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Hairdresser jailed for defrauding 80-year-old

A 29-year-old hairdresser from the Jönköping area in southern Sweden has been sentenced to 18 months in prison and ordered to pay damages to an elderly client, after bamboozling her out of large sums of money.

“The aggravated fraud amounted to significant sums and has meant particularly serious damage to the old woman,” the court wrote in the verdict, according to Sveriges Radio (SR).

The hairdresser met her client for the first time in 2008, but didn’t start pressuring her for money until 2010.

In order to get several pay-outs from her client, the hairdresser told the old woman on separate occasions that she had been diagnosed with breast cancer, that her partner had died, and that she had been evicted from her apartment.

The 80-year-old woman felt sorry for her hairdresser and kept lending her money to deal with her various hardships, a sum that amounted to some 1.6 million kronor ($241,000) over four years.

As evidence for the crime, the prosecutor presented several begging letters from the 29-year-old to the old woman as well as documents proving the bank transactions.

The court found no evidence that the hairdresser ever intended to pay back any of the money, which mainly went to finance the heavy drug addiction of a man she was romantically involved with and who was living with her at the time, reported local paper Jönköpings Nytt.

The hairdresser admitted during the trial to defrauding the old woman.

The court sentenced her on Wednesday to 18 months in prison and ordered her to pay back the money she had taken from the elderly client.

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GERMANY

Germany cracks down on fake Covid vaccine documents

German police have set up a special team to fight a growing number of forged vaccine certificates being sold in the black market

Germany cracks down on fake Covid vaccine documents
People who are fully vaccinated can show their vaccination booklet, which has a stamp and a sticker inside. Photo: Ina FASSBENDER / AFP

Police in Cologne have warned of a group of fraudsters selling fake vaccination certificates, a growing problem the scale of which is still unclear.

The police said the fraudsters worked in encrypted Telegram chats, making investigations difficult, and were selling fake documents with all the stamps and signatures, including a mark about vaccination with BioNTech or AstraZeneca.

READ ALSO: Germany probes Covid-19 testing centres for fraud

The fraud involved both real traffic in fake documents as well as scams luring customers into paying €100.

People in Germany who are fully vaccinated can show their vaccination booklet, which has a stamp and a sticker inside. Those who don’t have a booklet get a piece of paper.

Covid health passes are currently being rolled out across the EU, with a European health passport expected to be available from mid-June.

READ ALSO: What’s the latest on how the EU’s ‘Covid passports’ will work for travellers?

Over 44% of the adult population in Germany has received at least one dose of the Covid-19 vaccine, and more than 18% of Germans have been fully vaccinated.

German police have said forged coronavirus vaccine documents are becoming an increasing problem.

Last month, a couple in Baden-Württemberg was accused of selling fake coronavirus vaccination certificates.

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