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Anti-scam webinar shows FDHs how to protect themselves & elderly wards

Posted on 23 March 2021 No comments

By Vir B. Lumicao 

Saret and Lau at the start of the webinar done especially for Filipino DHs

More Filipino domestic helpers in Hong Kong are becoming victims of deception, but they themselves could help prevent their elderly employers from being conned.

This was disclosed in a webinar on deception conducted on Sunday, Mar 21, by the Hong Kong Police in cooperation with the Consulate. It was the first ever such project held by the police to educate the city’s legion of foreign domestic helpers.

“We, police, saw the rising trend in deception cases recently and many victims were Filipinos working in Hong Kong,” Chief Superintendent Lam Hung-chuen, commander of the Central Police District, said at the opening of the webinar.

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Consul Paulo Saret, head of the Consulate’s assistance to nationals section, thanked Lam for initiating the project, which he said was timely because many Filipino workers have become victims of scams lately.

Lam said two key officers in the police anti-deception campaign had been invited to speak and educate the workers on various types of deception and how to prevent them.

Lee says deception is like a virus that is everywhere and could infect anyone

Senior Inspector Gerald Lee, assistant regional crime prevention officer of Hong Kong Island, said deception had increased threefold from 5,652 or 7% of total crimes in 2010, to 15,553 or 25% in 2020, a high ratio of one in every four crime cases.

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“Actually, deception is an excellent business,” Lee said. Deception is a mainstream crime in Hong Kong that poses a real threat to everyone, he said.

“We find that a lot of domestic workers fall victims to deception cases, so you should know more about deception,” the officer said.

Lee said the advent of technology has made living convenient for people, but has also turned the environment conducive for fraudsters who use the internet, social media, communications software, and email to reach victims anywhere in the world.

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Lee said deception is like the Covid-19 virus that replicates and exists everywhere and infects anyone, so people have to get vaccinated to be immune to it.

“Deception and fraudsters are everywhere through the internet and they pose a real threat to us. If we are not cautious enough, we get deceived and lose our money,” Lee said.

In some minor cases like online shopping, the loss is just a few hundred dollars, but in a few serious telephone deception cases, the victims lose large amounts of money, including all their savings or a few million dollars.

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He said by knowing more about deception, the workers get more protection from it.

Lee first discussed “romance scam,” a common form of deception done through social media. He said many people use social media to find their partner and get into a relationship, but some end up getting deceived and losing a lot of money.

Fraudsters use social media and dating apps to get acquainted with victims to whom they introduce themselves as professionals like doctors, engineers, soldiers, and retirees. They will show care and concern and use sweet words to gain the victims’ trust.

Tunghayan ang isa na namang kwentong Dream Love

Once successful, they ask for financial aid claiming they’re in trouble, or send “high-value” special gifts for which the victim must pay a huge customs fee, Lee said.

Lee disclosed a new deception that combines romance scam and investment scam. In this trickery, after the scammer establishes a relationship, he lures the victim into high-yield investment plans and download an alleged investment mobile app.

The scammer then tells the victim to remit money through the mobile app as instructed.  Inspired by the initial high return, the victim invests more until she loses all her money.

Other scam methods involve shopping online, where the victim is enticed by a fraudster posing as a seller to buy goods through the e-shopping platform. The victim is instructed to pay upfront, but doesn’t receive the goods. The seller then becomes out of reach.

In another version, the fraudster poses as a buyer of goods, sends proof of payment so that the seller ships the merchandise to him. But the remittance receipt turns out to have been photoshopped and the deposited check forged, resulting in a loss to the seller.

Luk says many telephone scams target the elderly so helpers must know how to help them

Gary Luk, police senior inspector from the Anti-Deception Coordination Council, said in February this year, there were 39 telephone deception cases that led to a loss of $18.2 million, an increase of 148% from the same month last year.

Luk said there are two types of telephone deception, the “guess who” and “pretending officials”, in which scammers from the mainland target elderly Hong Kong people.

In the first type, the scammers disguise as mainland officials investigating the victim for criminal offenses. They then ask the victim to give money or his e-banking credentials to prove his innocence. In this scam, the victim can lose his lifetime savings, Luk said.

He said Filipinos are not within the reach of this type of scammers, who only speak Mandarin and Cantonese. But the workers play a very important role as key influence agents to halt the scam that target the elderly, most of whom don’t live with their children but with the helpers, who are the main care providers,” the officer said.

Luk sad in several cases, the helpers saw their elderly employer talking lengthily and nervously on the phone. The scams were halted when the employers’ children were alerted.

In the “guess who” type, the fraudster makes a call pretending to be a relative of the victim and asks for money, saying that another relative is in trouble. He asks the victim for help and tells him to transfer money in a designated bank account, then disappears. 

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Phl posts record daily tally of 8,019 new Covid-19 cases

Posted on 22 March 2021 No comments

By The SUN 

Donated food is handed across a barrier as stricter gathering rules take effect Monday (Reuters)

Another daily record of 8,019 new coronavirus infections was posted in the Philippines on Monday, Mar 22, as authorities tighten curbs in Metro Manila and four nearby provinces.

In its daily bulletin, the Department of Health said that total confirmed cases had reached 671,792, of which 12.1% or 80,970 are active.

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Most of the active cases or 95.4% have only mild symptoms, while 2.2 percent are asymptomatic. Another 1 percent of the patients have severe symptoms while 0.9 percent are in critical condition.

At the same time, 103 coronavirus patients were declared recovered, bringing the overall tally to 577,850. Four more deaths were recorded, bringing the death toll to 12,972.

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This was the third record rise in the Philippines’ daily coronavirus tally in just four days. The country’s previous daily record of cases was 7,999, which was posted only on Saturday.

The surge in cases, believed to be caused largely by the spread of the highly infectious coronavirus strain, has led to hospital capacity nearing critical levels, according to government figures.

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People are being urged to stay at home as much as possible to prevent the further spread of the virus.

Yesterday, President Rodrigo Duterte signed a resolution from the Inter-Agency Task Force on Covid-19 prevention that bans public gatherings and allowing only essential travel within Metro Manila and the provinces of Cavite, Laguna, Bulacan and Rizal.

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Overnight curfews are also in place, churches and other places where large groups gather have been shut, while indoor dining has been banned for the next two weeks at least.

The governments says it hopes to see new cases drop by at least 25% after the tighter measures are put in place.


The Philippines currently has the second-highest Covid-19 infections and deaths in Southeast Asia, after Indonesia. A further surge in case could threaten hopes of a strong economic record after last year’s record contraction of 9.5%, and the loss of millions of jobs.

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9 newly arrived Filipina DHs among 18 new coronavirus cases

Posted on No comments

By Daisy CL Mandap

6 of the Filipinas took Cebu Pacific Air, but on 2 separate dates

Nine Filipina domestic helpers are among 18 new cases of coronavirus infections recorded in Hong Kong today, Mar. 22. Six of them had the highly infectious N501Y variant.

According to the CHP’s Dr Chuang Shuk-kwan, 11 of the new cases were imported, and nine were new arrivals from the Philippines, one from Indonesia and another from Pakistan.

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Six of the Filipinas arrived on Mar 20, three on board Philippine Airlines flight PR 300 and the other three, on Cebu Pacific flight 5J272. All tested positive at the airport.

Three others flew in on Mar 9 aboard flight 5J 272 and tested positive on their 12th day in hotel quarantine.

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Chuang said the two other imported cases were an Indonesian domestic worker who also tested positive at HK Airport, and a returning resident from Pakistan who was found infected on his 19th day in quarantine, and also carried the mutated virus.

She said there are about 10 preliminary positive cases today, and most of them are imported.

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Today’s imported case with their flight details and visa status are listed as follows:

 

Case Number

Arrival Date

Flight Number

Air crew/Sea w/Sea Crew /Domestic helper ?

Mmutated virus (N501Y) spotted

11381

20/3/2021

5J272

Domestic helper

Yes

11382

20/3/2021

5J272

Domestic helper

No

11383

20/3/2021

PR300

Domestic helper

Yes

11384

20/3/2021

PR300

Domestic helper

Yes

11385

20/3/2021

PR300

Domestic helper

Yes

11386

20/3/2021

SQ882

Domestic helper

No (Indo)

11392

20/3/2021

5J272

Domestic helper

Yes

11393

1/3/2021

EK384

No

Yes (Pak)

11395

9/3/2021

5J272

Domestic helper

Yes

11396

9/3/2021

5J272

Domestic helper

No

11397

9/3/2021

5J272

Domestic helper

No

 

Exactly a week ago, nine newly arrived Filipinas were also found to have Covid-19. Five all flew together from Manila aboard Cathay Pacific Airways, prompting Hong Kong authorities to suspend the airline for two weeks in line with anti pandemic protocols.

Meanwhile Chuang said that of the seven local cases, five were linked to the outbreak at Ursus Fitness in Sai Ying Pun, and were detected at the quarantine centers.

5 of the new local cases were detected in quarantine centers 

They brought the total number of cases from that cluster to 147, comprising 8 staff, 93 customers and 46 close contacts.

The two other cases had unknown sources, including a parttime taxi driver who plied the Hong Kong and Kowloon routes. Chuang said his passengers who used the LeaveHomeSafe app and have been notified should go for testing immediately.


Another is a clerk at a Cha Kwo Ling construction site. More than 100 people who work at the site will be ordered to test for Covid-19 while 10 others who work in the same office as the patient will be sent to quarantine centers.

Of the preliminary cases, one involving an 88-year-old man is causing concern as he appears to have eaten in a Chinese restaurant in Lam Tin where two other customers were recently found infected. He also lives in a public housing building as one of the two earlier patients.

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The elderly man was taken to United Christian Hospital early this morning because of a fever and shortness of breath.

Chuang said the CHP is still investigating whether there’s any link between him and the two previous cases.

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Police looking at bank's CCTV in Filipina's $800k ATM theft case

Posted on No comments

By Vir B. Lumicao 

Garaza did not apply for bail when she appeared in court

Prosecutors are still awaiting CCTV footages and an analysis of ATM transactions made by a Filipina domestic helper who is accused of stealing $768,000 from her male employer’s bank account, the Eastern Court was told today, Mar 22.

The defendant, June Jennie Garaza, appeared briefly before Magistrate Peter Law for her second court appearance since her arrest on Jan 22 after allegedly skimming the amount over a period of 14 months.

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She did not apply for bail, and the magistrate ordered her remanded in custody until her next court appearance on May 17.

The prosecutor requested the magistrate to give the police eight weeks to further review the video footages of Garaza’s visits to ATM booths of the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corp between Nov 26, 2019 and Jan 21 this year.

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Garaza, a 33-year-old mother of a 15-month-old boy, was accused of making more than 200 unauthorized ATM withdrawals during that period from the bank account of her French employer, Stephen Peepels.

Luga (right) telling news anchor Raffy Tulfo that his wife is innocent

The defendant glanced at the gallery when she appeared in the dock and on her way back to the holding area. Only a staff from the Consulate and a relative of Garaza were there to attend her hearing.

Absent from the hearing was defendant’s husband, Kevin Luga, who fed the case last month to “Raffy Tulfo in Action,” a highly popular TV show among Filipinos in a bid to gain support for his wife.

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Little has been said in court about the case. But Luga, who also works as a domestic helper at Peepels’ house, told show host Raffy Tulfo the case stemmed from a $17,850 hotel bill he and his son incurred for quarantine upon arrival from Manila on Jan 18.

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He said his wife paid the bill using Peepels’ ATM card, but with the employer's consent. When a nephew of Peepels who live in the same household saw the receipt he reportedly accused the couple of cheating their boss.


Peepels, said to be in his mid-50s, reportedly got furious and checked his account, leading to his discovery of the alleged theft. He reported the case, after which he fired Luga.

The Filipino has reportedly returned to the Philippines with his son since.

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