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Who is Qaiser Saeed? Wiki, Biography, Age, Family, Cheating, Investigation

Qaiser Saeed Wiki – Qaiser Saeed Biography

A married romance scammer who posed as a prominent businessman to scam a lonely woman out of £ 47,650 has been jailed for three years. The callous Qaiser Saeed, 40, cheated the unconscious, 39-year-old target of her life savings after befriending her online. The Casanova scammer spent four months showering his victim with compliments and dripping false details about himself, including lies that he was single and owned his own business.

Ironically, his hustle saw him claim that his bank account had been frozen due to being the victim of fraud. He then tricked his target into transferring large sums of money to his account that he claimed would pay his employees’ salaries until his account was unfrozen. In reality, Saeed was a married man with children who worked as a security guard.

Qaiser Saeed Age

Qaiser Saeed is 40 years old.

Arrested – Charged

 Heartless heartthrob Saeed exposed in his mugshot as the cruel con artist he was Saeed, of Hayes, appeared at Isleworth Crown Court on Tuesday, where he was sentenced to three years in prison for misrepresentation fraud. Previously, a jury from the Barbican Nightingale Court found him guilty of the crime on September 3, 2020. Detectives first arrested him on April 10, 2014, on suspicion of fraud, but after being released on bail, he fled the country to Pakistan in an attempt to evade justice.
He appeared at Isleworth Crown Court on Tuesday, where he was sentenced to three years. Five years later, on September 30, 2019, he flew to Heathrow on a student visa. To his surprise, he was detained at the airport on suspicion of fraud, and the next day he was charged with fraud by misrepresentation.

Detective Sergeant James Harbor said: ‘Qaiser Saeed intentionally misled the victim by telling her lie upon lie to trick her into parting ways with her money. Scammers, like Saeed, are skilled liars who weave a complex web of falsehoods to manipulate vulnerable or unsuspecting people, playing with their emotions before taking their money under false pretenses.

Anyone can be a victim, regardless of age or gender. It is not unusual for victims to feel too embarrassed to tell the police or someone they trust, or they may continue to believe that the suspect is telling them the truth, as the reality of being scammed by someone they care about is too difficult to contemplate.

“I urge anyone who has been the victim of this type of fraud to contact the police immediately. There is nothing to be ashamed of and you will have the support of agents who understand how this despicable crime works and will support you. ”

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