CWN 0.25% $12.09 crown resorts limited

What is going on ??, page-44

  1. 4,270 Posts.
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    think I've found the leak....these guys have been selling hand over fist for 3 weeks IMO

    Police make 19,000 triad arrests in Hong Kong, Macau and Guangdong
    1 hour ago
    From the section Asia
    A gambling tableImage copyrightGetty Images
    Image caption
    Police said illegal gambling was one of the crimes the suspects were involved with
    Nineteen thousand suspects have been arrested in a drive against organised-crime in China, state media said.
    A three-month operation led to the arrests in Hong Kong, Macau and Guangdong province. Police said triad gangs were increasingly expanding into mainland China.
    The crimes involved include drug dealing, gambling and prostitution.
    Triads are transnational crime groups, often based in Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan, but operating globally.
    Hong Kong police officers, monitoring a demonstration in JulyImage copyrightGetty Images
    Image caption
    Police say they are increasing cross-border cooperation in a bid to counter the gangs' own growing reach
    "The message we want to send out to the public is that police have zero tolerance for organised crimes and any other illegal activities," Au Chin-chau, chief superintendent of Hong Kong police's Organised Crime and Triad Bureau told journalists.
    Illegal loans were also found to be a new source of income for the gangs, he said.
    Reports said 4,343 people, 1,177 of them from mainland China, were arrested by police in Hong Kong, where more than 7,500 properties were searched.
    In Hong Kong, police seized $102m Hong Kong dollars ($13m; £8.5m) in cash, along with drugs, pirated DVDs, weapons and contraband cigarettes worth HK$67m.
    In neighbouring Guangdong province, more than 11,000 suspects were arrested. And in Macau, almost 4,000 people were picked up by police.
    The crime-sweep, part of a regular operation codenamed Thunderbolt 15, was reportedly the longest joint operation of its kind, and a model for increasing cross-border police cooperation in the future, state media said.
    Signs on the front of a sex work business in Hong KongImage copyrightGetty Images
    Image caption
    The accused were also said by police to be involved in the sex trade
    Last edited by sergeant: 24/09/15
 
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