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TRUSTED TO BUILD. BETRAYED TO RUIN.
For over 20 years, Mr. Tarsem Singh Jaspal (aka JOGA / JAS) manipulated a Nuneaton businessman into believing that he would manage his finances with integrity, trust, and honesty, assuring him that he would handle everything correctly and bring smart investments.
But instead of managing it with integrity, he drained it for himself.
▪️ The victim never took a penny in profit or wages — all income was left for reinvestment. ▪️ Jaspal secretly siphoned off business earnings and took out hidden loans. ▪️ Left the victim without a pension, with no other option but to enter an IVA (Individual Voluntary Agreement) to manage the mounting debt.
📢 More facts, documents, and evidence coming soon.
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B'wood makeup artist booked for duping trader of ₹6.15 crore
The Gamdevi police have registered an FIR against well-known Bollywood makeup artist Cherag Bambboat for allegedly duping a chemical trader of Rs6.15 crore. According to police sources, apart from Bambboat, one Rakesh Shetty and his wife Tamsin Shaikh have also been named as co-accused.
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Employees protest unpaid wages from local hospitality group
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Employees of a local restaurant group protested Wednesday outside one of its several locations, claiming unpaid wages and bounced checks.
"We want our money because we worked for it; we’re not interns, we’re not volunteers, we work really hard for this guy, and we make him a lot of money," said Brisebois.
The employees claim the hotel recently cut ties with Harrag, meaning he’d no longer operate its food and beverage, but say when the relationship, they didn’t get their final checks on time.
"It’s just completely unacceptable for us to have put in 2 weeks' worth of hard labor and just have money that we thought we were going to get evaporate," says Brisebois.
Employees from other locations owned by Be Saha also joined the protest, alleging bounced checks for months.
Harrag claims the hotel owes him, which he says, in turn, delayed final paychecks. He showed us a message that he says proves employees received a sign-on bonus from the hotel and checks from him today. He also provided emails in which he claimed he attempted to get the money from the hotel.
"We requested those funds early on, we requested them multiple times and asking and making sure that our employees receive their final pay on time and unfortunately those funds, we still haven’t received anything," says Amar Harrag, the founder of Be Saha.
He said the paychecks that went out today were due to a private loan he took out to pay his employees.
"So, it’s really unfortunate that at this point, they really feel that somehow we’re not doing something right by them when we spent literally 14 months fighting for them," adds Harrag.
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Andreína Tarazón: hay un «mejor clima macroeconómico» gracias a políticas de Maduro
La presidenta del Centro de Altos Estudios y Desarrollos de las Economías Emergentes, Andreína Tarazón, afirmó este martes 24 de mayo que gracias a las políticas económicas implementadas por la administración de Nicolás Maduro en Venezuela se puede experimentar un «mejor clima macroeconómico» que ha impulsado el emprendimiento.
A su juicio, el desconocimiento de lo que afirma que es la realidad sería un acto «mezquino», «ignorante» y no reconocimiento al rol del Estado.
«Lo cierto es que Venezuela hoy goza de un mejor clima económico gracias a las políticas macroeconómicas del presidente Nicolás Maduro y su equipo de gobierno. Si no hubiese una política monetaria fiscal, comercial, coherente, responsable, pues evidentemente hoy no fuese posible mirar lo que estamos viendo a nuestro alrededor. Por ejemplo el desarrollo volátil del emprendimiento en Venezuela (…) es gracias a un clima macroeconómico que ha generado la política de Nicolás Maduro», comentó en entrevista concedida a VTV.
A juicio de Tarazón, Maduro «ha podido leer» la realidad nacional y poder adaptarse a la situación por medio de un conjunto de medidas económicas sin renunciar a lo que es la construcción del socialismo, que lleva para ella una mayor equidad social.
Advirtió que Venezuela «está dando sus primeros pasos» en la recuperación económica y que lo que se busca es que esa bonanza se traduzca en mejores empleos, en el despegue de las empresas, en desarrollo industrial, en comercio exterior, entre otras cosas, porque cree que «no es posible llegar al socialismo si hay población en hambruna» o si estamos alejados del comercio internacional.
Andreína Tarazón cree que existe una «nueva subjetividad» en el ámbito político porque los sectores económicos, según su opinión, entendieron que con paz y estabilidad se pueden alcanzar objetivos positivos. Por ende, subrayó la necesidad de que exista una «nueva clase económica» que defienda los intereses nacionales y pueda generar y producir tecnología a lo interno.
Considera que Venezuela puede aprender algo de la «teoría del gradualismo» que aplica China, país que en 35 años logró sacar de la pobreza a 800 millones de personas -según los estudios hechos en Cedes- y que es vista como una nación progresista con ideología política muy parecida a la nuestra.
Agregó que el reto que se cierne es cultural porque en el esquema de pensamiento de muchos sigue la idea de una economía rentista, aunque dijo que eso está cambiando porque hay personas que han comprendido que tienen la fuerza para poder independizarse.
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Sugar baby probation violation re-opens extortion case
A former "sugar baby" who escaped jail time after pleading guilty in 2009 to extorting a Greenwich millionaire is in trouble with the law again after allegedly violating the terms of her probation.
Dawn Jessop, 29, of Mansfield, Ohio, turned herself into Connecticut authorities in early May after being charged with first-degree violation of probation -- an offense that stems from a separate Ohio arrest that landed her in jail in her home state, according to officials.
Jessop and her husband, Christopher Jessop, were convicted of first-degree larceny last year after police said the duo duped former Riverside resident Stephen Dent after meeting him on www.SeekingArrangement.com, an "elite sugar daddy dating website" in where men can pay women for their companionship.
In May 2009, Christopher Jessop was sentenced to 18 months in jail, while Dawn Jessop got three years of probation and a suspended jail term of five years. When Dawn Jessop returned to Ohio, however, she faced a felony drug charge and was sentenced to probation in her home state as well. That probation did not last long, according to the Mansfield News Journal, which reported that Jessop was put behind bars in September 2009 after police found she broke her curfew, drove with a restricted license and was in possession of pornography on her cell phone.
Once Connecticut authorities learned of the Ohio case, a judge ordered her re-arrest. Attorney Mark Sherman, who is representing Jessop, said he is prepared to explain the circumstances behind his client's Ohio arrest to help her avoid jail time here.
"Since her plea, Dawn has been substantially compliant with her probation terms and we plan on presenting a detailed explanation to the court at the appropriate time," Sherman said.
Police reports detailed the elaborate extortion scheme in which Christopher Jessop got the idea to scam rich men after watching a segment about the website on Dr. Phil. In November 2009, after Dawn Jessop developed an online relationship with Dent, she and her husband threatened to release the information to his family if Dent didn't send money.
Dent wired $50,000 to the Jessops and planned to send more before police got involved and arrested the husband and wife when they drove to Greenwich to confront the investor.
Dent had a network of women or "slaves" he chatted with on the website and police records showed he paid upwards of $200,000 in exchange for companionship and in some cases, for sex. He was never charged with a crime. Dawn Jessop has been released from state custody on a $20,000 bond and is scheduled to appear in state Superior Court in Stamford on June 11.
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