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Philippine
police backed by Interpol have arrested almost 60 people in connection with an
online extortion syndicate which involved tricking hundreds of victims
worldwide into exposing themselves in front of webcams and then blackmailing
them.
At least
58 people have been arrested in the Philippines for their role in the scam,
which is one of the largest busts in recent years. The investigation also
involved Interpol, the US Homeland Security Department, and police from three
other countries who were able to trace the online conversations from the
victims’ computers, Philippine National Police chief Allan Purisima said in a
news conference on Friday.
During
raids by 15 police teams, more than 260 computers, mobile phones, and various
pieces of pornography were seized, he told a news conference in the Philippine
capital of Manila.
The bust, although large, “is
just the tip of the iceberg,” said Gilbert Sosa, director of the Philippine
police Anti-Cybercrime Group. Many more are still at large and will be pursued,
he said.
The
syndicate preyed on mainly male victims by employing women with fake Facebook
accounts who then struck up online conversations with them.
Sanjay Virmani (L), director of
Interpol's Digital Crime Centre, gestures as he speaks while Britain's
Ambassador to the Philippines Asif ahmad (C) and Philippine police chief Alan
Purisima (R) listen during a press conference at the police headquarters in
Manila on May 2, 2014. (AFP Photo / Ted Aljibe) They would then begin talking
dirty and eventually the victim would expose themselves or perform a sexual act
in front of a webcam. This would then be recorded and the victim would be
blackmailed. The price usually began at US$500 but there have been demands for
as much as $15,000, according to Interpol.
“The scale of these ‘sextortion’
networks is massive and run with one goal in mind, to make money regardless of
the terrible emotional damage they inflict on their victims,” said Sanjay Virmani, director of Interpol’s
Digital Crime Center, in a statement to reporters.
Louis
Kwan Chung-yin, a Hong Kong police inspector, said that more than 470 people
have been victimized in Hong Kong. A US Embassy official said that members of the
US military have also been victimized.
Three of the suspects were
believed to have been involved with the case of Daniel Perry, a 17-year-old
mechanic from Scotland who jumped off a bridge and killed himself after being
told that if he didn’t pay up, his family and friends would be sent his video
conversations.
Gary Cunningham, a police officer
from Scotland, said the three Filipinos would be arrested if there was enough
evidence to connect them to the case.
The authorities emphasized that
the Philippines was not the hub of the scams, and that the current
investigation had merely focused on the South East Asian nation.
“These
crimes are not limited to any one country and or are the victims. That’s why
international cooperation in investigating these crimes is essential,”
said Virmani.

3 comments:
This should be a lesson to those who indulge themselves in unlawful acts.
This should be a lesson to those who indulge themselves in unlawful acts.
Why people can not do something worthwhile instead of unlawful things
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