Spanish police on
Wednesday arrested a key figure of the Spanish quarters of fake brokerage investment platform, EverFX. The police identified the arrested top gun as “Pablo
A ,”
According to OCCRP,
akinek vizsgálatok
2020-ben exposed the massive
investment fraud network, “Pablo A” was rounded up at the El Prat Aiport in
Barcelona, Spain, after he rounded off a trip from Romania. A joint statement by
police forces Guardia Civil and Mossos d’Esquadra notes
that “Pablo A” and his teams made contact with victims “through call centers
located on the periphery of the European Union.”
Oliva
Press, an English-language newspaper for the expatriate community in Spain,
notes that about 17,000 persons were scammed in Spain alone.
Összehangolt cselekvés
According to a joint statement shared by the police force and cited by the OCCRP, the crime network was making about 50 million euros every three months from its
thousands of victims from across the world.
Meanwhile, the arrest of the key
figure comes a month after European authorities through a coordinated campaign
shut down 15 call centres of the network in Albania, Georgia, Ukraine, Bulgaria and North Macedonia. During the raid, which was conducted between November 8 and 9, police and
prosecutors from Germany, Spain, Sweden, Ukraine, and other six European nations
arrested five suspects and seized thousands of euros worth of cash, among
egyebek.
The campaign was led by
Eurojust, the European Union agency for judicial cooperation, which also funded
the efforts.
Spanish police on
Wednesday arrested a key figure of the Spanish quarters of fake brokerage investment platform, EverFX. The police identified the arrested top gun as “Pablo
A ,”
According to OCCRP,
akinek vizsgálatok
2020-ben exposed the massive
investment fraud network, “Pablo A” was rounded up at the El Prat Aiport in
Barcelona, Spain, after he rounded off a trip from Romania. A joint statement by
police forces Guardia Civil and Mossos d’Esquadra notes
that “Pablo A” and his teams made contact with victims “through call centers
located on the periphery of the European Union.”
Oliva
Press, an English-language newspaper for the expatriate community in Spain,
notes that about 17,000 persons were scammed in Spain alone.
Összehangolt cselekvés
According to a joint statement shared by the police force and cited by the OCCRP, the crime network was making about 50 million euros every three months from its
thousands of victims from across the world.
Meanwhile, the arrest of the key
figure comes a month after European authorities through a coordinated campaign
shut down 15 call centres of the network in Albania, Georgia, Ukraine, Bulgaria and North Macedonia. During the raid, which was conducted between November 8 and 9, police and
prosecutors from Germany, Spain, Sweden, Ukraine, and other six European nations
arrested five suspects and seized thousands of euros worth of cash, among
egyebek.
The campaign was led by
Eurojust, the European Union agency for judicial cooperation, which also funded
the efforts.
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