
2 arrested, 1,075 fake tickets seized ahead of Jay Chou Hong Kong concerts
Hong Kong police have arrested two people and seized more than 1,000 fake tickets with a face value of over HK$2 million (US$256,410) in total for concerts by Mandopop superstar Jay Chou this weekend.
The force said on Saturday that officers arrested a man, 23, and a 17-year-old girl during an operation the previous afternoon at Hung Hom MTR station when members of a local syndicate were allegedly making a deal. Two counterfeit tickets were seized from the pair.
Officers also found another 1,073 fake concert tickets with a face value of HK$1,880 each, or more than HK$2 million in total, in a hotel room in To Kwa Wan.
The pair were arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to defraud and possessing a false instrument and had been detained for investigation, the force said.
The fake tickets were of poor quality. Photo: Handout
A preliminary investigation had revealed that the syndicate used hotel rooms to store fake concert tickets and arrange for their distribution, Chief Inspector To King-sang said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Beijing's liaison office ‘angered' by Angel Chong's Miss Hong Kong bid, sources say
Officials from Beijing's liaison office in Hong Kong were 'angered' by a young district councillor's brief attempt to compete in a beauty pageant and cautioned her political party over it, according to sources who viewed her move as falling short of the expected conduct of a public officeholder. The Post also learned that the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong (DAB) and the government chose to downplay the saga while resisting any investigation into whether Angel Chong Nga-ting's actions constituted misconduct so as to avoid 'renewing the public's attention' on the incident. The 24-year-old, the city's youngest district councillor, was spotted attending the first round of interviews for the Miss Hong Kong Pageant organised by broadcaster TVB on Tuesday. She announced her withdrawal a day later, saying she wanted to protect the district council's image. Chong had reportedly brought her assistant in the Sai Kung District Council along to the interview, who distributed cold drinks to reporters on site. The assistant was also seen providing Chong's contact information as a councillor to journalists. Multiple insiders from the DAB said Chong had not informed the party of her decision to join the beauty contest. 'The liaison office was angry at her move and also the party for allowing the incident to happen,' a DAB source said.


South China Morning Post
4 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
With big matches coming to Hong Kong, it's important that all fans feel safe
Hong Kong has caught football fever, with the city playing host to a string of high-profile events. Top European teams will soon compete in a 'football festival' and a museum dedicated to superstar Cristiano Ronaldo opens this month. Hopes of bringing the Brazilian national team to the city were revealed last week. But all of this has, so far, been outshone by a match featuring the Hong Kong team. The vibrant atmosphere created by more than 42,000 fans celebrating the recent win over India was a joy to watch. Local fans enjoyed a memorable evening at the new Kai Tak Stadium. Such occasions give Hong Kong football a much-needed boost. But the experience was not so enjoyable for a 31-year-old Indian woman and resident of the city, who gave her name as Yaga. She alleged she had been harassed and intimidated by rival Hong Kong fans sitting near her in response to her passionate support for the Indian team, posting a video that partly supports her claims. Yaga says water was thrown over her and an obscene gesture made towards her by one local fan. She was laughed at, stared at and taunted, she said.


South China Morning Post
5 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Why Israel's spy tactics against Iran have sparked fears in Taiwan
Israel's sweeping intelligence operations against Iran have jolted Taiwan's security community, raising concerns that Beijing could adopt similar tactics to cripple the island's leadership or critical infrastructure. As assassinations and sabotage rattle Tehran, analysts in Taipei warn that Beijing's infiltration of Taiwan is no longer a purely political threat, and it might be laying the groundwork for high-stakes covert warfare. In recent months, Taiwan has seen a surge in espionage cases implicating not only retired and active-duty military personnel, but also aides to senior government officials and lawmakers from the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP). The breadth and depth of these cases have sparked concerns that Beijing's intelligence network has already penetrated the island's political and defence systems. 'What Israel has done to Iran – through a combination of precision, infiltration, and intelligence dominance – is something Beijing could try to replicate,' said Max Lo, executive director of the Taiwan International Strategic Study Society. 'The difference is, this time Taiwan may be the one under the microscope.' According to experts, Taiwan's vulnerabilities lie not only in its geographic proximity to mainland China but also in decades of cross-strait social and cultural exchange, which have enabled mainland Chinese intelligence operatives to blend in and recruit more easily.