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“The ashes of my parents are broken.”
In mid-June, a residential area in Nam-gu, Busan.
While driving through the alleys, Mr. A was surprised to hear a knock on the side mirror and hastily stopped.
When I got out, there was an old man in his 60s around the car touching the broken porcelain on the floor and crying.
This man, dressed in a black suit and permanently dressed, threw a yellow envelope at the driver, and on it was written the word ‘death certificate (makeup)’.
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The man asked for 300,000 won in cash and said he was broken in a contact accident with his parents’ remains.
Driver A, who was shocked to the point of having a cold sweat on his back at the thought that he had broken the remains of the deceased, took the money out of his wallet and handed it to the man.
After recovering from the accident, Mr. A was guilty of not giving the man the contact information.
Thinking it could be a hit-and-run controversy later, Mr. A reported the accident to the police.
The reversal took place from that moment on.
Hearing the report, the investigator from the South Police Station in Busan realized that it was strange.
This is because an accident with the same content was received not long ago.
The Southern Police Department began searching other police stations for similar cases, found 11 cases in all, and followed the man.
However, it was difficult to find out where this man was mainly because he only went to places where there was no closed circuit television (CC).
Then a victim accidentally witnessed and reported the man on the street, and the police investigated CCTV from the scene, confirming that the man was Mr. B and trapping Dulmi.
Police believe that Mr. B took out 1.09 million won from 11 people from May last year to 7 this month.
It was confirmed that there were various punishments after he was arrested for wringing a small amount of money from the deal by hitting the wrist against the side mirror using a technique called “wrist strike.”
It was revealed that the man wore a protective device made of silicone on his right arm for ‘assault fraud’ and practiced the crime in advance.
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Police believe there will be more drivers who have suffered damage from similar techniques.
Police said: “This man left the house every day from 5 o’clock and walked around the city,” he said. “I rarely report that the victims broke the ashes, but if anyone sees the damage, contact the Southwest traffic accident investigation team.” Revealed.
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