Three individuals, including a 38-year-old Chinese company employee, have been arrested by the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department on suspicion of organized fraud and other charges for their alleged involvement in impersonating police officers. The suspects have not disclosed their plea. The police believe that the group, led by the Chinese suspect, was based in Cambodia and defrauded victims of approximately 5 billion yen between August last year and January this year.
According to the Special Investigation Division, the other two arrested individuals are a 31-year-old unemployed man with no fixed address and a 36-year-old Chinese national with an unknown occupation. The unemployed suspect is believed to have managed individuals who made fraudulent phone calls, while the Chinese suspect is thought to have directed the transfer of stolen funds.
The three are suspected of making false phone calls to three individuals nationwide in 2023, claiming things like “Your account has been used fraudulently, and you are under suspicion of crime. You need to transfer cash for investigation purposes,” and defrauding them of a total of approximately 35 million yen.
The Chinese suspect is also suspected of laundering 10 million yen from these fraud proceeds by transferring it to a real estate agency as part of a down payment for a luxury condominium.
Down Payment of Approximately 60 Million Yen, Condominium Price Estimated at Hundreds of Millions of Yen
According to investigative sources, the condominium is believed to be worth hundreds of millions of yen, with a down payment of approximately 60 million yen. The 10 million yen related to the arrest charges was transferred to the real estate agency’s account about three minutes after the fraudulent funds were deposited. This is reportedly the first confirmed case where money from this group’s fraud schemes was used for condominium purchases.
Additionally, there are indications that stolen funds may have been used for purchases of pearls and luxury foreign cars like Ferraris. The Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department believes the group was attempting to launder money.
More than 20 people have been arrested so far in connection with this group for their alleged involvement in special fraud cases.