A Japanese man has been arrested after being accused of having squandered the equivalent of 338,000 euros which had been paid to him by mistake as Covid allowances, police announced on Thursday May 19.
The arrest came after the 24-year-old claimed, through his lawyer, that he spent it all in online casinos but decided to
"return the money, even if it
(should)
be done little by little”
.
Read alsoThe “zero Covid” strategy is shattered in Japan against Omicron
The tidy sum of 46.3 million yen (338,000 euros) was transferred to him last month following a confusion between officials of the town of Abu, in western Japan, who were then paying allowances to low-income people affected by the pandemic.
Municipal officials had multiplied visits, calls and letters to try to convince the person concerned to reimburse the money.
Tired of the fight, the municipality had taken legal action last week.
“We arrested the man for apparently violating the law on computer fraud,”
a police officer in Yamaguchi prefecture, where Abu is located, told AFP.
The man is believed to have received benefits by transferring some of the money to another online account, despite being aware that he had received the money in error.
He is in custody and claimed to have used the money in online casinos, the officer said.
Read alsoTourism: Japan will not reopen its borders this summer
"I think the arrest is a step towards the truth
," Abu Mayor Norihiko Hanada told reporters.
"I honestly don't believe
(he used it all up)
and it's possible
(there's money)
somewhere
," he said, adding that city staff were exhausted from calls. and angry emails from the public.