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It’s like Lou Bega’s “Mambo No. 5” come to life.
A Japanese fraudster has been busted for allegedly scamming over 35 different women with whom he pretended he was in a serious relationship.
Takashi Miyagawa, a 39-year-old part time worker with no fixed address in Kansai, told each of his “girlfriends” that his birthday fell on a different date so he could receive oodles of gifts, Newsflash reported.
All the while, his gals — apparently blinded by love — were completely oblivious to each other’s existence.
In the most recent scam, the serial sex swindler told one 47-year-old lover that his birthday was on February 22 — despite it actually falling on the November 13. Another victim said he convinced her his birthday was in July, while a third mark was fooled into thinking it occurred in April.
Japanese broadcaster MBS recently released photographs showing Miyagawa with many different women, including one that depicts a table with two cakes and a note saying “Happy Birthday.”
All told, the catfish’s fauxmantic racket netted him a whopping JPY 100,000 (or $929.44 USD) worth of presents, clothes and cash.
Miyagawa had reportedly met the single women while selling them hydrogen shower heads and other products for an unnamed company, and began each relationship under the assumption that marriage was in the cards.
He managed to con at least 35 women before the scorned sugar mamas banded together a la “John Tucker Must Die” and reported the scoundrel to the police in February, according to local media outlets.
An investigation on the fraud charges is ongoing — but Miyagawi’s far from the first “Con Juan” to orchestrate such an outlandish romance scam.
Last winter, an 80-year-old Oregon widower lost his life savings after a swindler masqueraded as a prospective lover and convinced him to spend $200,000 on a giant lion sculpture from China.
Meanwhile, a New Jersey hustler was busted earlier that year for scamming dozens of women out of $2 million by posing as an overseas service member looking for stateside love.
According to a 2019 report by the Federal Trade Commission, romance scams are the most costly forms of online fraud, skyrocketing from $33 million lost in 2015 to $143 million lost in 2018.
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