October 5, 20169 yr The Ministry of Interior’s penal police yesterday arrested two Nigerians and one Cambodian for allegedly cheating a man out of $20,000 through a fake joint venture to print counterfeit money last year. San Sothy, a penal police officer with the Ministry of Interior’s Penal Department, said the three suspects were Onye Caefuna, 30, Pascal Awaski, 39, both Nigerian, and Mr. Awaski’s girlfriend, Cambodian Chhaen Davy, 35. “They are now being detained at the Ministry of Interior. They will be sent to provincial court for questioning on Wednesday,” Mr. Sothy told Khmer Times. The penal police officer said the plaintiff, whom he did not name, met the two Nigerian suspects on Facebook and eventually agreed to a money laundering business venture which involved forging US currency. Mr. Sothy added that the plaintiff was promised a 50 percent cut of the profits from the money-printing business pitched by the two men. The suspects had purportedly even showed the victim the machine they would use to print the forged bills in a bid to convince him of the legitimacy of the business. read more http://www.khmertimeskh.com/news/30393/three-nabbed-for--20-000-scam/ -- © Copyright Khmer Times 05/10 ThaiVisa, c'est aussi en français ThaiVisa, it's also in French
October 5, 20169 yr "... cheating a man out of $20,000 through a fake joint venture to print counterfeit money last year." And we're talking REAL money.... "You can't cheat an honest man" comes to mind.... or at least a bit more difficult
October 5, 20169 yr Shouldn't the plaintiff be a defendant for attempting to finance a counterfeit currency operation?
October 5, 20169 yr $ 20.000 sounds like peanuts after tax deduction and considering inflation. Here comes the real deal:
October 5, 20169 yr 3 hours ago, klauskunkel said: I have mixed emoticons on that story. from to and I don't it looks good on this guy.
October 5, 20169 yr 6 hours ago, KMartinHandyman said: Shouldn't the plaintiff be a defendant for attempting to finance a counterfeit currency operation? Yes
October 6, 20169 yr 18 hours ago, Emster23 said: "... cheating a man out of $20,000 through a fake joint venture to print counterfeit money last year." And we're talking REAL money.... "You can't cheat an honest man" comes to mind.... or at least a bit more difficult Honest men are very susceptible to being cheated, the big cheats on Wall St call then Whales, the smaller whales get ripped quite often for being to honest and trusting by motor mouthed or silver tonged devils, usually drop outs from private schools. Nigerians learn their trade in the back alley University's and amazingly are successful world wide preying on broken hearted women and idiots .
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