Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario Man Ganesh Khatry left with $9 dollars in his bank account after being victim of an alleged fraud

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Oct, 2020 04:40 AM
  • Ontario Man Ganesh Khatry left with $9 dollars in his bank account after being victim of an alleged fraud

A new immigrant Ganesh Khatry who came from Nepal to Canada a few years ago to start a new life has been scammed $8290 and is only left with $9 in his bank account.  He was scammed $8290, after receiving multiple calls from people who posed as police to warn that his SIN card had been compromised and multiple bank accounts have been created by someone else. 

While navigating his new environment, he was able to secure a job working as a Walmart employee, where he took a night shift and worked day and night to survive and continued to live his life in Canada. On October 1, he got a call that stated that the caller was from Brampton Police. Khatry says he was called in the middle of his work and was told that his SIN card number and bank accounts have been hacked.

As a new immigrant, he was worried that he might lose all his savings in the bank and asked several times if he would talk to his friend who was with him at that time but the caller said since there was fraud against both his bank accounts and SIN card, he should not be talking to anyone because it might not be safe for him.

The caller also told him that his card had been used to open multiple bank accounts and the funds had been used for drug trafficking and money laundering. The caller told Khatry to leave the place without talking to anyone as it is not “safe to do”. The caller then asked Khatry to withdraw all his funds from his bank accounts. He was then told to deposit his money in a Bitcoin machine, where it would be “safeguarded” until he received a new SIN card the following day. When he called the number, no one picked up. He then realized he was a victim of a scam.

The next day he contacted Brampton Police and filed a report with Peel police but it was already too late by that time. Without his savings and no job, he is now forced to live with support from his friends. 

Photo courtesy of GoFundMe. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Orca sex ratio skewed say scientists

Orca sex ratio skewed say scientists
The feisty boy appeared robust and healthy, it said in a news release. The calf pushes the number of southern resident orcas to just over 70.

Orca sex ratio skewed say scientists

B.C. municipalities want province to share pot tax

B.C. municipalities want province to share pot tax
The union says B.C. is expected to receive $50 million in revenue from the excise tax in the fiscal 2020-2021 year.

B.C. municipalities want province to share pot tax

Liberals promise focus on 'community safety'

Liberals promise focus on 'community safety'
Horgan said he understands that some people are concerned about the impacts of placing homeless people in hotels.

Liberals promise focus on 'community safety'

Man says off-duty cop assault changed his life

Man says off-duty cop assault changed his life
Dafonte Miller laid out the lingering impact of the Dec. 28, 2016 encounter in a statement read by prosecutors Friday at a sentencing hearing for Const. Michael Theriault.

Man says off-duty cop assault changed his life

Quebecer charged in U.S. opioid-trafficking case

Quebecer charged in U.S. opioid-trafficking case
The charges against Arden McCann in connection with the disruption of an alleged international opioid-trafficking ring were announced this week by officials in Washington, D.C.

Quebecer charged in U.S. opioid-trafficking case

Mi'kmaq fishery not a concern for lobster stocks: expert

Mi'kmaq fishery not a concern for lobster stocks: expert
As of December 2018, there were 979 lobster licenses issued in the fishing area around St. Marys Bay, according to the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, Bailey said.

Mi'kmaq fishery not a concern for lobster stocks: expert