Tag: fraud

  • Comfort Taxi Driver Tries To Claim $12,000 Damages For Bumper Scratches, Is This Fraud?

    Comfort Taxi Driver Tries To Claim $12,000 Damages For Bumper Scratches, Is This Fraud?

    Comfort taxi driver claiming absurd amount for insurance claim. Surveyors believed to have profit from the accident claim

    We need to stop all this foul play as my friend kenna the same treatment from comfort taxi ! Where got kenna bang and they claim you so much one siol.

    SGD$12,000 for scratches on the bumper ? Not even a broken headlamp or dent on the bumper. Kenna bang on my door lei. #whyliddat

    Taxi driver still got face to claim medical when he can shout vulgarities like f my Mother and he even want to punch me. This shows clearly he is perfectly fine what. Where got need medical attention when he can be so drama. He tried to call 999 too. ?!? Is this taxi driver on drugs or what? All the actions happening in front of his cool blue Hyundai. #whysostupid #carcam

    Taxi driver also unwilling to cooperate by giving me identification card to take down his particulars. So now he know how I am but I don’t even know who is he. Is he even the rightful hirer ? #winliaolor

    Contact comfort but the CSO mentioned they will try not to agitate the driver in case they return car and join Uber / Grab. LOL

    After which he fled the scene after his speech filled with dirty vugalrities. #liddatcanmeh Just received the attached letter from his lawyer and the damages stated $12,000 siol.

    We need to stop taxi driver from all this foul play ! Making people bang on their rear by jam braking or don’t give way when you want to filter out than they bang you hard. Of course last but not least, how to get $12,000?

    Dawson
    A.S.S. Contributor

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Woman In Alledged Ponzi Scam Reported Missing

    Woman In Alledged Ponzi Scam Reported Missing

    Madam Leong Lai Yee, the woman at the centre of an alleged million-dollar ponzi scam who has been uncontactable for more than a week, has been reported missing.

    Investors who say they are owed a total of $60 million fear that she has left the country.

    Madam Leong’s sister Veronica had reported to the police last Saturday that she was missing.

    Last week, about 60 investors came forward to say they had given Madam Leong money, which she said would be used to buy distressed properties in prime districts to be sold at a profit to overseas buyers. They were promised payments on May 18, after several months of postponements.

    But when the day came, several of them received not money but a letter from Madam Leong in which she said she would take her life.

    An investor who gave his name only as Mr Ong went to her house in Tanah Merah on May 16 after she did not reply to text messages, and calls to her and her husband’s phones could not get through.

    “The lights were on and both cars were seen,” Mr Ong told The Straits Times, adding that no one responded when he pressed the doorbell.

    He said he contacted “all those people close to her to ask them if they know where they are, as it’s weird to have the whole family go overseas at this stressful period of time when she promised payment to investors”.

    The Straits Times called Madam Leong, her husband, two of their children and Madam Leong’s sister, but could not get through to them.

    Madam Leong and her husband Lim Eng Soon were believed to be former property agents. Mr Lim later traded in foreign exchange, investors said.

    The couple had owned or managed a total of 11 companies, including an educational consultancy, a real estate company and an investment holding company, at various times from as far back as 1983.

    All have since been cancelled, terminated or struck off, according to records from the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority.

    The newest one, Golden Space Investment, was registered in November 2009 and struck off 11/2 years later.

    The couple are known for being generous.

    At least two investors attended a Chinese New Year party this year where guests were treated to a lavish buffet spread including wine and crayfish. One of them, Mr S. Goh, 58, a businessman who has known the family for 14 years, said the family regularly hosts Chinese New Year gatherings and birthday parties at their three-storey semi-detached house.

    “It’s posh. There are plenty of art pieces and she even had a bamboo garden which she said cost more than $15,000,” he told The Straits Times last week.

    Mr Goh was also told by Madam Leong that she owned five other condominium units. He visited two of them, in Simei and Orchard Road. But he believes she has since sold all five.

    The Tanah Merah property had been renovated recently and was listed for sale online last month.When The Straits Times visited the house yesterday evening, a Mercedes-Benz and a BMW, which neighbours said belonged to the family, were parked there. Investors say the couple live with their son and daughter. Another daughter is overseas.

    What appeared to be a week’s worth of newspapers were strewn about the front porch.

    Neighbours said they have not seen the family in two or three weeks, but described them as friendly. “The husband would give us starfruit from their tree,” said Madam Pan Lay Choo, 59, a housewife.

    She said she has known Madam Leong’s family since they moved in about eight years ago, and her son is friends with one of Madam Leong’s two daughters, although the two families are not close.

    A car used by one of the daughters had not returned to the house recently, Madam Pan said, adding that the family’s maid and dog were nowhere to be seen. The police were seen at the house last week.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com