2009 top ten news

    Top 10 frauds of 2009

    (chinadaily.com.cn)
    Updated: 2009-12-25 06:29
    Large Medium Small

    Editor's Note: As China continues to grow, lies and frauds bubble up like sediments in a flooded river. There is not much ingenuity in these scams, but they do harm people, sometimes large groups. But thanks to the Internet, more and more of them have been exposed and the perpetrators brought to justice.

    Here in a chinadaily.com.cn special, we look back at the most notorious frauds and hoaxes uncovered in 2009, mostly in China but not limited to China.?[The Top 10 Everything of 2009]

    1. Identity theft  

    2. Ethnic impostor  

    3. Counterfeit banknotes  

    4. Twin counties  

    5. Phone scam 

    6. Celebrity endorsement of fakery 

    7. Match fixing  

    8. Balloon boy  

    9. Conned into marriage  

    10.Temple homepage 

    ??1. Identity theft

    Top 10 frauds of 2009
    Luo Caixia [tianjinwe.com] 

    The mayor of a small town in Hunan Province helped his daughter steal the identity of one of her classmates so she could attend Guizhou Normal University.

    Wang Zhengrong forged a copy of the ID card of Luo Caixia, 23, and then intercepted an admission letter addressed to Luo from Guizhou Normal. Wang’s daughter attended the school with the forged papers and stolen admissions letter, graduating with a teaching certificate, all the while pretending to be Luo.

    The degree has since been revoked, and Luo is now demanding 135,200 yuan ($20,000) in compensation. Wang Zhengrong was sentenced to two years by a local court.

    Luo, now a student at Tianjin Normal University, first realized that her identity had been stolen when she applied for a bank card and was rejected because the bank had already given a card to someone named Luo Caixia. So, China Daily website editors deem this the biggest scam story of the year in terms of impact on us and Luo Caixia the biggest victim.

    Related readings:
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Power devalues education
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Officer's daughter enters university in name of classmate
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Former Hunan official held for ID theft
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Trading faces in testing times

    Back to Top

    2. Ethnic impostor

    Top 10 frauds of 2009

    He Chuanyang, the student who had the highest score in Chongqing on the liberal arts portion of China’s national college entrance exams, lied about his ethnicity in order to get extra points on the exam.

    He's father, He Yeda, allegedly used his position as director of Wushan county admission office in Chongqing to register He as a member of the Tujia minority.

    But the authorities were tipped off that He was not in fact of Tujia descent. Peking University turned him down once it learned he had lied about his ethnicity.

    After further investigations, 15 officials in Chongqing were punished for falsifying the ethnicity of 31 students to give them extra points on the national college entrance exam.

    China has policies of affirmative action that grant extra points to college applicants of ethnic minorities.

    Related readings:
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Student deserves to be punished
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 University of Hong Kong rejects top scorer
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Officials, students punished for ethnicity lies
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Crack down on fake ethnic identity scam

    Back to Top

    3. Counterfeit banknotes

    Top 10 frauds of 2009
    Police officers with the Public Security Bureau in Fuzhou, Fujian province, count a big stash of counterfeit money, March 18, 2009. [Xinhua]

    Fake banknotes were found in more than 10 provinces ahead of the Spring Festival holiday in 2009.

    The People's Bank of China said that some fake notes with bill numbers starting with "HD9026" might be hard to detect with low quality cash detectors, but they could be easily seen with the naked eye, if one knows what to look for.

    All ATMs and the commercial banks' cash detectors can spot the fake HD-series notes.

    Related readings:
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Beijing police seize record haul of fake money
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 $26m fake banknotes seized in China
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 $17m fake bank notes seized
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Fake money trading gang in E. China held

     

    Back to Top

    4. Twin counties

    Top 10 frauds of 2009

    Top 10 frauds of 2009

    Two news reports about two different places were found to be almost identical in October.

    Both Sui County and Tongbai County, two different areas of Henan Province, publicized their achievements in "developing forestry industry" on their government official websites. The content of the reports were almost identical; the only differences were the names of the counties.

    Further investigation found that the person who operated the Tongbai county government official website was to blame for the incident. Local authorities in Tongbai claim that the operator "failed to save the revised version of the report" and called it a "malfunction".

    Back to Top

    5. Phone scam

    Top 10 frauds of 2009

    If you receive a phone call from the "telecommunications department," "the bank," or even "the police" telling you that your bank account has been hacked and you should transfer all your money to a safer account, beware - it could be a scam.

    Telephone frauds run rampant in China. For instance, some victims said they received phone calls from people who claimed to be customer service staff from their banks, asking for their credit card information for "internal review."

    Police said most of the victims were women older than 40 years of age, some of whom have been duped out of millions of yuan.

    Related readings:
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Middle-aged women targeted in scams
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Phone fraud to rise as year ends
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Spike in scams smears port city
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Guangdong cops crack telephone scam

    Back to Top

    6. Celebrity endorsement of fakery

     
     

    Top 10 frauds of 2009
    [CCTV.com]

     

    Some Chinese celebrities have been forced to apologize to the public for appearing in TV commercials promoting fake or unregistered medicine and medical equipment, including veteran CCTV host Zhao Zhongxiang and famous comedian Hou Yaohua. A man also attempted to sue movie star Chen Daoming, claiming Chen's advertising of products was misleading, but he lost his case in December.

    Related readings:
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 CCTV host says sorry for fake ads
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 TV stations should also be accountable
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Court rejects herbal tea claim for cash

    Back to Top

    7. Match fixing

    Top 10 frauds of 2009
    Former Shanxi club general manager Wang Po. Police said Wang was suspected of manipulating several First Division league matches since 2006.
    [File photo]

    The largest ever match-fixing incident in China's soccer history was exposed this year.

    The scandal involved two clubs in the Chinese Super League (CSL) - Guangzhou Pharmaceutical FC and Chengdu Sheffield United FC, both of which offered opponents bribes to throw matches.

    The scandal was first uncovered in March when a high-profile committee was set up by 12 ministry-level organs to clean up Chinese soccer, which had long been thought to be corrupt.

    Related readings:
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 China soccer match-fixing probe nets 3 execs
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Soccer betting targeted in China
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Former club official: Bribery rampant in leagues
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Police detain at least 4 in soccer gambling

    Back to Top

    8. Balloon boy

    Top 10 frauds of 2009
    Richard Heene (C), his wife Mayumi (R) and son six-year-old Falcon Heene talk to reporters in Fort Collins, Colorado, October 15, 2009.[Agencies] 

    A Colorado couple drew worldwide attention on October 15 when they reported that the youngest of their three sons, 6-year-old Falcon, had been carried away in a homemade helium balloon that accidentally lifted off from their backyard.

    The odd-looking silver craft, built to resemble a flying saucer, drifted over Colorado for 50 miles, trailed by National Guard helicopters as authorities scrambled to reroute aviation traffic in and out of Denver International Airport.

    The episode was followed for hours on live television and the Internet, transfixing millions as the balloon came down in a wheat field and was found empty.

    It turned out the family had squirreled the boy away in the attic of their garage.

    The father received a 90-day jail term and both face thousands of dollars in restitution. Yes, this happened outside China, but China Daily website editors feel it was a pretty ingenious scam, or to borrow an idiom from a Chinese movie, a scam "with high technological input".

    Related readings:
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Lawyer blasts release of affidavit in balloon case
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Mom admits to "Balloon Boy" hoax: court record
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Colorado parents sentenced for "balloon boy" hoax
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Balloon boy parents are sent to jail for hoax

    Back to Top

    9. Conned into marriage

    Top 10 frauds of 2009
    The?swindler surnamed Xu

    A swindler who claimed to be the daughter of a senior Chinese diplomat successfully convinced a Tsinghua University student to marry her, and ended up stealing his money.

    The 41-year-old woman surnamed Xu met a 23-year-old student named Fan at a party in February. The women claimed to be the daughter of former Chinese ambassador to the United Nations Qin Huasun, and said she was a 26-year-old doctoral student at Tsinghua.

    Fan found out that Xu was not who she said she was after the wedding ceremony, and ended up losing 20,000 yuan ($2,924). The woman received a jail sentence of two years.

     

    Back to Top

    10. Temple homepage

     

    Top 10 frauds of 2009
    Shaolin Temple Abbot Shi Yongxin poses with the certificate of a luxury cassock, which was given to him as a gift by a silk company, in Songshan, Henan province, June 7, 2009. [CFP]
     

    In November, the front page of the Shaolin Temple's website was replaced with a fake letter of remorse, which essentially accused Abbot Shi Yongxin of commercializing the 1,000-year-old temple during his 10 years at the helm, staining the religion's reputation and breaching its fundamental discipline.

    At first, Shi thought the people behind the attacks were just curious about the temple's website. But after reading the letter, he believed they were making jokes about the temple, about Buddhism and about himself.

    But he also said the attacks were a warning to the temple as well as to him and they will make efforts to improve themselves.

    Shi has made a name for himself and the Shaolin temple by establishing at least five businesses using the Shaolin name in the past decade.

    Related readings:
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Shaolin takes shot from web hoax
    Top 10 frauds of 2009 Shaolin strikes back at online hacker attacks

     

    Back to Top

     

     

    а√在线中文网新版地址在线| 亚洲AV无码专区亚洲AV伊甸园| 三上悠亚ssⅰn939无码播放| 忘忧草在线社区WWW中国中文| 日本欧美亚洲中文| 波多野42部无码喷潮在线| 中文字幕永久一区二区三区在线观看| 免费无码又爽又黄又刺激网站| 暴力强奷在线播放无码| 人妻少妇久久中文字幕 | 国产中文在线观看| 免费无码午夜福利片| 精品国产a∨无码一区二区三区 | 精品人妻V?出轨中文字幕| 亚洲综合最新无码专区| 人妻系列无码专区无码中出| 日韩人妻无码精品无码中文字幕 | 中文字幕无码无码专区| 免费无码一区二区三区| 亚洲国产无套无码av电影| 人妻少妇AV无码一区二区| 精品久久久久中文字| 中文字幕视频免费| 日本免费中文字幕| 亚洲成人中文字幕| 天堂√最新版中文在线天堂| 美丽姑娘免费观看在线观看中文版 | 亚洲综合无码一区二区| 未满十八18禁止免费无码网站 | 国产AV无码专区亚洲AWWW| 亚洲国产人成中文幕一级二级| 色欲狠狠躁天天躁无码中文字幕| 最好看的2018中文在线观看| 欧美乱人伦中文字幕在线| 日产无码1区2区在线观看| 免费无码又爽又黄又刺激网站| a级毛片无码兔费真人久久| 国产乱妇无码大片在线观看| 五月婷婷无码观看| 亚洲中文字幕伊人久久无码| а√在线中文网新版地址在线|