a year later.
She was upset, but I’m’m not sure what they said. ” Why did you divulge our information to outsiders?” She questioned me. That was the last day I heard from her, and she claimed she was afraid to speak to me.
She has me blocked. She also blocked my attempts to call her on my father’s’s phone. Her father claimed she wanted a marriage when I contacted her kids.
Seven years had passed since we first started dating, which is a significant amount of time.
She should watch this meeting and comprehend what transpired in Cambodia, I hope. I can vouch for the fact that I didn’t harm you in any way. Even if it’s’s only for five to ten minutes, kindly give me a chance to explain. & nbsp,
I received assistance from the Malaysian International Humanitarian Organization, an NGO, in November. The police assigned an official in a specialized anti-trafficking machine to get my speech at the demand of its director, former inspector general of police Musa Hassan.
The case’s’s officer in charge informed me last month that studies were ongoing. He didn’t provide me with any additional information.
To defend my case in court, I am just relying on funds from the general public. Being up against a sizable organization makes me very concerned.
I had assumed that those who had been conned into traveling to Cambodia were stupid, but it turns out that I am really like them. I always imagined that I would experience this, but it did.
( Editorial note: CNA Insider was unable to independently verify many of the features of Tan’s’s scenario. His story, however, is comparable to those of numerous other victims of work fraud employed by scam syndicates.
Ray Yeh & nbsp, Lianne Chia
Observe our site: Scammers Exposed to read more first-person accounts by rip-off victims and former scammers.
Malaysian Bilce Tan was held captive for three weeks and had to con people in order to succeed. He gathered information covertly to identify his prisoners. He just describes the specifics of life and work in a Thai scam element to CNA Insider.