DutchNews, June 2,
2016
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| Some of the cash seized by police. Photo: OM.nl |
Police and finance ministry officials have raided six
companies at 10 locations throughout the Netherlands in connection with an
international investigation into a letter scam based on non-existent prizes.
The Dutch firms manage some 300 post office boxes which were used by the
fraudsters to con people into sending them money, the public prosecution
department said in a statement. The scam netted the gang millions of euros, the
department said.
There were no arrests but officials seized thousands of
envelopes containing bank notes and cheques, as well as watches, art, expensive
cars and €500,000 in cash. In Utrecht they found pallets loaded with hundreds
of thousands of printed letters ready to be sent, the public prosecution
department said.
The fraudsters sent letters to ‘hundreds of thousands of
people’ urging them to make over small amounts of cash as a fee in return for a
major prize or as a donation to a charity. The victims were based in the US,
Britain, Japan, France and other countries.
Payments
The payments, of between
€20 and €45, were addressed to the post office boxes in the Netherlands. These were managed by the
Dutch companies, which sorted the post and processed the payments.
At the same
time as the raids, the American justice ministry filed a civil case against two
of the Dutch companies – Trends Service in Kommunikatie and Kommunikatie
Service Buitenland – both of which are direct mail companies based in Utrecht.
According to the complaint, they may have helped scam at least $18m a year from
victims in the US.
‘Schemes targeting elderly victims are increasingly
international in scope, but geographic distance will not prevent us from
seeking justice and holding bad actors accountable,’ Benjamin Mizer of the US
Justice department’s civil division said in a statement.
Dutch role
The Dutch
public prosecution department says the Dutch companies are thought to have
facilitated the fraud but that the main suspects are not in the Netherlands.
‘Presumably, the companies were allowed to keep part of the money as payment
for services rendered, but the larger part of the money was transferred to bank
accounts, which allegedly belonged to the main suspects of the fraud,’ the
department said.
The investigation was launched after customs officials at
Schiphol airport intercepted a large quantity of letters.

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