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HANGZHOU - Police have rounded up 36 suspects who are believed to be from seven fraud gangs after officers were tipped off by the world's largest business-to-business e-commerce company.
The arrests were announced on Wednesday.
Alibaba.com Corporation helped solve 281 fraud cases involving more than $6.6 million, said police in Hangzhou, capital of Zhejiang province.
Most of the suspects were college educated and had strong language skills as well as computer proficiency, police said at a news conference in Hangzhou.
Yu Weimin, an investigator in the criminal investigation department at Hangzhou public security bureau, said the suspects' knowledge of foreign languages, international trade and computer skills helped them carry out their frauds on the company's global e-commerce platform.
The arrests followed Alibaba.com receiving complaints from many overseas buyers who said they had placed orders and paid but had not received their purchases.
Alibaba.com found that about 1,219 people registered as a "supplier from China" in 2009 and it said that, by 2010, 1,107 of them had been found to be fraudulent.
In 2010, a buyer from Argentina searched worldwide for suppliers of model aircraft accessories and found a supplier in China through Alibaba.com that quoted a price that was one-third of the market price. The buyer paid $1,400 after a negotiation with the supposed supplier via the online platform.
However, the buyer never received the items he paid for and reported the incident three months later.
Alibaba.com later found that the supplier was fraudulent, acknowledged the scam and reported it to police. The website's chief executive officer and chief operating officer also resigned.
China established an investigating team in March and the 36 suspects were arrested in Hangzhou and Putian, Fujian province in April. As many as 35 computers, 60 identity cards, 137 bank cards and three cars were confiscated. About six gigabytes of electronic information was also collected as evidence.
So far, police have tracked down 208 overseas victims.
The scammers had allegedly illegally purchased supplier accounts and registered as a "supplier from China". They had also allegedly forged identification cards needed to apply for bank accounts.
After obtaining supplier accounts, the fraudsters allegedly claimed to be selling popular items at low prices and pocketed payments without ever posting any goods, according to Hangzhou police.
Alibaba.com has paid $1.94 million in compensation to the overseas victims and has adjusted its efforts to keep online fraud at bay.
Further steps to protect buyers will be introduced soon, said Jiang Fang, director of integrity and security at Alibaba.com.
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