Shenzhen police busted a credit card forgery ring and
confiscated 41,000 counterfeit credit cards earlier this year,
police announced yesterday.
It was the biggest credit card forgery case in China in terms of
the number of counterfeit cards confiscated, police spokesman Li
Honglang told a press conference yesterday. The fake cards were
copies of five major international credit card brands, namely Visa,
Mastercard, Diners Club, American Express, and JCB.
Li said some of the counterfeit cards carried the cardholders'
information. Police are still interrogating the suspects on how
they obtained the information and are contacting the credit card
companies to see if any of the counterfeit cards had been used.
Acting on a tip-off from their Hong Kong colleagues, Shenzhen
police raided two apartments in Luohu District at noon Feb. 22,
where they found about 39,000 counterfeit credit cards, with about
38,000 being stored in one apartment.
On Feb. 23, police raided a factory in Buji Subdistrict,
Longgang District, where they found equipment for counterfeiting
the cards, and 1,200 fake credit cards.
Four suspects were arrested, including a Hong Kong resident
surnamed Liu, who was allegedly in charge of selling and using the
cards overseas. Three others were a man surnamed Huang, responsible
for inputting information into the cards, a man surnamed Zeng, in
charge of the factory, and a man surnamed Zhu, responsible for
storing and transporting the counterfeit cards.
The spokesman said the possibility of information leaking from
banks was very low. “The Hong Kong man, who was the ringleader, was
not a bank employee,” he said.
The police estimated that the counterfeit cards could have
caused economic losses of more than 900 million yuan (US$112
million) if they were used.
(Shenzhen Daily April 12, 2006)