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Scams that use jobs as a bait for newcomers continue to exist.



There are cases where people believe in high income and stable work, but rather take on large debts and even become ex-convicts.



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Mo Park, 22, who had just been discharged from the military, posted an open resume on a job site and received a job offer from a company over the phone.



[Mr. Park (22 years old): It was a method of going to the promised place, meeting the person, giving the documents, receiving the money, and depositing the money into the designated account.]



All contact with the company

was

made only through phone or SNS, not face-to-face.



Still, he promised to earn 100,000 won per case and convert to a full-time employee if he worked hard.



However, only ten days later, Park became a suspect.



What Park did was a voice phishing cash delivery system.



[Park Mo (22 years old): It's unfair. I'm doing gonna be need to eat a bad heart punish Once this behavior, global even had I felt some hope to see now live hard, I am. -



29-year-old Mr. Mo was preparing for civil service examinations also have started to work part-time voice phishing as Mr. Park became an accomplice.



He only worked for five days, but he was sentenced to one year in prison for fraud and is currently preparing an appeal.



[Lee Mo (29 years old): As a former criminal, I gave up preparing for the civil service exam, and I had to come to an agreement with the (voice phishing) victim, so I had to prepare 60, 70 million won each... .]



The real culprits are walking outside the net of the law.



[Lee Mo (29 years old): I will cooperate with the investigation and catch the real criminals. I can't catch it anyway... .] Some



young people have been forced to take on huge debts.



Mo Jo, 22, was introduced to a job by an acquaintance.



[Mr. Jo (22 years old): If I give you a cell phone, you can answer the call and write down what it says in a report form and give it to me. They say they give you 7 million won a month.]



But my acquaintance said that in order to do this job, I had to do a credit check first, and to get a loan to check it.



And since the loan was company money used for credit check, I instructed him to deposit all of it to the company.



[Mr. Jo (22 years old): I did a credit check without knowing anything and got a loan. The total loan amount was about 45 million won... .] The



company promised to repay the loan, and I even received a bank message saying that everything had been deposited, but they were all fraudulent messages from the company, and the loan amount of 45 million won became Cho's debt.



According to the results of a survey by a job site, about half of the respondents in their 20s and 30s said they had been scammed.



[Lee Yun-woo / Senior Spokesperson of the Korean Bar Association: Because the employment crisis is so serious, I am exposed to fraudulent activities such as 'I have to do something', and I am exposed to employment fraud while neglecting the suspicion itself.

That's why it's easier to get hit.]



Experts advised that job seekers need to carefully examine themselves first.



[Hong Soon-min / Seoul Gwangjin Police Station Strong Team Leader: Face-to-face interview is mandatory.

There is no face-to-face interview.

Take a photo of your ID or a copy of your ID, proof of family relations, and send it to them, there is absolutely no such thing.]



The voices demanding social responsibility from job sites are growing.



He also emphasized that the government's strong efforts to eradicate employment fraud and strengthen punishment are also urgent.



(Video coverage: Ha Ryung)