In a case in which an employee of Kansai Electric Power was arrested for pretending to be a student who was looking for a job and taking a ``substitute exam'' for a company's online exam, the employee formed a group with his friends about four years ago and asked for a substitute. Interviews with investigative officials revealed that there was suspicion that he had been received.

From this year, he left the group and started to undertake alone, and he said to the investigation, ``I thought it would be better if I became independent because the student would pay less.''

Nobuhito Tanaka (28), an employee of the Kansai Electric Power Co. in Osaka, received a request from a fourth-year university student in Tokyo in April this year, and performed a "substitute exam" to act as an agent for an online examination conducted by a credit card company during recruitment. On the 21st, he was arrested by the Metropolitan Police Department on suspicion of illegally creating electronic records.



In the investigation so far, it is known that Tanaka recruited test substitutes on SNS and received requests from about 300 job hunting students and received more than 4 million yen.



In addition, about four years ago, the agency started forming a group with friends and received 15,000 yen per case, of which Tanaka seems to have received 2,000 yen, according to interviews with investigative sources. I understand.



After that, in January this year, he left the group and began to undertake acting alone, and he received requests for 2000 yen per case.



In response to the investigation, the Metropolitan Police Department is investigating the details, saying, "I thought it would be better if I became independent from the group because the student would pay less."