Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Man gets 30-month jail, $65,000 fine for Olympic ticket touting

BEIJING, Nov. 16 (Chinese media) -- A man was sentenced to two and a half years in

jail and a fine of 447,000 yuan (about 65,000 U.S. dollars) for illegal scalping

of more than 500 Olympic tickets.

It is the biggest Olympic ticket scalping case trialed in Beijing so far.

The 41-year-old man, surnamed He, agreed to buy Olympic tickets for two

companies in Beijing and Guangzhou at prices 50 percent to60 percent higher than

the official ones, according to the Xicheng District People's Court.

He booked 527 Olympic tickets with 230,000 yuan (about 34,000 U.S. dollars)

through the online ticketing system, using 2,500 pieces of identity information

illegally obtained through his friend's construction company and other means,

the court said.

He was arrested by police on May 13 this year.

Organizers of the Beijing Olympics had repeatedly warned that "resale of

Olympic tickets for profit is illegal" and vowed to "support the authorities to

crack down on suspected illegal transactions."

Police had warned anyone found scalping tickets would face penalties, which

in some cases could be 10 to 15 days in detention.

A total of 7 million tickets for the Aug. 8-24 Games are available, three

quarters of which were sold inside China, through the official ticketing website

or at the Bank of China ticket outlets.

Buyers and those who wished to transfer their tickets were required to

produce their identity cards to print the tickets or do transactions at

designated branches of the Bank of China. Each ticket is only transferable once.

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