Gifu “I worked as a receiver but I didn’t get paid anything and I don’t have any money to get home,” said a 41-year-old unemployed man who visited a police station and was arrested.
0001@Old Man Friends Club ★.Aug. 5, 2024 (Mon) 23:36:52.37ID:aeQkvfoN9
In July, a 41-year-old unemployed man from Gifu City was arrested for visiting the home of an 80-year-old woman in Toyama City, posing as an employee of the Financial Services Agency, and attempting to steal her bankbook and cash card. The 41-year-old unemployed man reportedly went to the police station himself to report the incident, saying, “I worked as a receiver but I wasn’t paid anything and I don’t have any money to get home,” which led to his arrest. The arrested suspect is Seiichi Murakami (41), an unemployed man from Gifu City. According to police, the 41-year-old unemployed man is suspected of attempted fraud after he visited the home of an 80-year-old woman in Toyama City on July 12, posing as an employee of the Financial Services Agency, and attempted to steal her bankbook and cash card. The woman became suspicious of the circumstances of the crime and noticed that the 41-year-old unemployed man immediately left the scene, so she contacted the police. Then, on July 15th, a 41-year-old unemployed man went to Toyama Central Police Station himself and said, “I worked as a receiver for a special fraud case, but I didn’t get paid anything and I don’t have the money to go home. He reportedly said, “I was deceived by a supervisor I met through a job advertisement on social media for a shady part-time job.” Continue reading on NHK 2024/08/05 17:44.
>>1 It’s been altered to “Continued on NHK 2024/08/05 17:44”, but this is a time machine for “August 02, 17:44”. If you weren’t tricked by the thread request, then it’s a problem.
While taking notes, ask for the person’s full name, ask for the characters in their name, ask for the department they belong to, ask for the characters in their department, ask for their date of birth, ask for the person’s boss’ full name, ask for the characters in their boss’ name, ask for the boss’s job title, and then ask them to repeat the whole thing from the beginning, claiming to confirm the above.
The moment you assume that unknown criminals will fulfill their obligations under the law to your subordinates, you are leaking the most important part of the contract.
No, this wasn’t a case of him being a natural idiot or anything like that; it’s possible that he went to the police partly for protection because his boss had kept his identities and those of his family under control and he was in a desperate situation after failing his job.
>>37 Is it the case that when you’re doing shady part-time work, they might ask you about where your parents work? I guess you should be able to guess, but if they did talk about it, that might be the case.
>>37 People who do shady part-time jobs are really just idiots with borderline intelligence. There’s so much information circulating about people’s families being taken hostage and made into slaves, so I wonder why there are still people who do it.
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