By : WONG PEK MEI
PETALING JAYA: It has to be
the latest trick in town steal, then strip and shout your way out of trouble. Hawkers
and traders at SS2 here have encountered cases where a group of Vietnamese
women robbed their customers and flashed their breasts to 'stun' the victims
while they escape.
Recounting an incident when
a woman was caught stealing a customer's wallet, hawker Chow Kwai Chet, 41,
said: "She quickly took off her top and she was braless. She then screamed
'Molest!' which threw my husband who was pursuing her off guard."
Earlier, he had tried to nab
the petite woman, believed to be a Vietnamese in her 30s, when she was caught
stealing his wallet.
The woman tried to remove
her bottoms, too.
"However, a female
hawker slapped and scolded her," Chow said at a Press conference with MCA
Public Services and Complaints Department head Datuk Seri Michael Chong
yesterday.
Another hawker, Leng Chin
Huat, 46, said the women would usually come in a group of three to four
individuals and were believed to be part of a syndicate.
He said they managed to
apprehend three Vietnamese women for stealing and had handed them over to the
police.
"However, the police
had to let them go as they could not find the stolen items on them," he
said.
SS2 Morning Market Traders
Association chairman Khor Choon Seong, 27, said the women would only take the
money and not the credit cards.
"They would then throw
away the purse or wallet. Customers would only find out that they had been robbed
when they wanted to buy something," he said.
Chong said the incident
usually took place during the weekends.
He advised the public to
limit the amount of cash they carried with them and to keep the money in their
front pockets.
Chong also reminded the
public not to believe the claims stated in flyers that were being distributed,
alleging that a Thai monk could help them predict winning lottery numbers.
"The flyers would
usually display the name of the monk' and offer millions of dollars in prize
money," he said.
"In the past two years,
I have received eight cases of people falling prey to such scams," he
added.
"The total loss
amounted to RM1.5million." (The Star)
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