Arrest of a group of Zionists who extorted money from tourists in Ukraine.
Ukrainian police say they have arrested a group of criminal Zionists in the Ukrainian capital who were extorting money from foreign tourists.
Israeli media reported Sunday evening that Ukrainian police had arrested a group of criminal Zionists in Kiev for extorting and extorting money from foreign tourists.
According to the Hebrew-language newspaper Valla News, the Zionist gangsters were active in restaurants and cafes, and Ukrainian officials had repeatedly warned tourist groups about the gang because of the extortion.
The group, which has been operating in the Ukrainian capital since 2020, has so far swindled and extorted about 150 tourists, according to the report. How they worked was that by hiring a number of waiters in restaurants and cafes, they delivered bills 10 times more than the orders to pay tourists.
Victims who had to pay tens of thousands of dollars more than their original order were threatened with harassment by a restaurant security guard if they refused to pay or objected to the bill, or were taken by the delinquent Zionists to an office allegedly the manager’s office. And there they paid the ransom with violence and intimidation.
According to the Jerusalem Post, if the tourists still refused to pay the extra bills, the Zionists would steal whatever money and valuables they had.
The Kiev prosecutor’s office says a member of the Zionist criminal gang has previously been wanted by international police for bank fraud.
According to the Prosecutor General of Kiev, these Zionist gangsters, of course, were not very shrewd and expected the extorted tourists not to go to the police and instead simply leave Ukraine, so they did not think that their crimes would be prosecuted. .
Accordingly, 10 members of the Zionist gang were arrested following a security and police operation in three locations in the center of Kiev, one of whom was a local patrol officer who pretended to be a taxi driver and took tourists to the desired restaurants.
If convicted, they will each face between seven and 10 years in prison.