Latest news with #RM474


Sinar Daily
22-07-2025
- Sinar Daily
Two men lose over RM470,000 to investment and phone scams
Ipoh police chief ACP Abang Zainal Abidin Abang Ahmad said the victims, aged 61 and 56, lodged their reports on Sunday. 22 Jul 2025 07:33pm Photo illustrated by Sinar Daily. Ipoh police chief ACP Abang Zainal Abidin Abang Ahmad. Photo by Bernama IPOH - Two men have lost a total of RM474,212.58 after falling victim to a non-existent investment scheme and a phone scam, according to police. Ipoh police chief ACP Abang Zainal Abidin Abang Ahmad said the victims, aged 61 and 56, lodged their reports on Sunday. "The first victim, a site supervisor, lost RM307,315 after being duped by the 'KKR Investment' advertisement on Facebook promising between 10 and 20 per cent returns in a short time. "Enticed by the offer, the supervisor made 14 transactions to six different bank accounts between April and July, only to realise he had been scammed when he was asked to make additional payments supposedly for profit withdrawal,' he said in a statement today. He said in the second case, a 56-year-old former factory worker lost RM166,897.58 after receiving a call from an individual posing as a Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) officer in June. Abang Zainal Abidin said the individual also claimed the man's phone number was linked to illegal moneylending activities ('ah long') and urged him to lodge a police report. "The victim was then connected to another individual posing as a police officer from Bukit Aman, who instructed him to transfer money from his Employees Provident Fund (EPF) account to a company account for investigation purposes. "The fund transfer was made on July 7 before the victim realised he had been duped and lodged a police report,' he said. Abang Zainal advised the public to be more cautious of investment offers that promise high returns in a short period and not to trust unsolicited phone calls from unknown individuals. - BERNAMA More Like This


The Sun
22-07-2025
- Business
- The Sun
Two men lose RM470k to investment and phone scams in Ipoh
IPOH: Two men have lost a combined RM474,212.58 after falling prey to fraudulent investment schemes and phone scams, police confirmed. The victims, aged 61 and 56, filed reports on Sunday. Ipoh police chief ACP Abang Zainal Abidin Abang Ahmad said the first victim, a site supervisor, was lured by a Facebook advertisement for 'KKR Investment,' which promised returns of 10 to 20 per cent within a short period. 'Enticed by the offer, the supervisor made 14 transactions to six different bank accounts between April and July, only to realise he had been scammed when he was asked to make additional payments supposedly for profit withdrawal,' he said. In the second case, a 56-year-old former factory worker lost RM166,897.58 after receiving a call from someone posing as a Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) officer in June. Abang Zainal Abidin said the scammer claimed the victim's phone number was linked to illegal moneylending activities and pressured him to file a police report. 'The victim was then connected to another individual pretending to be a Bukit Aman police officer, who instructed him to transfer money from his EPF account to a company account for 'investigation purposes,'' he explained. The transfer was made on July 7 before the victim realised he had been deceived. Police urge the public to be wary of unrealistic investment offers and unsolicited calls from unknown parties. - BERNAMApix

Barnama
22-07-2025
- Barnama
Two Men Lose Over RM470,000 To Investment And Phone Scams
IPOH, July 22 (Bernama) -- Two men have lost a total of RM474,212.58 after falling victim to a non-existent investment scheme and a phone scam, according to police. Ipoh police chief ACP Abang Zainal Abidin Abang Ahmad said the victims, aged 61 and 56, lodged their reports on Sunday. 'The first victim, a site supervisor, lost RM307,315 after being duped by the 'KKR Investment' advertisement on Facebook promising between 10 and 20 per cent returns in a short time. 'Enticed by the offer, the supervisor made 14 transactions to six different bank accounts between April and July, only to realise he had been scammed when he was asked to make additional payments supposedly for profit withdrawal,' he said in a statement today. He said in the second case, a 56-year-old former factory worker lost RM166,897.58 after receiving a call from an individual posing as a Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) officer in June. Abang Zainal Abidin said the individual also claimed the man's phone number was linked to illegal moneylending activities ('ah long') and urged him to lodge a police report. 'The victim was then connected to another individual posing as a police officer from Bukit Aman, who instructed him to transfer money from his Employees Provident Fund (EPF) account to a company account for investigation purposes. 'The fund transfer was made on July 7 before the victim realised he had been duped and lodged a police report,' he said. Abang Zainal advised the public to be more cautious of investment offers that promise high returns in a short period and not to trust unsolicited phone calls from unknown individuals.


The Star
22-07-2025
- The Star
Two Ipoh men lose nearly RM500K to investment and phone scams
IPOH: Two men here have lost a total of over RM474,000 in separate fraud cases – a bogus investment scheme and a telephone scam. Ipoh OCPD Asst Comm Abang Zainal Abidin Abang Ahmad said they received two reports on Sunday (July 20) from the victims. In the first case, a 61-year-old site supervisor said he came across an advertisement on Facebook for an investment platform called 'KKR Investment' on April 1. 'Enticed by the promise of 10% to 20% returns in a short time, the victim contacted the so-called agent and ended up making 14 transactions to six different bank accounts, totalling RM307,315,' ACP Abang Zainal said in a statement on Tuesday (July 22) The man only realised he had been duped when he was asked to make additional payments, supposedly for taxes, before he could withdraw his 'profits'. In the second case, a 56-year-old retired factory worker said he received a call in June from someone claiming to be from the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC). 'The caller told the victim that his phone number had been linked to an illegal loan shark case and advised him to lodge a police report. 'The call was then transferred to an individual claiming to be a police officer from Bukit Aman,' he said. ACP Abang Zainal said the victim was instructed to transfer his Employees Provident Fund (EPF) savings to another account for investigation purposes. 'On July 7, he transferred RM166,897.58 to a bank account registered under a company,' he said. He reminded the public to always be wary of investment offers that promise high returns in a short time and to conduct thorough checks before committing to any scheme. 'Avoid investing through social media. "Also, never trust unexpected phone calls from strangers claiming to be officials,' he advised.