

The same sentiment was shared by Liezl Balajadia who said, “Big no. Hindi na nga makaipon dadagdag pa ng bayarin. Malayo na nga kami sa pamilya namin ni scam nyo pa kami.”

Quipped another who goes by the nameYa Kc Ej: “Sunduin nyo kaya ang nakaisip nito at sya ang magkuskos ng inidoro dito. Jusko lahat na lang e..buti kung nagka emergency makukuha mo agad (pero) kailangan pang ikutin ang Pilipinas sa requirements bago ma-release.”

But a few didn’t think the mandatory insurance was such a bad idea. “Yes, dahil mga amo naman ang magbabayad e, hindi naman tayo,” said Flordeliza Bibat.

“Opo, dapat sa employer kunin ang bayad hindi sa OFW,” said another who goes by the name Ako Si Hans.

Expanded mandatory insurance was stealthily put into place by the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration through a Resolution issued in August last year requiring employers or recruitment agents to pay for the insurance coverage of both new and rehired OFWs.

Unifil quickly responded with a statement opposing the move, and held a rally in January this year to call for the junking of the resolution. More than 170 organizations reportedly backed the call.

Nothing more was heard about the POEA Resolution until now, when it emerged that mandatory insurance has become part of a new legislation creating the super body that will oversee the concerns of all Filipinos overseas.
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