Police remind parents to keep their payment passwords secure, strengthen their awareness of fraud prevention, set payment limits, and pay more attention to their children’s online activities to promptly detect any unusual emotional changes.
“If you don’t cooperate, I’ll have your parents arrested and sent to jail!” Upon hearing this, Xiao Yu, a 10-year-old elementary school student in Luzhou, Sichuan, obediently followed the instructions of a fake police officer and transferred over 52,000 yuan belonging to his grandparents. Recently, after learning the truth, family members reported the incident to the Hongxing Police Station of the Longmatan District Public Security Bureau in Luzhou. The case is currently under further investigation.
Screenshot of the messages received by Xiao Yu.
According to relevant staff at the Hongxing Police Station, Xiao Yu usually earns pocket money by leveling up game accounts for others and met an online friend named “Deepest Affection Yu Yu” during this process. Xiao Yu initially thought it was a business opportunity, but the other party suddenly changed their tone, claiming to be a “police officer.”
After adding each other as QQ friends, the other party showed a “police officer’s certificate” via video call and sternly told Xiao Yu: “You must cooperate with the investigation now, or we will arrest your parents and send them to jail.”
Frightened and with his mind going blank, under the intimidation and remote direction of the fake police officer, Xiao Yu quietly took his grandparents’ phones, scanned QR codes, confirmed, and transferred money… During the two-hour video call, Xiao Yu made 15 transfers totaling over 52,000 yuan.
Police remind parents to keep their payment passwords secure, strengthen their awareness of fraud prevention, set payment limits, and should pay more attention to minors’ online activities to promptly detect any unusual emotional changes in their children.