Showing posts with label loanshark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label loanshark. Show all posts

Monday, June 15, 2009

O$P$: Tearaway teens

More and more youth being used by loan sharks to harass debtors

Teo Xuanwei

HE HAD been eyeing a dream mobile phone for some time even though he could not afford it. So, when an offer to make some easy cash came along, Tom - not his real name - jumped at it.

The "task" assigned to him by an "uncle": Scrawling graffiti outside debtors' flats demanding payment.

The 15-year-old school dropout has been a runner for illegal moneylenders for almost six months, getting between $20 and $50 for each night's "work". And he has saved almost enough for the $400 second-hand mobile phone he craves for.

"You usually work with someone acting as a lookout, so you have to be very unlucky to get caught," the tearaway teenager told Today.

Teens like Tom are increasingly being used by loan shark syndicates to harass debtors into paying up. Police figures show that the number of youth - those aged under 19 - arrested last year for offences related to unlicensed moneylending crept up to 63 from 59 in the preceding year.

Figures for youth arrests this year have not been made public yet. But based on the massive jump in the number of harassment cases related to loansharking in the first three months alone, it is likely that more youth are involved. Between January and March, the police handled about 4,000 such cases - double the number in the corresponding period last year.

In two separate operations last week, police arrested seven youth suspected of harassing debtors. On Thursday, two suspects, including a boy aged 17, were nabbed. Two days earlier, six out of the nine persons arrested for suspected harassment related to loansharking were aged between 12 and 19 years old.

The police and youth counsellors told Today that the lure of making a quick buck is usually the main motivation for teens to turn to crime.

Dr Carol Balhetchet, director of youth services at the Singapore Children's Society, said: "They see their peers having certain material possessions and they want those things, too."

Some may not be able to find jobs because of their age and decide to resort to crime. "It's the easiest shortcut to the 'problem' in the kid's eyes," she said.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a one-time loan shark said that youth, especially those involved in street-gang activities, are soft targets.

Loan shark syndicates usually task the leaders of street gangs with harassing debtors and the leaders, in turn, delegate the work to the teens "under" them, he explained. "These teenagers will do almost anything to prove they are 'brave'," he said. "They are so eager to prove their loyalty to the gang that they don't think about the consequences."

Echoing the view, Dr Balhetchet says these youth see the gangs as their "surrogate families".

"The gangs give them a sense of belonging and security. It makes them willing to do anything for their 'family members'," she noted.

And even if they do get caught, they are too far down the "food chain" to lead the authorities to the syndicate leader, said the former loan shark.

Mr Winston Seah, a senior social worker at Crossroad Youth Centre & Care Corner Family Service Centre, said that getting youth to become runners is appealing to loan sharks because the teens "are often able to avoid the suspicion of law enforcement officers".

As Tom pointed out: "People think we're just kids staying out late and hanging out."

Under the law, those convicted of harassment or intimidation in connection with unlicensed moneylending face a fine between $4,000 and $40,000, or up to three years in jail, or both. Although the teenage runners may face less strict treatment under the law compared with adults, being cavalier could be foolhardy. And under certain circumstances, those aged 17 and above may even be tried as adults.

Many like Tom continue to engage in these criminal activities until they get caught.

The police and youth counsellors advise parents, family members and teachers to look out for warning signs. These include a youth who often keeps to himself, becomes secretive about his activities or his friends, or who is suddenly able to afford branded goods.

"If parents detect these warning signs, they should begin communicating with their children about their activities or enforce a curfew," said Mr Seah.

"The police will continue to work with schools and educational institutions to prevent youth from being lured and recruited by the syndicates," a police spokesperson said.

From TODAY, News –Monday, 15-Jun-2009


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Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Four girls nabbed for loan shark activities

Ong Dai Lin, dailin@mediacorp.com.sg

FOUR teenage girls between 15 and 16 years old were arrested over the weekend for suspected involvement in loan-shark activities.

At 8.30pm last Friday, a man was leaving his flat when he saw two girls behaving suspiciously at the corridor near a staircase landing of a block at Hougang Street 52. They fled when they realised that they had been spotted and the man gave chase. He was joined by his father who happened to be returning home at the time.

They caught one of the girls after a short chase. When the police arrived, they found a blue marker, cans and plastic bags of paint on the girl. The walls of the staircase landings where the girls were originally seen were daubed with graffiti, believed to be written by the teenagers.

The girl was arrested for suspected involvement in loan-sharking activities. Her three accomplices were arrested the next day.

Yesterday, two of the girls, Cessida Tham and Chua Hui Wen, both 16, were charged in court. They have been remanded for further investigation and are expected to be back in court next Monday. The other two have been released on bail, pending investigations.

From TODAY, News – Tuesday, 05-May-2009



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Jobseekers find personal details abused

SCAM TARGETS UNEMPLOYED

Many fall prey to loan sharks, unsolicited sales pitches


Leong Wee Keat, weekeat@mediacorp.com.sg


LIKE many jobseekers, he thought nothing of it when his employer made copies of his identity card. After all, the 21-year-old, who only wanted to be known as Jack, had his identity card photocopied when he applied for previous part-time jobs.


But the past weekend turned out to be a nightmare for Jack. His home was targeted by loan sharks: A shoe rack was set on fire on Saturday and paint was splashed on his door early yesterday morning.


Jack believes he had unwittingly given his personal details as part of an illegal loan transaction. Told that his part-time job involved the securing of property loans, Jack’s “work” included picking up calls, giving his personal details and handing over money transferred into his personal bank account to his employer.


Jack, who has lodged a police report, is not alone. Today understands that at least eight people may have fallen victim to this alleged employment scam. A police spokesperson said investigations are ongoing.


Other jobseekers who have disclosed their personal details have found themselves on the receiving end of unsolicited sales pitches of insurance and other products.


Last month, Mr Jason Lim received three calls from insurance agencies after his online resume was viewed by six financial advisory firms or insurance-related companies.


“I felt that my private information had been misused and it could have been worse,” said the 28-year-old. “Imagine an illegal group using the information to make a hoax kidnapping threat. They basically have all my personal information.”


Ms Jennifer De Souza, who responded to a classified ad asking jobseekers to reply with an SMS of their names and dates of birth, found herself receiving six calls within a week from companies peddling insurance and other products.


“Does MOM (Ministry of Manpower) check whether these companies have an opening or do they just collect information for a database of these applicants?” she wondered.


Pointing to the Employment Agency Licensing Conditions, an MOM spokesperson said licensed agencies cannot give, divulge or reveal to any persons, directly or indirectly, any information regarding any client without the client’s written consent. Otherwise, the agency’s licence may be revoked.


The MOM has not received any complaints against the more than 2,000 licensed employment agencies here on the misuse of client information this year, added the spokesperson.


But jobseekers enter into a grey area when they turn to online job portals and classified ads. Portals that allow employers and jobseekers to search and post job postings and resumes need not be licensed. Only those that match and place jobseekers have to be.


At present, there is no generic personal data protection law, even though there are strict provisions that apply to specific sectors. These include the Banking Act and codes for medical professionals to protect sensitive information about a person’s finances and health.


Online job portals Today contacted said they do not sell databases of jobseekers and have put in place measures to prevent unscrupulous businesses from mining personal data other than for employment purposes.


Mr Lim Der Shing, chief executive for job portal JobsCentral, believes the situation is worse offline. “Actually, offline, an unscrupulous business could also run a newspaper ad claiming to have lots of job positions and use the resultant databases generated for other purposes such as sales,” he said.


With the economy in the doldrums, jobseekers such as Ms De Souza and Jack hope that the authorities will crack down on unscrupulous employers.


“Please do not make us a fool, requesting a resume and not getting back to us,” said Ms de Souza, who has been unemployed since last August.


Jack, who is awaiting National Service enlistment, is enduring sleepless nights. He stays up to monitor a surveillance camera he has installed, worried that his family members may be harmed.


Yesterday, the family even bought a cable cutter in case the loan sharks chain their gates. “I only wanted to earn some income and help my family. I never thought it could end up like this,” said Jack.


From TODAY, News – Tuesday, 05-May-2009


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Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Loan sharks beware

Illegal moneylending
Police to use mobile CCTVs to curb syndicates' harassment

Teo Xuanwei
xuanwei@mediacorp.com.sg

SOON, police will have eyes round-the-clock at "hotspots" for this "public menace": Illegal moneylenders who splash, paint or scrawl O$P$ (owe money, pay money) on walls.

Against the backdrop of a doubling in the number of illegal moneylending harassment cases in the first quarter compared to the same period last year, Deputy Prime Minister and Home Affairs Minister Wong Kan Seng said mobile closed-circuit televisions will be installed at "harassment-prone sites".

The police said they had bought more than 300 mobile CCTV cameras, which will aid their investigations and serve as deterrence to harassers. Although overall crime figures dipped by 3 per cent between January and last month, loan-sharking cases rose from last year's 2,066 to 3,993.

The Home Affairs Ministry will also consider making borrowing from loan sharks an offence, so as to hold borrowers accountable "if their reckless borrowing or gambling habits endanger the safety and security of the community", Mr Wong said at the annual police workplan seminar yesterday.

Many debtors have been known to become runners for loan-shark syndicates to pay off their debts, he said, making it necessary to "stem the problem decisively in the bud".

Innocent victims of such harassments say they welcome the move despite having to sacrifice some privacy. "If I don't have to spend a single cent, it's definitely a good move," said a MediaCorp Hotline caller who only wanted to be known as Madam Tan. The 34-year-old customer relations officer's home has been splashed with paint six times although her family never borrowed from loan sharks.

Whether this will arrest the problem depends on how soon and for how long the CCTVs are deployed, engineer Alex Lau, 39, told Today. To help frontline officers manage their workload, Mr Wong also announced that manpower at the existing 32 neighbourhood police centres (NPCs) would be beefed up with 220 new officers.

The opening of an integrated resort at the end of the year might bring fresh challenges, noted Mr Wong, as "undesirable elements" enter Singapore and heighten the risk of crimes such as money-laundering, cheating and forgery. But he stressed that the police will "reinvent and reposition" themselves.

www.channelnewsasia.com/video

From TODAY, News – Friday, 17-April-2009