Asia-Pacific News
Gamblers fleeced out of millions in bogus Macau casinos
Feb 14, 2012, 7:15 GMT
Hong Kong - Police in Macau arrested 16 people over an elaborate scam in which gamblers lost millions of dollars in bogus casinos set up in luxury hotel suites, a news report said Tuesday.
Suites in several top hotels were decked out to look like genuine gambling halls with security staff, dealers and other customers as part of the ruse, the South China Morning Post reported.
Customers from mainland China were lured across the border to the southern casino resort and given drinks spiked with drugs before being tricked out of their money, the newspaper said.
One customer lost the equivalent of 1.25 million US dollars while believing he was in a real casino. Police said they had not yet determined the number of victims, but official immigration records showed the gang members had crossed the border into Macau at least 19 times since Mach 2010.
Fake gambling chips worth more than 12 million US dollars were seized in a police raid on a luxury hotel Sunday where the 16 suspects were arrested, according to the Post.
They were charged with fraud, fraudulent gambling and drug trafficking, the newspaper said.
Macau, a former Portuguese colony, is the only place on Chinese soil where casinos are legal. It attracts tens of millions of gamblers a year from mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan.
Read more about China
COMMENT
blog comments powered by DisqusLatest Headlines in Asia-Pacific
- 1. Chinese dissidents hail late democracy activist Fang Lizhi
- 2. China "worried" over planned North Korea rocket launch
- 3. Myanmar's opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi meets Karen rebels
- 4. Chinese schoolboy sells kidney to buy iPad, iPhone
- 5. Myanmar president invites Karen rebels to form party
Older Talkback
