Hong Kong Woman Loses HK$2.25 Million in Job Scam
Victim duped into borrowing from loan companies and transferring money to scammers; calls for tighter online job platform regulations
نظرة سريعة
- A 25-year-old Hong Kong woman was cheated out of more than HK$2.25 million (US$287,190) over one month after responding to a part-time job posting offering HK$90 an hour.
- The victim, who had quit her university research assistant job due to health issues, was tricked into signing documents for a fake lawyer assisting a mainland financier, taken to three loan companies in one day, and asked to open virtual bank accounts to transfer money to scammers.
ملخص مُنشأ بالذكاء الاصطناعي
لماذا يهم
The case highlights concerns about online employment platform verification, with advocates calling for tighter regulations requiring employers to be verified. The victim was tricked through a sophisticated scheme involving fake legal documentation and promises of helping a mainland financier.
A 25-year-old Hong Kong woman was cheated out of more than HK$2.25 million (US$287,190) in one month after falling prey to a job scam, prompting calls for tighter rules requiring online employment platforms to verify employers.
The victim said on Saturday at a press briefing held by the Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions that she came across a posting for a "part-time helper" job offering HK$90 an hour in January. She had quit her job as a research assistant at a local university late last year because of poor health. She passed all the "interviews" and was subsequently hired.
In March, she was asked to sign documents to help a "lawyer" assist a "mainland big shot" with "financing". The victim, who declined to be named, said she was taken to three loan companies to borrow money in one day and was also asked to open accounts at virtual banks to transfer the money to designated bank accounts of the scammers.
"They said I had signed contractual documents and if I did not help the mainland boss I could face penalties amounting to millions of yuan for breaching the contract," she said of her ordeal. "They also said it was only procedural and the company would pay me back the money to repay the loans."
ما الذي يجب مراقبته
توقعات الذكاء الاصطناعي — احتمالات وليست حقائق
Hong Kong authorities may introduce stricter regulations for online employment platforms
مرجح · خلال أشهر
أسئلة مفتوحة
- How were the scammers able to operate undetected?
- What verification processes do Hong Kong online job platforms currently have?
- Will there be regulatory action following this case?






