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Showing posts with label Filipina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Filipina. Show all posts

Friday, February 01, 2019

Disrespectful Cyclist, Stabbed By A Club-hopper In Dubai


A Nigerian cyclist was stabbed by an Arab man in Dubai after knocking off a Filipina with his bike while they were on their way out from a bar going to their car.

A Nigerian cyclist was stabbed by an Arab man in Dubai after knocking off a Filipina with his bike while they were on their way out from a bar going to their car.          Ads    A 22-year-old Arab man stabbed a cyclist multiple times for hitting his Filipina friend along a street in Dubai.  According to the investigator, the Arab man, along with his Filipina girlfriend and another female friend, was walking along a pavement in Dubai after a night of drinking on October 15 last year.  The cyclist hit one of the Filipinas which triggered the Arab man to kick the bike, causing the cyclist to fall.  When the cyclist asked for an explanation as to why he kicked the bike, the Arab man pulled out a knife and stabbed the cyclist multiple times before riding a cab in an attempt to escape.  The cab, however, was not able to pull away when it was stuck in heavy traffic.  The cyclist later received help while the Arab man was arrested inside a hotel in Oud Metha.  During the investigation, the Arab man said that he was only acting on self-defense. He said that the knife was from the Nigerian cyclist which he was able to grab after the cyclist stabbed him on his hand. He added that he could not remember the parts of the body he hit since he drank eight cans of alcohol that night.  The prosecution team sought for the heaviest punishment for the Arab man who did not show himself the trial.  The ruling was adjourned until February 28.

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A 22-year-old Arab man stabbed a cyclist multiple times for hitting his Filipina friend along a street in Dubai.

According to the investigator, the Arab man, along with his Filipina girlfriend and another female friend, was walking along a pavement in Dubai after a night of drinking on October 15 last year.

The cyclist hit one of the Filipinas which triggered the Arab man to kick the bike, causing the cyclist to fall.

When the cyclist asked for an explanation as to why he kicked the bike, the Arab man pulled out a knife and stabbed the cyclist multiple times before riding a cab in an attempt to escape.

The cab, however, was not able to pull away when it was stuck in heavy traffic.

The cyclist later received help while the Arab man was arrested inside a hotel in Oud Metha.

During the investigation, the Arab man said that he was only acting on self-defense. He said that the knife was from the Nigerian cyclist which he was able to grab after the cyclist stabbed him on his hand. He added that he could not remember the parts of the body he hit since he drank eight cans of alcohol that night.

The prosecution team sought for the heaviest punishment for the Arab man who did not show himself the trial.

The ruling was adjourned until February 28.
A Nigerian cyclist was stabbed by an Arab man in Dubai after knocking off a Filipina with his bike while they were on their way out from a bar going to their car.          Ads    A 22-year-old Arab man stabbed a cyclist multiple times for hitting his Filipina friend along a street in Dubai.  According to the investigator, the Arab man, along with his Filipina girlfriend and another female friend, was walking along a pavement in Dubai after a night of drinking on October 15 last year.  The cyclist hit one of the Filipinas which triggered the Arab man to kick the bike, causing the cyclist to fall.  When the cyclist asked for an explanation as to why he kicked the bike, the Arab man pulled out a knife and stabbed the cyclist multiple times before riding a cab in an attempt to escape.  The cab, however, was not able to pull away when it was stuck in heavy traffic.  The cyclist later received help while the Arab man was arrested inside a hotel in Oud Metha.  During the investigation, the Arab man said that he was only acting on self-defense. He said that the knife was from the Nigerian cyclist which he was able to grab after the cyclist stabbed him on his hand. He added that he could not remember the parts of the body he hit since he drank eight cans of alcohol that night.  The prosecution team sought for the heaviest punishment for the Arab man who did not show himself the trial.  The ruling was adjourned until February 28.


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An overseas Filipino worker in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia posted a video of her on social media while crying for help after her employer tried to kiss her on the back of her neck.        Ads    Merlyn Angel Arellano hails from Gonzaga town in Cagayan province. In the video which was eventually taken down, she said that she locked herself inside the comfort room after the incident. According to the OFW, this isn’t the first time her employer tried to sexually molest her.  According to the report, they tried to contact Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III to inform him about the incident but there is no reply from him yet.  Arellano said she has informed representatives of her agency and members and Philippine Overseas Labor Office who all told her to wait for the government’s actions.  The OFW said that she wants to go home to the Philippines and leave her overseas job.
Be careful in doing transactions with recruitment agencies if you are applying for jobs abroad. Make sure that you are dealing only with legitimate recruitment agencies with a valid license from the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration to prevent yourself from being a victim of bogus recruitment agencies which will put you into serious trouble.       Ads  An OFW jumped off the building of the agency which allegedly scammed her.  The OFW was rescued and currently recovering. She went to Dubai December last year to work as a household service worker. Upon arrival, someone fetches her at the airport and brought her at the agency. they promised her that an employer will be coming but after a week of waiting, no employer had come. According to the OFW, in a week, there was no food and they were detained at the agency. During that period, they were also not allowed to use mobile phones even just to let their family know how they are doing.  That's when the OFW jumped off from the third storey of the building where they were staying. Without even thinking that she could die, all she was thinking was to escape from the agency and find help. A fellow Filipina found her and brought her to the Philippine Overseas Labor Office (POLO) In Dubai. Though she wanted to go back to the Philippines, she will not be able to do it because the agency is holding her passport.  Labor Attache Felicitas Bay of POLO Dubai reminds everyone that we should make sure that the agency which promises job abroad is duly accredited and licensed by the POEA before immersing ourselves in doing business with them.
"All of a sudden, as soon as they took us off, they closed the gate and then they said, 'Sorry, sir, some people complained you had body odor and we're not letting you back on,'" Yossi Adler, the head of the family who was kicked off the American Airlines an interview from Miami International Airport. His family was vacationing in Miami. They were onboard American Airlines flight when suddenly, the flight crew said they need to leave the plane due to other passengers about complaints about their odor.  American Airlines confirmed the incident involving the family and said it planned to cover their hotel and meal expenses for the night.  "Mr. Adler and his wife were removed from the flight when several passengers complained about their body odor," the airline told WPLG. "They have been booked into a hotel for the night and given meal vouchers. They have been rebooked on a flight Thursday."  The Adler family had made it to Detroit and were reunited with their luggage late Thursday.

©2019 THOUGHTSKOTO

Monday, October 08, 2018

Filipina Arrested In Hong Kong For Crimes She Committed Two Years Ago


It is a very sad truth that oftentimes, people can do awful and unimaginable things even to their compatriot just for the sake of money. The fortunate thing is that without even thinking about it, the suspect was arrested and now facing charges for the fraud she did a couple of years ago.  
The Hong Kong police confirmed that a Filipina was arrested in August due to her alleged involvement in a recruitment scam that victimized hundreds of overseas Filipino workers (OFW) two years ago.

The suspect Ody Lai Puk-yim 56-year-old   was arrested at the Hong Kong International Airport for alleged conspiracy to defraud and money laundering when she returned from a trip to Manila.

It is a very sad truth that oftentimes, people can do awful and unimaginable things even to their compatriot just for the sake of money. The fortunate thing is that without even thinking about it, the suspect was arrested and now facing charges for the fraud she did a couple of years ago.    The Hong Kong police confirmed that a Filipina was arrested in August due to her alleged involvement in a recruitment scam that victimized hundreds of overseas Filipino workers (OFW) two years ago.   The suspect Ody Lai Puk-yim 56-year-old   was arrested at the Hong Kong International Airport for alleged conspiracy to defraud and money laundering when she returned from a trip to Manila.         Ads     Sponsored Links    however, Lai was allowed to post bail and was told to report to the police in mid-October as the complaints against her were still uder investigation.  Consul Paulo Saret, the head of the consulate’s assistance to nationals section, said Lai’s bail condition was that she could not travel outside Hong Kong without permission from police.  Lai is suspected of involvement in the recruitment of about 600 Filipinos in Hong Kong, Macau, and the Philippines for non-existent high-paying jobs in Britain and Canada in 2016.  Each domestic worker reportedly paid processing fees of HK$10,000 to HK$15,000 (US$1,280-$1,920) to a 65-year-od Filipina Ester Ylagan, the co-owner of the defunct Emry’s Service Staff and Employment Agency.  Ylagan was a friend of Lai and was arrested in June this year in Hong Kong. The two women were also suspected of involvement in the transfer of about KH$10 million to several countries as far apart as Malaysia, Turkey, and Burkina Faso at about the same time.  Documents showing the transfers were reportedly unearthed by lawyers looking into the recruitment scam and turned over to police.     Filed under the category of Hong Kong police, Filipina, recruitment scam,  overseas Filipino workers, Hong Kong International Airport, Manila


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However, Lai was allowed to post bail and was told to report to the police in mid-October as the complaints against her were still under investigation.

Consul Paulo Saret, the head of the consulate’s assistance to nationals section, said Lai’s bail condition was that she could not travel outside Hong Kong without permission from police.

Lai is suspected of involvement in the recruitment of about 600 Filipinos in Hong Kong, Macau, and the Philippines for non-existent high-paying jobs in Britain and Canada in 2016.

Each domestic worker reportedly paid processing fees of HK$10,000 to HK$15,000 (US$1,280-$1,920) to a 65-year-od Filipina Ester Ylagan, the co-owner of the defunct Emry’s Service Staff and Employment Agency.

Ylagan was a friend of Lai and was arrested in June this year in Hong Kong. The two women were also suspected of involvement in the transfer of about KH$10 million to several countries as far apart as Malaysia, Turkey, and Burkina Faso at about the same time.

Documents showing the transfers were reportedly unearthed by lawyers looking into the recruitment scam and turned over to police.
It is a very sad truth that oftentimes, people can do awful and unimaginable things even to their compatriot just for the sake of money. The fortunate thing is that without even thinking about it, the suspect was arrested and now facing charges for the fraud she did a couple of years ago.    The Hong Kong police confirmed that a Filipina was arrested in August due to her alleged involvement in a recruitment scam that victimized hundreds of overseas Filipino workers (OFW) two years ago.   The suspect Ody Lai Puk-yim 56-year-old   was arrested at the Hong Kong International Airport for alleged conspiracy to defraud and money laundering when she returned from a trip to Manila.         Ads     Sponsored Links    however, Lai was allowed to post bail and was told to report to the police in mid-October as the complaints against her were still uder investigation.  Consul Paulo Saret, the head of the consulate’s assistance to nationals section, said Lai’s bail condition was that she could not travel outside Hong Kong without permission from police.  Lai is suspected of involvement in the recruitment of about 600 Filipinos in Hong Kong, Macau, and the Philippines for non-existent high-paying jobs in Britain and Canada in 2016.  Each domestic worker reportedly paid processing fees of HK$10,000 to HK$15,000 (US$1,280-$1,920) to a 65-year-od Filipina Ester Ylagan, the co-owner of the defunct Emry’s Service Staff and Employment Agency.  Ylagan was a friend of Lai and was arrested in June this year in Hong Kong. The two women were also suspected of involvement in the transfer of about KH$10 million to several countries as far apart as Malaysia, Turkey, and Burkina Faso at about the same time.  Documents showing the transfers were reportedly unearthed by lawyers looking into the recruitment scam and turned over to police.     Filed under the category of Hong Kong police, Filipina, recruitment scam,  overseas Filipino workers, Hong Kong International Airport, Manila
Filed under the category of Hong Kong police, Filipina, recruitment scam,  overseas Filipino workers, Hong Kong International Airport, Manila
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As overseas Filipino workers (OFW) working in an unfamiliar territory, we feel comfortable whenever we see a compatriot or a fellow Filipino abroad. In some instances, very unfortunate things happen like getting into a trouble because of a fellow Filipino. The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) and the Consulate General in Saudi Arabia confirmed that an OFW was stabbed and killed by a fellow OFW in Jeddah, KSA.      Ads     Sponsored Links    A Filipino was stabbed and killed by a fellow Filipino in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, according to the confirmation of the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA).  The victim (name withheld) was a 29-year-old from Datu Odin Sinsuat, Maguindanao, who worked as a family driver in Jeddah.   The suspect (name withheld), a 34-year-old from Capiz, also a driver for the same family  The suspect remains under police custody after he was arrested immediately after the incident. The two "allegedly engaged in a fistfight in front of the house of their employer that ended in the victim getting fatally stabbed by his fellow driver." The motive of the stabbing is still unknown.  The Consulate General and the Philippine Overseas Labor Office in Jeddah will extend full assistance to both Filipinos as well as their families.    The victim is set for a vacation to the Philippines soon but the incident turned out to be unfortunate that he will come home inside a box.  Consul General Edgar Badajos said that the suspect is facing a death sentence as per Saudi Sharia law. However, since they are both Filipinos, it is possible that the victim's family could instead  He assured that they will render assistance to help both OFWs.    Filed under the category of overseas Filipino workers, Filipino abroad, Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), Saudi Arabia,   stabbed, Jeddah, KSA

More often, families with overseas Filipino workers (OFW) rely on their OFW breadwinner in providing their needs and without doing any efforts to have extra income. They use the money they receive to pay their bills, rents, mortgages, etc. They tend to spend the remittances they receive and wait for the next remittance when the money is over without any savings. This is the reason why no matter how long the OFWs exhaust themselves working overseas, they are still coming home broke and without any savings.  Encouraging our spouse or anyone who is responsible for the remittances you send to save could be a great help and could guarantee a hassle-free retirement, much more if they placed this savings to a profitable investment.      Ads     Sponsored Links    Stick to a budget schedule  Convince your spouse to make a monthly budget and commit to saving a portion of the monthly remittance. They could also spend the remaining part of the budget after setting aside the savings.  No matter how small the savings, it could mean a lot after a period of time you regularly do it.    Use the credit card wisely or do not use it at all  Credit cards could be an advantage when purchasing but it can also lure the holder to spend more. Whenever possible, avoid using credit cards and use cash instead. It would save you from paying extra charges and interests which can really raise your spending.    The best rule should be, do not spend the money you do not have.     Always make a list of important things to buy  Many OFW spouses tend to go on a shopping spree just after receiving the remittance and let their impulses lead in which items they like to buy at the very moment without putting their priorities on the things they really needed.  Encourage them to develop a habit and discipline of making a list of the things they need to prioritize during shopping and strictly follow what is on the list to avoid spending too much on the things that are not really important.    Live a lifestyle that suits your income  Many OFW spouses live like one day millionaire. after claiming the remittances you sent, they will go straight to the mall, eat at the fast-food chain of their choice, go on a shopping spree buying what they want without even thinking if they still have the money to go through the month until the next remittance. If their budget got short, they would borrow money from someone which would cause the next budget to bear the shortage and the cycle goes on.    There's nothing wrong with being generous but not too much  Advise your spouse to exercise caution when giving help to extended families, relatives or friends. There is nothing wrong with extending help but there has to be a limitation. This would avoid them to become dependent on your assistance that they would knock your everytime they need financial help.    Working overseas is not forever and you will eventually come home for good. It is you and your spouse who need to work hand-in-hand to succeed. Together you must find ways to take care of your finances and save for the future of your family.  Filed under the category of overseas Filipino workers, extra income,  bills, rents, mortgages, remittances, working overseas, retirement, investment, savings
More often, families with overseas Filipino workers (OFW) rely on their OFW breadwinner in providing their needs and without doing any efforts to have extra income. They use the money they receive to pay their bills, rents, mortgages, etc. They tend to spend the remittances they receive and wait for the next remittance when the money is over without any savings. This is the reason why no matter how long the OFWs exhaust themselves working overseas, they are still coming home broke and without any savings.  Encouraging our spouse or anyone who is responsible for the remittances you send to save could be a great help and could guarantee a hassle-free retirement, much more if they placed this savings to a profitable investment.      Ads     Sponsored Links    Stick to a budget schedule  Convince your spouse to make a monthly budget and commit to saving a portion of the monthly remittance. They could also spend the remaining part of the budget after setting aside the savings.  No matter how small the savings, it could mean a lot after a period of time you regularly do it.    Use the credit card wisely or do not use it at all  Credit cards could be an advantage when purchasing but it can also lure the holder to spend more. Whenever possible, avoid using credit cards and use cash instead. It would save you from paying extra charges and interests which can really raise your spending.    The best rule should be, do not spend the money you do not have.     Always make a list of important things to buy  Many OFW spouses tend to go on a shopping spree just after receiving the remittance and let their impulses lead in which items they like to buy at the very moment without putting their priorities on the things they really needed.  Encourage them to develop a habit and discipline of making a list of the things they need to prioritize during shopping and strictly follow what is on the list to avoid spending too much on the things that are not really important.    Live a lifestyle that suits your income  Many OFW spouses live like one day millionaire. after claiming the remittances you sent, they will go straight to the mall, eat at the fast-food chain of their choice, go on a shopping spree buying what they want without even thinking if they still have the money to go through the month until the next remittance. If their budget got short, they would borrow money from someone which would cause the next budget to bear the shortage and the cycle goes on.    There's nothing wrong with being generous but not too much  Advise your spouse to exercise caution when giving help to extended families, relatives or friends. There is nothing wrong with extending help but there has to be a limitation. This would avoid them to become dependent on your assistance that they would knock your everytime they need financial help.    Working overseas is not forever and you will eventually come home for good. It is you and your spouse who need to work hand-in-hand to succeed. Together you must find ways to take care of your finances and save for the future of your family.  Filed under the category of overseas Filipino workers, extra income,  bills, rents, mortgages, remittances, working overseas, retirement, investment, savings
More often, families with overseas Filipino workers (OFW) rely on their OFW breadwinner in providing their needs and without doing any efforts to have extra income. They use the money they receive to pay their bills, rents, mortgages, etc. They tend to spend the remittances they receive and wait for the next remittance when the money is over without any savings. This is the reason why no matter how long the OFWs exhaust themselves working overseas, they are still coming home broke and without any savings.  Encouraging our spouse or anyone who is responsible for the remittances you send to save could be a great help and could guarantee a hassle-free retirement, much more if they placed this savings to a profitable investment.      Ads     Sponsored Links    Stick to a budget schedule  Convince your spouse to make a monthly budget and commit to saving a portion of the monthly remittance. They could also spend the remaining part of the budget after setting aside the savings.  No matter how small the savings, it could mean a lot after a period of time you regularly do it.    Use the credit card wisely or do not use it at all  Credit cards could be an advantage when purchasing but it can also lure the holder to spend more. Whenever possible, avoid using credit cards and use cash instead. It would save you from paying extra charges and interests which can really raise your spending.    The best rule should be, do not spend the money you do not have.     Always make a list of important things to buy  Many OFW spouses tend to go on a shopping spree just after receiving the remittance and let their impulses lead in which items they like to buy at the very moment without putting their priorities on the things they really needed.  Encourage them to develop a habit and discipline of making a list of the things they need to prioritize during shopping and strictly follow what is on the list to avoid spending too much on the things that are not really important.    Live a lifestyle that suits your income  Many OFW spouses live like one day millionaire. after claiming the remittances you sent, they will go straight to the mall, eat at the fast-food chain of their choice, go on a shopping spree buying what they want without even thinking if they still have the money to go through the month until the next remittance. If their budget got short, they would borrow money from someone which would cause the next budget to bear the shortage and the cycle goes on.    There's nothing wrong with being generous but not too much  Advise your spouse to exercise caution when giving help to extended families, relatives or friends. There is nothing wrong with extending help but there has to be a limitation. This would avoid them to become dependent on your assistance that they would knock your everytime they need financial help.    Working overseas is not forever and you will eventually come home for good. It is you and your spouse who need to work hand-in-hand to succeed. Together you must find ways to take care of your finances and save for the future of your family.  Filed under the category of overseas Filipino workers, extra income,  bills, rents, mortgages, remittances, working overseas, retirement, investment, savings

Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Filipina Gets Two-Year Prison Sentence for Stealing $100,000 from US Base

A Filipina was sentenced to two years in prison by a United States federal court for stealing nearly $100,000 from a US Naval base in Japan in 2015. 60-year old Cynthia Lopez Creseni pleaded guilty to theft of public money in a court Kansas City last August of 2017. She stole $99,068 from the Morale Welfare and Recreation Center at the Yokosuka Naval Base in Japan.    Working as lead cashier in the recreation center, it was Creseni who initially reported $112,300 missing from a safe after she returned from a vacation in the United States. Shortly afterward, she fled to the Philippines, where she is a citizen.    Creseni entered the United States in July 2015 and overstayed her USA visitor visa. She was arrested in January 2017 in Overland Park, Kansas. No information is given about how she got her visitor visa from the US.  Prior to the theft, Creseni had worked in various jobs at Yokosuka Naval Base since 2000. She was living in Japan on a civilian visa at the time of the incident.    An interview by an NCIS special agent revealed that Creseni first stole $1,000 to help a sick relative in the Philippines. Creseni stated that she continued to take money over the course of six months, and falsified audit documents that made the money appear as if it were accounted for during official audits.    She spent the money on family members, plane tickets and an apartment in Yokosuka, Japan. It is not known if she spent some of the stolen money for her legal fees.    Sponsored Links  Creseni claims that she kept a false identity in Japan hoping to marry a Japanese citizen. She was already married in the Philippines. Creseni said her actual name is Blesilda de Guzman Fernando, though that has not been verified.    {OR INSERT ANOTHER 3-5 IMAGES OR VIDEO HERE}   Apart from her conviction of two years, Creseni is facing deportation to the Philippines after serving her full sentence.    source: NavyTimes, Stripes, Seattle Times

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A Filipina was sentenced to two years in prison by a United States federal court for stealing nearly $100,000 from a US Naval base in Japan in 2015. 60-year old Cynthia Lopez Creseni pleaded guilty to theft of public money in a court Kansas City last August of 2017. She stole $99,068 from the Morale Welfare and Recreation Center at the Yokosuka Naval Base in Japan.
A Filipina was sentenced to two years in prison by a United States federal court for stealing nearly $100,000 from a US Naval base in Japan in 2015. 60-year old Cynthia Lopez Creseni pleaded guilty to theft of public money in a court Kansas City last August of 2017. She stole $99,068 from the Morale Welfare and Recreation Center at the Yokosuka Naval Base in Japan.    Working as lead cashier in the recreation center, it was Creseni who initially reported $112,300 missing from a safe after she returned from a vacation in the United States. Shortly afterward, she fled to the Philippines, where she is a citizen.    Creseni entered the United States in July 2015 and overstayed her USA visitor visa. She was arrested in January 2017 in Overland Park, Kansas. No information is given about how she got her visitor visa from the US.  Prior to the theft, Creseni had worked in various jobs at Yokosuka Naval Base since 2000. She was living in Japan on a civilian visa at the time of the incident.    An interview by an NCIS special agent revealed that Creseni first stole $1,000 to help a sick relative in the Philippines. Creseni stated that she continued to take money over the course of six months, and falsified audit documents that made the money appear as if it were accounted for during official audits.    She spent the money on family members, plane tickets and an apartment in Yokosuka, Japan. It is not known if she spent some of the stolen money for her legal fees.    Sponsored Links  Creseni claims that she kept a false identity in Japan hoping to marry a Japanese citizen. She was already married in the Philippines. Creseni said her actual name is Blesilda de Guzman Fernando, though that has not been verified.    {OR INSERT ANOTHER 3-5 IMAGES OR VIDEO HERE}   Apart from her conviction of two years, Creseni is facing deportation to the Philippines after serving her full sentence.    source: NavyTimes, Stripes, Seattle Times
Aerial view of Yokosuka Naval Base in Japan. Source: Wikipedia Commons

Working as lead cashier in the recreation center, it was Creseni who initially reported $112,300 missing from a safe after she returned from a vacation in the United States. Shortly afterward, she fled to the Philippines, where she is a citizen.

Creseni entered the United States in July 2015 and overstayed her USA visitor visa. She was arrested in January 2017 in Overland Park, Kansas. No information is given about how she got her visitor visa from the US.
A Filipina was sentenced to two years in prison by a United States federal court for stealing nearly $100,000 from a US Naval base in Japan in 2015. 60-year old Cynthia Lopez Creseni pleaded guilty to theft of public money in a court Kansas City last August of 2017. She stole $99,068 from the Morale Welfare and Recreation Center at the Yokosuka Naval Base in Japan.    Working as lead cashier in the recreation center, it was Creseni who initially reported $112,300 missing from a safe after she returned from a vacation in the United States. Shortly afterward, she fled to the Philippines, where she is a citizen.    Creseni entered the United States in July 2015 and overstayed her USA visitor visa. She was arrested in January 2017 in Overland Park, Kansas. No information is given about how she got her visitor visa from the US.  Prior to the theft, Creseni had worked in various jobs at Yokosuka Naval Base since 2000. She was living in Japan on a civilian visa at the time of the incident.    An interview by an NCIS special agent revealed that Creseni first stole $1,000 to help a sick relative in the Philippines. Creseni stated that she continued to take money over the course of six months, and falsified audit documents that made the money appear as if it were accounted for during official audits.    She spent the money on family members, plane tickets and an apartment in Yokosuka, Japan. It is not known if she spent some of the stolen money for her legal fees.    Sponsored Links  Creseni claims that she kept a false identity in Japan hoping to marry a Japanese citizen. She was already married in the Philippines. Creseni said her actual name is Blesilda de Guzman Fernando, though that has not been verified.    {OR INSERT ANOTHER 3-5 IMAGES OR VIDEO HERE}   Apart from her conviction of two years, Creseni is facing deportation to the Philippines after serving her full sentence.    source: NavyTimes, Stripes, Seattle Times
An image of the gambling machines at the Morale Welfare and Recreation Center. Source: stripes.com

Prior to the theft, Creseni had worked in various jobs at Yokosuka Naval Base since 2000. She was living in Japan on a civilian visa at the time of the incident.

An interview by an NCIS special agent revealed that Creseni first stole $1,000 to help a sick relative in the Philippines. Creseni stated that she continued to take money over the course of six months, and falsified audit documents that made the money appear as if it were accounted for during official audits.

She spent the money on family members, plane tickets and an apartment in Yokosuka, Japan. It is not known if she spent some of the stolen money for her legal fees.
A Filipina was sentenced to two years in prison by a United States federal court for stealing nearly $100,000 from a US Naval base in Japan in 2015. 60-year old Cynthia Lopez Creseni pleaded guilty to theft of public money in a court Kansas City last August of 2017. She stole $99,068 from the Morale Welfare and Recreation Center at the Yokosuka Naval Base in Japan.    Working as lead cashier in the recreation center, it was Creseni who initially reported $112,300 missing from a safe after she returned from a vacation in the United States. Shortly afterward, she fled to the Philippines, where she is a citizen.    Creseni entered the United States in July 2015 and overstayed her USA visitor visa. She was arrested in January 2017 in Overland Park, Kansas. No information is given about how she got her visitor visa from the US.  Prior to the theft, Creseni had worked in various jobs at Yokosuka Naval Base since 2000. She was living in Japan on a civilian visa at the time of the incident.    An interview by an NCIS special agent revealed that Creseni first stole $1,000 to help a sick relative in the Philippines. Creseni stated that she continued to take money over the course of six months, and falsified audit documents that made the money appear as if it were accounted for during official audits.    She spent the money on family members, plane tickets and an apartment in Yokosuka, Japan. It is not known if she spent some of the stolen money for her legal fees.    Sponsored Links  Creseni claims that she kept a false identity in Japan hoping to marry a Japanese citizen. She was already married in the Philippines. Creseni said her actual name is Blesilda de Guzman Fernando, though that has not been verified.    {OR INSERT ANOTHER 3-5 IMAGES OR VIDEO HERE}   Apart from her conviction of two years, Creseni is facing deportation to the Philippines after serving her full sentence.    source: NavyTimes, Stripes, Seattle Times
A stock image showing a lady handcuffed and being led to a police car.


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Creseni claims that she kept a false identity in Japan hoping to marry a Japanese citizen. She was already married in the Philippines. Creseni said her actual name is Blesilda de Guzman Fernando, though that has not been verified.

Apart from her conviction of two years, Creseni is facing deportation to the Philippines after serving her full sentence.

source: NavyTimes, Stripes, Seattle Times

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Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Video: OFW Had To Eat Dog Food To Survive In Brazil


Some people think that being an Overseas Filipino Worker (OFW) is like a bed of roses, with lots of money, eating every food they want and buying anything they want to buy. It is not. Many OFWs suffer a lot, physically and emotionally. Ask any OFW and they would surely agree, you will never know what they are going through unless you tried being an OFW yourself.  Maria (not her real name) had arrived in Brazil from the Philippines two months earlier, hired as a domestic worker by a family who lived in a wealthy neighbourhood of Sao Paulo.  The tasks they set her seemed never ending. She had to help the mother with the three school-aged boys and a baby. Then clean the large apartment, which had a large dining room, a living room and four bedrooms, each with its own bathroom. Also walk the family's dog, put all the children to bed.   The family's mother usually stayed at home, closely watching everything Maria did. Once, complaining that Maria had not cleaned a glass table properly, she made her polish it for almost an hour. Some days she would count the clothes Maria had ironed and, not satisfied, would make her spend hours ironing some more. Weeks would pass without Maria's employers giving her a day off. With so much to do, she often had no time left to eat. Sometimes, even the food she was given was not enough.  On that night, she thought about her own family in the Philippine countryside: her mother and three young daughters, two of whom needed special medicine for their cardiac disease. With all of them depending on her wages, Maria had no choice but to carry on. So she made her bed and went to sleep.  "My world was spinning. I was crying," recalled the 40-year-old about the day she almost ended her own life. She had dreamt of coming here - "I had heard that Brazil was nice" - and struggled to understand why she was being treated so badly.  When Maria woke up the next day, her stomach hurt from the lack of food, but her tasks were already waiting for her. Only hours later did she find something to eat: she was cooking meat for the family's dog and took half of it for herself.  "I didn't have [any other] choice to survive."  Sponsored Links  In 2013, Brazil finally started introducing legislation to give housemaids the same rights as every other worker, such as an eight-hour working day, a maximum of 44 hours of work per week and the right to overtime pay. Most, however, still work informally.  Those rights, Maria said, were part of the attraction of coming to Brazil. She was also promised what she thought was a decent monthly wage ($600; £460) and longed for the chance to explore a new country.  A kind, smiley woman, she had already worked as a live-in maid in Dubai and Hong Kong without having problems, and never imagined she would have any trouble in Brazil.  When Maria lost hope that her working conditions would improve, she challenged her employer. "I asked 'Why are you always like this to me?'" Her employer, she recalled, said disdainfully that she had never liked Maria.  Maria was rarely alone in the apartment. But one night the family went out and when Maria checked the doors, she found them locked. As the apartment was in a highly secure building, it was unusual for the front doors to be locked. The fact that they were when she was left alone made Maria wary.  That was a turning point. She decided she had to escape.  The next morning, she got up before anyone else, and finding the door unlocked, she left. Concerned that the building's security guard may become suspicious seeing her leaving with her luggage and alert her employers, she purposefully and jauntily waved goodbye at the security camera.  The trick worked and Maria got away unchallenged. She was still jubilant: "I was lucky".  Millions of people from the Philippines work abroad, mainly in neighbouring Asian and oil-rich Middle Eastern countries, to support their families. But frequent cases of abuse have put the spotlight on how they are treated.  In Brazil, three other Philippine maids who were recruited by the same agency as Maria also left their employment in the last year under similar circumstances.  They were helped by Father Paolo Parisi, who runs the non-governmental organisation Missao Paz. "They were crying, their dignities had been destroyed," he said. "I told them this was exploitation."  Maria and the other three Philippine maids paid $2,000 (£1,500) in fees to the agency. Their employers paid the agency $6,000 and the cost of the flights to Brazil.  What they were not told when they applied for their jobs was that their visas would be tied to their employment. So even when they found conditions to be bad, they felt they could not just walk out and look for a new job. And to get a new work permit, they would have to leave Brazil.  About 250 Filipinas have been hired to work as maids in Brazil since the end of 2012, when legislation paved the way for families here to hire foreigners. Many Brazilians say they prefer Philippine maids because they are well-trained and speak English, and so their children can grow up in a bilingual environment.  But there might be more to it, said Livia Ferreira, an inspector at Brazil's Labour Ministry in Sao Paulo.  "I think these families started hiring these workers to exploit them," she said. "They couldn't find [Brazilians] that would be at their disposal... The changes in legislation empowered housemaids and they weren't accepting certain working conditions anymore."  Ms Ferreira's team concluded that Maria and the other three Philippine maids had been kept in slave-like conditions - Brazilian law defines it as forced labour, work in degrading or risky conditions, without pay or to pay off debts owed to an employer.  "Their working conditions were very different from what they had been promised. They were kept in forced labour and had exhausting routines," Ms Ferreira said.  The employers, who have not been identified, have not commented. Brazil's public defender's office has launched labour lawsuits against the families and the recruitment agency. The agency denies any wrongdoing and has suspended its recruitment service.  The authorities are now looking into the situation of 180 other foreign domestic workers, and some labour law violations have already been found in the first cases.  Maria has found a new job after the government gave her and the other Philippine maids new visas. But her life is not without fear. Two months ago, the flat she moved into was ransacked. Nothing was taken but Maria saw it as a warning.  Most of what Maria earns goes towards paying off debt she got into to pay the agency which first placed her in Brazil. She hopes to save money to send her daughters to university - "so they don't follow in my footsteps" - and to open her own business when she returns home to the Philippines.  But for now, she is finally enjoying her life in Brazil. "I feel free. I'm happy now."  Source: BBC       Advertisement  Read More:                   ©2017 THOUGHTSKOTO

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Some people think that being an Overseas Filipino Worker (OFW) is like a bed of roses, with lots of money, eating every food they want and buying anything they want to buy. It is not. Many OFWs suffer a lot, physically and emotionally. Ask any OFW and they would surely agree, you will never know what they are going through unless you tried being an OFW yourself.

Maria, (real name withheld)
on her 40's, came to Brazil from the Philippines two months ago, hired as a domestic worker by wealthy a family who lived in Sao Paulo.

They gave her tasks that seemed never ending.
She had to babysit three school-aged boys and a baby, clean a large apartment,with a large dining room, a living room and four bedrooms, each with own bathroom. Also walk the family's dog, tuck all the children to bed.

The family's mother usually stays at home,  watching 
closely everything Maria was doing. In an instance, complaining that she had not cleaned a glass table properly, she made her polish it for nearly an hour. There would be days that she count the clothes Maria had ironed and would make her spend hours ironing some more if she was not satisfied.

Maria's do not have any day-offs. She often had no time left to eat due to piles of work. Sometimes, she was given inadequate food.

That night, she thought about her own family in the Philippine countryside: her mother and three young daughters, two of whom needed special medicine for their cardiac disease—all of them depending on her wages, she had no choice but to carry on. So she made her bed and went to sleep.

"My world was spinning. I was crying... I had heard that Brazil was nice."

When she woke up the following day, her stomach feels awful from hunger, but she still had to work. Later as she was cooking meat for the family's dog—she took half of the dog food and ate it.
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When she came to Brazil, Maria was  promised what she thought was a decent monthly wage ($600; £460) and not to mention , a chance to explore a new country.

A kind, smiley woman, she had previously worked as a live-in maid in Dubai and Hong Kong without having problems, she never imagined she would have any trouble working in Brazil.


When Maria lost hope that her working conditions would improve, she made a challenge with her employer to just send her back to the Philippines if they don't want her services anymore.

One night the family went out and locked the doors with Maria inside it. It made her weary.
That was a turning point. She decided she had to escape.


The next morning, she got up earlier than the others, she left after finding the door unlocked. She  even purposefully and jauntily waved goodbye at the security camera to avoid suspicion from the building security guards. She luckily got away without any hassle.

Aside from Maria, three other Philippine maids who were recruited by the same agency that recruited Maria also left their employment in the the previous year under similar circumstances.
All of them paid $2,000 (£1,500) in fees to the agency. Their sponsors paid the agency $6,000 and the plane tickets to Brazil.

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The employers, who's identities were not disclosed, did not issue any statements. Brazil's public defender's office has launched labour lawsuits against the families and the recruitment agency. The agency denies any wrongdoing and has suspended its recruitment service.

Maria is now enjoying her  new job after the Brazilian government gave her and the other Filipina maids new work visas. All her earnings goes toward paying off her loans she used to pay the recruitment agency that deployed her in Brazil. All she want now is to save money and send her daughters to finish college so that they would not end up like her. She also wanted to start her own business in the Philippines when she finally come home for good.

For the mean time, she is now enjoying her life in Brazil. Free and happy as she described it.

Source: BBC
Some people think that being an Overseas Filipino Worker (OFW) is like a bed of roses, with lots of money, eating every food they want and buying anything they want to buy. It is not. Many OFWs suffer a lot, physically and emotionally. Ask any OFW and they would surely agree, you will never know what they are going through unless you tried being an OFW yourself.  Maria (not her real name) had arrived in Brazil from the Philippines two months earlier, hired as a domestic worker by a family who lived in a wealthy neighbourhood of Sao Paulo.  The tasks they set her seemed never ending. She had to help the mother with the three school-aged boys and a baby. Then clean the large apartment, which had a large dining room, a living room and four bedrooms, each with its own bathroom. Also walk the family's dog, put all the children to bed.   The family's mother usually stayed at home, closely watching everything Maria did. Once, complaining that Maria had not cleaned a glass table properly, she made her polish it for almost an hour. Some days she would count the clothes Maria had ironed and, not satisfied, would make her spend hours ironing some more. Weeks would pass without Maria's employers giving her a day off. With so much to do, she often had no time left to eat. Sometimes, even the food she was given was not enough.  On that night, she thought about her own family in the Philippine countryside: her mother and three young daughters, two of whom needed special medicine for their cardiac disease. With all of them depending on her wages, Maria had no choice but to carry on. So she made her bed and went to sleep.  "My world was spinning. I was crying," recalled the 40-year-old about the day she almost ended her own life. She had dreamt of coming here - "I had heard that Brazil was nice" - and struggled to understand why she was being treated so badly.  When Maria woke up the next day, her stomach hurt from the lack of food, but her tasks were already waiting for her. Only hours later did she find something to eat: she was cooking meat for the family's dog and took half of it for herself.  "I didn't have [any other] choice to survive."  Sponsored Links  In 2013, Brazil finally started introducing legislation to give housemaids the same rights as every other worker, such as an eight-hour working day, a maximum of 44 hours of work per week and the right to overtime pay. Most, however, still work informally.  Those rights, Maria said, were part of the attraction of coming to Brazil. She was also promised what she thought was a decent monthly wage ($600; £460) and longed for the chance to explore a new country.  A kind, smiley woman, she had already worked as a live-in maid in Dubai and Hong Kong without having problems, and never imagined she would have any trouble in Brazil.  When Maria lost hope that her working conditions would improve, she challenged her employer. "I asked 'Why are you always like this to me?'" Her employer, she recalled, said disdainfully that she had never liked Maria.  Maria was rarely alone in the apartment. But one night the family went out and when Maria checked the doors, she found them locked. As the apartment was in a highly secure building, it was unusual for the front doors to be locked. The fact that they were when she was left alone made Maria wary.  That was a turning point. She decided she had to escape.  The next morning, she got up before anyone else, and finding the door unlocked, she left. Concerned that the building's security guard may become suspicious seeing her leaving with her luggage and alert her employers, she purposefully and jauntily waved goodbye at the security camera.  The trick worked and Maria got away unchallenged. She was still jubilant: "I was lucky".  Millions of people from the Philippines work abroad, mainly in neighbouring Asian and oil-rich Middle Eastern countries, to support their families. But frequent cases of abuse have put the spotlight on how they are treated.  In Brazil, three other Philippine maids who were recruited by the same agency as Maria also left their employment in the last year under similar circumstances.  They were helped by Father Paolo Parisi, who runs the non-governmental organisation Missao Paz. "They were crying, their dignities had been destroyed," he said. "I told them this was exploitation."  Maria and the other three Philippine maids paid $2,000 (£1,500) in fees to the agency. Their employers paid the agency $6,000 and the cost of the flights to Brazil.  What they were not told when they applied for their jobs was that their visas would be tied to their employment. So even when they found conditions to be bad, they felt they could not just walk out and look for a new job. And to get a new work permit, they would have to leave Brazil.  About 250 Filipinas have been hired to work as maids in Brazil since the end of 2012, when legislation paved the way for families here to hire foreigners. Many Brazilians say they prefer Philippine maids because they are well-trained and speak English, and so their children can grow up in a bilingual environment.  But there might be more to it, said Livia Ferreira, an inspector at Brazil's Labour Ministry in Sao Paulo.  "I think these families started hiring these workers to exploit them," she said. "They couldn't find [Brazilians] that would be at their disposal... The changes in legislation empowered housemaids and they weren't accepting certain working conditions anymore."  Ms Ferreira's team concluded that Maria and the other three Philippine maids had been kept in slave-like conditions - Brazilian law defines it as forced labour, work in degrading or risky conditions, without pay or to pay off debts owed to an employer.  "Their working conditions were very different from what they had been promised. They were kept in forced labour and had exhausting routines," Ms Ferreira said.  The employers, who have not been identified, have not commented. Brazil's public defender's office has launched labour lawsuits against the families and the recruitment agency. The agency denies any wrongdoing and has suspended its recruitment service.  The authorities are now looking into the situation of 180 other foreign domestic workers, and some labour law violations have already been found in the first cases.  Maria has found a new job after the government gave her and the other Philippine maids new visas. But her life is not without fear. Two months ago, the flat she moved into was ransacked. Nothing was taken but Maria saw it as a warning.  Most of what Maria earns goes towards paying off debt she got into to pay the agency which first placed her in Brazil. She hopes to save money to send her daughters to university - "so they don't follow in my footsteps" - and to open her own business when she returns home to the Philippines.  But for now, she is finally enjoying her life in Brazil. "I feel free. I'm happy now."  Source: BBC       Advertisement  Read More:                   ©2017 THOUGHTSKOTO

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Wednesday, October 18, 2017

OFW In Dubai Jailed For Having A One-night-stand With A Total Stranger


A moment of pleasure for a woman has caused her to bear an illegitimate daughter, imprisoned and subjected to deportation after serving her sentence.   A Filipina saleswoman has been sentenced to one month in prison for engaging in an illicit one-night affair with a stranger, resulting in the birth of her illegitimate daughter.  The woman, 30, said an Indian man approached her in January, said some nice words before asking her to have sex with him, to which she agreed to, Gulf News reported.  Sponsored Links Seven months later, the unmarried Filipina was taken to the hospital after experiencing stomach contractions, where she discovered she was pregnant and about to go into labor.  Following the birth of her daughter, the hospital notified authorities of the her situation.  The Filipina admitted to engaging in sexual relations with the stranger but insisted that it was consensual.  “Yes I allowed him to have sex with me and it was mutual,” she told the Dubai Misdemeanours Court on Tuesday, October 17.  The woman was sentenced to imprisonment followed by deportation. Advertisement Read more:      ©2017 THOUGHTSKOTO
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A moment of pleasure for a woman has caused her to bear an illegitimate daughter, imprisoned and subjected to deportation after serving her sentencein Dubai.


A Filipina saleswoman, 30,  has been sentenced to one month in prison for engaging in an illicit one-night affair with a total stranger. A man whom she only met at a corner.

The woman, an Indian man came to her in January, had some nice talks and eventually  asked her to have sex with him and she agreed to do it.
A moment of pleasure for a woman has caused her to bear an illegitimate daughter, imprisoned and subjected to deportation after serving her sentence.   A Filipina saleswoman has been sentenced to one month in prison for engaging in an illicit one-night affair with a stranger, resulting in the birth of her illegitimate daughter.  The woman, 30, said an Indian man approached her in January, said some nice words before asking her to have sex with him, to which she agreed to, Gulf News reported.  Sponsored Links Seven months later, the unmarried Filipina was taken to the hospital after experiencing stomach contractions, where she discovered she was pregnant and about to go into labor.  Following the birth of her daughter, the hospital notified authorities of the her situation.  The Filipina admitted to engaging in sexual relations with the stranger but insisted that it was consensual.  “Yes I allowed him to have sex with me and it was mutual,” she told the Dubai Misdemeanours Court on Tuesday, October 17.  The woman was sentenced to imprisonment followed by deportation. Advertisement Read more:      ©2017 THOUGHTSKOTO
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Seven months later, the unmarried Filipina experienced abdominal contractions and has to be taken to the hospital where she discovered she was pregnant and about to go into labor.
The hospital where she gave birth of her daughter notified authorities of the her situation.

The Filipina admitted to engaging in sexual relations with the stranger but insisted that it was consensual. However, the woman seem to be without remorse or whatsoever for what she did. “Yes I allowed him to have sex with me and it was mutual,” she told the Dubai Misdemeanours Court on Tuesday, October 17.

Having sexual relationship in the UAE is strictly prohibited and punishable under the law.

Source: The Filipino Times
A moment of pleasure for a woman has caused her to bear an illegitimate daughter, imprisoned and subjected to deportation after serving her sentence.   A Filipina saleswoman has been sentenced to one month in prison for engaging in an illicit one-night affair with a stranger, resulting in the birth of her illegitimate daughter.  The woman, 30, said an Indian man approached her in January, said some nice words before asking her to have sex with him, to which she agreed to, Gulf News reported. A moment of pleasure for a woman has caused her to bear an illegitimate daughter, imprisoned and subjected to deportation after serving her sentence.   A Filipina saleswoman has been sentenced to one month in prison for engaging in an illicit one-night affair with a stranger, resulting in the birth of her illegitimate daughter.  The woman, 30, said an Indian man approached her in January, said some nice words before asking her to have sex with him, to which she agreed to, Gulf News reported.  Sponsored Links Seven months later, the unmarried Filipina was taken to the hospital after experiencing stomach contractions, where she discovered she was pregnant and about to go into labor.  Following the birth of her daughter, the hospital notified authorities of the her situation.  The Filipina admitted to engaging in sexual relations with the stranger but insisted that it was consensual.  “Yes I allowed him to have sex with me and it was mutual,” she told the Dubai Misdemeanours Court on Tuesday, October 17.  The woman was sentenced to imprisonment followed by deportation. Advertisement Read more:      ©2017 THOUGHTSKOTO Sponsored Links Seven months later, the unmarried Filipina was taken to the hospital after experiencing stomach contractions, where she discovered she was pregnant and about to go into labor. The hospital where she gave birth of her daughter notified authorities of the her situation.  The Filipina admitted to engaging in sexual relations with the stranger but insisted that it was consensual. However, the woman seem to be without remorse or whatsoever for what she did. “Yes I allowed him to have sex with me and it was mutual,” she told the Dubai Misdemeanours Court on Tuesday, October 17.  Having sexual relationship in the UAE is strictly prohibited and punishable under the law. Source: The Filipino Times   Advertisement Read more:      ©2017 THOUGHTSKOTO

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