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China to hear largest case of making, selling fake receipts in history
KUNMING—A local court in
China's southwestern Yunnan Province will hear the largest ever case of
making and selling fake receipts on Friday after more than 1 million
bogus receipts worth 1.05 trillion yuan (147.3 billion U.S. dollars)
were confiscated.
"It is the largest case of making and selling fake receipts since 1949,
according to the Ministry of Public security. The fake receipts that
were confiscated could load two trucks," said Chai Jiaping, Qujing
Municipal Public Security Bureau deputy head, on Thursday.
Five suspects have been arrested and will be tried on Friday morning in
Luoping County people's court, a subsidiary of the Qujing municipal
court. Luoping County police found 128,300 fake receipts worth 18.7
million yuan on a coach heading from Xingyi County in Guizhou Province
to the Yunnan provincial capital, Kunming, on the evening of Aug. 17.
"The fake receipts look almost the same as the real ones. Consumers and
even the tax collectors find it hard to distinguish," said Tang Xiaozhou,
Luoping County Administration of Taxation head. "If put into the market,
the national treasury will lose more than 75 billion yuan in tax
revenue." Police searched the house of consignor Yang Wenbin the next
morning and found 72,700 fake receipts worth 36 million yuan, as well as
computers and scanners for making the bogus receipts.
They then destroyed a workshop making the fabricated receipts in Xingyi
on Aug. 22, where 400,000 receipts worth 611 billion yuan were found.
Two suspects there fled the scene. Police later caught the two and
another consignor, Luo Wenjie, in September in Kunming where they
confiscated fake receipts worth 192.5 billion yuan. —Xinhua |