ZHENGZHOU -- Chinese police have seized the country's largest ring of ticket 
scalpers, an extended family in the central Henan Province that scalped at least 
100,000 train tickets in the past five years. 
The ring of 11 members have earned more than 400,000 yuan (US$50,000) since 
early 2001 by buying up train tickets at the railway station and reselling them 
at higher prices. 
Many travelers had to pay a surcharge of 30 yuan or 40 yuan (US$3.75 to 5) 
for a hard-won ticket because it is very difficult to get one in a country with 
1.3 billion people, particularly on the eve of holidays. 
Yang Shengli, the head of the ticket scalping ring, colluded with his wife 
and nearly all his relatives to do the business. 
Yang opened up a ticket hotline, which he publicized with promises that he 
could get any ticket at any time. Yang and his brother answered the phone, took 
orders and sent a niece and a nephew out to buy up tickets daily at official 
ticket windows. 
The tickets were then sent to a drugstore run by a cousin of Yang in a 
downtown hotel. From there, Yang's sisters and cousins would sell them at higher 
prices. 
They were having booming business when a passenger from Shanghai turned them 
in, accusing them of extra charges. 
The passenger complained to Zhengzhou railway police in July that he could 
not get a sleeper ticket at Zhengzhou Railway Station even though he had been 
waiting at the counter three days in advance. 
The ring were seized in August but investigation is still going on. 
China's railway police have been cracking down on train ticket scalpers since 
2004. 
Over the past three years, police have seized nearly 20,000 illegal ticket 
dealers and 100,000 tickets at a face value of 12.2 million yuan (US$1.5 
million). 
Some scalpers were found to sell fake tickets. 
In China, trains are the most popular means of travel, especially over long 
distances. The railway carries 1.16 billion people a year, according to the 
Ministry of Railways.