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Three Chinese men arrested for alleged skimming at ATM booth


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Three Chinese men arrested for alleged skimming at ATM booth

By THE NATION

 

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THREE CHINESE men have been arrested on suspicion of skimming after one of them was caught allegedly installing a device to copy data from customer cards at an ATM booth in Bangkok’s Huai Kwang district on Monday night.

 

The three men – along with another elusive Chinese suspect identified as Zhong Lang Ming – were believed to belong to a larger gang which installed the skimming devices at various locations in Bangkok and Chiang Mai.

 

The suspects – Zhong Fuhua, 31, Liu Liming, 40, and Zhu Wanrong, 47 – were presented at a press conference yesterday in Bangkok along with evidence including three skimming devices with data cables, five small video cameras, 10 electronic cards and two computer notebooks. 

 

They are facing charges of having possession of instruments or materials for electronic card counterfeit or alteration, which is punishable by one to five years in prison and a fine between Bt10,000 and Bt100,000.

 

Pol Maj General Surachet Hakpan, the 191 patrol and special operation division’s chief, said Zhong Fuhua was arrested first near the Central Rama 9 subway station in Huai Kwang while he allegedly removed the skimming device and camera from an ATM machine on Monday night. Police later arrested his two accomplices along with more evidence. 

 

Zhong Fuhua and Liu Liming reportedly confessed and implicated the fugitive Zhong Lang Ming as the gang leader. Zhu Wanrong maintained he was innocent and was Zhong Fuhua’s roommate.

 

Pongsit Chaichutpornsuk, executive vice president and head of Siam Commercial Bank’s Fraud Management Division, said that Thailand was the sixth worst country hit by skimming. 

 

In this case, there appeared to be no damage as police seized the skimming devices before the criminals returned to China.

 

Such devices could copy data from 200 electronic cards per day and the data could be used in withdrawing money from anywhere in the world, he said. 

 

He urged the public not to panic as bank officials would check |and immediately suspend any |suspicious transactions.

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/news/breakingnews/30317989

 
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-- © Copyright The Nation 2017-6-13
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"Pongsit Chaichutpornsuk, executive vice president and head of Siam Commercial Bank’s Fraud Management Division, said that Thailand was the sixth worst country hit by skimming."

 

And of course that wouldn't have anything to do with how dedicated Thai banks are to protecting the accounts of their customers either, would it? Does not continuig to use long outmoded ATM technologies beg the very people you are complaining about to flock here from all over the world, Pongsit? Do you care? Why comment?

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