ANOTHER MAJOR INTERNET GAMBLING BUST IN CHINA
3 April 2009
Bets worth over $73 million recorded in
online gambling raid
Chinese police in the city of Hangzhou, Zhejiang
province this week arrested 11 people on charges of
running an illegal gambling network, involving bets
worth over 500 million yuan ($73 million).
"The
[Hangzhou] network acted as a bridge between Chinese
gamblers and overseas Internet casinos in the
Philippines," Wu Jun, spokesman for the public security
bureau of Xiaoshang district told the newspaper China
Daily.
"About 80 percent of the gamblers are
local businessmen, and chances are that the money they
bet came from their companies' accounts," Wu claimed.
Briefing the press, Wu Jun said that the
underground gambling network was set up by a wealthy
forty-something local businessman surnamed Li in March
2008. Li was acting as an agent for an unidentified
Philippines-based online gambling website and had been
recruited to the role while he was gambling in Macau. Li
had been required to place a 5 million yuan deposit to
set up the action, and 17 percent of the amounts won
from players would go to the website as a fee.
Hangzhou gamblers could view real-time images of the
casino streamed from the Philippines via the website and
place bets through the agent's account. Li's cut was 10
percent of the winnings as commission, while the person
who introduced the gambler to the website received a 7
percent commission.
The China Daily reports that
to maximise commissions, Li had to attract as many
gamblers as he could to his virtual casino, which only
consisted of a laptop with an Internet connection. He
ran the gambling network under a pyramid scheme in which
gamblers were encouraged to bring in more people to join
the website's network in order to earn more commission.
"Li provided a convenient but illegal platform
for wealthy businessmen, who wanted to gamble in
Xiaoshan," Wu said. "Otherwise they had to travel all
the way to Macau to do so."
Under current
Chinese law, gambling is prohibited, with the exception
of the Hiong Kong offshore island of Macau, the
newspaper claims.
Following his arrest a
contrite Li told the Hangzhou-based Qianjiang Evening
News: "This is the stupidest thing I've ever done. The
whole thing started as a joke, but the joke went too
far. I was not short of money, I was just being greedy."
Li told the evening newspaper his normal annual
income was around 3 million yuan.
Li's
involvement in a profitable gambling enterprise was
uncovered almost by accident by police investigating the
case of a fugitive businessman who had absconded owing
local banks "hundreds of millions of yuan".
Investigators traced much of the money back to Li's
online gambling network.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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