An 84-year-old man went to a supermarket to buy 30,000 yuan in game points. The clerk suspected that the man had been cheated and called the police to the store for assistance.

(provided by the police)

[Reporter Peng Jianli/Miaoli Report] An 84-year-old man in Miaoli City went to a supermarket to buy 30,000 yuan in game points. The clerk suspected that the old man had been cheated and called the police to the store for assistance. After understanding, the old man met a person in the Facebook community A female netizen nicknamed "Qiqi" chatted with each other on LINE. "Qiqi" asked the old man to buy game points before he would go out with him. Fortunately, the super store clerk sensed the difference and immediately notified the police, successfully stopping the old man from being attacked. scam.

On the 12th, the Beimiao Police Station of the Miaoli Police Sub-bureau received a report from an employee of a supermarket in the jurisdiction that an old man wanted to buy 30,000 yuan in game points.

Please read on...

Police officers Zhan Quanren and Li Xuanzhang immediately went to the store to find out, and asked the old man what he used to buy the game points. At first, the old man refused to explain. He asked to buy points before agreeing to travel together, and he followed the instructions to the supermarket to buy game points.

After hearing this, the policeman explained to the old man that this is a common fraudulent method of "fake friends, real fraud", and supplemented by a case to illustrate that the old man was finally willing to accept that "Qiqi" is a fraud group. He thanked the police and shop assistants and escaped. This time "Peach Blossom Tribulation".

The Miaoli Police Sub-bureau stated that it has recently successfully blocked three cases of "fake investment" and one "fake dating" fraud case.

And once again appealed, there are many scams in dating messages on the Internet, mobile APP, Line communication software, etc. If there are requests for remittance investment, purchase of game points, etc. in the content of the conversation, it may be a trick of a fraud group, so don't trust it If you have any questions, you can call the 165 anti-fraud hotline or 110 for reporting.