The country's biggest fake credit card racket has been uncovered in Shenzhen 
Special Economic Zone, involving 41,000 fraudulent cards and a base full of 
state-of-the-art production materials. 
Guangdong police yesterday announced, in collaboration with their 
counterparts in Hong Kong and Macao, that the fake credit cards were confiscated 
from a Shenzhen warehouse and production site in February. 
Four suspects, including a Hong Kong resident surnamed Lau, were detained at 
the two sites, according to Xu Wenhai, director of the Economic Criminal 
Investigation Department under Guangdong Provincial Bureau of Public Security. 
Lau, 31, is thought to be the leader of the group, Xu said. 
Addressing a press conference in Guangzhou yesterday afternoon, Xu said 
computers, code readers, printers, fax machines, scanners and raw materials for 
card production were also found. 
"It is so far the largest fake credit card case that has been uncovered in 
the Chinese mainland and also one of one of the biggest cases involving fake 
credit card production and sales in the world," Xu said. 
The seized fakes mainly included imitations of Mastercard, Visa and others 
issued by big name international banks. 
The technologies and equipment used to produce the fake credit cards were 
found to be most advanced in the world, Xu said. 
Guangdong Provincial Bureau of Public Security last May established a special 
task force and began investigating when they received information from Hong Kong 
police that a fake credit card gang might have started producing fake cards in 
Shenzhen. 
The gang allegedly stole credit card information from abroad and focused on 
producing and selling fake credit cards in the southern Chinese region. 
Zhang estimated that if the fake credit cards had been circulated they would 
have caused economic losses valued at more than 900 million yuan (US$112.5 
million). 
The crackdown of the case has dealt a heavy blow to the region's fake credit 
card production gangs and will likely deter related crimes, Xu said. 
Despite the achievement, Xu said Guangdong police would continue to spare no 
effort to crack down on illegal economic financial incidents in the region and 
try to bring fake credit card production under control, Xu said. 
"Guangdong police will continue to expand their co-operation with Hong Kong 
and Macao counterparts in fighting cross border crimes in the future," Xu said. 
The Hong Kong Credit Card Risk Management Committee also sent a delegation to 
the Guangdong provincial capital city to express their appreciation to Guangdong 
police. 
Brian Chan, president of the Hong Kong Credit Card Risk Management Committee, 
said the uncovering of the case would help protect the legal interest of foreign 
banks and overseas cardholders. 
Banks in Hong Kong are estimated to have issued more than 10 million credit 
cards. 
(China Daily 04/12/2006 page9) 
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