German police raids tied to welfare fraud, illegal gambling
BERLIN — Around 600 investigators searched 31 buildings in the western German state of North Rhine-Westphalia and police arrested a family of four Tuesday in connection with alleged money laundering, organized crime and welfare fraud.
Police and special units from the state office that
investigates organized crime arrested a 46-year-old man, his 42-year-old wife
and the couple's two sons, 24 and 28, at the family's mansion in the city of
Leverkusen. None of their identities were released in line with German privacy
rules.
Police said the family is accused of defrauding North
Rhine-Westphalia of about 400,000 euros ($487,000) in social welfare benefits
while living in the million-euro house.
The investigators also raided homes, offices and stores in
Duisburg, Leverkusen, Gelsenkirchen and other cities in the Rhineland and Ruhr
Valley, German news agency dpa reported.
In a separate operation, several hundred Berlin police
officers searched a hotel in the German capital as part of an illegal gambling
investigation. The officers searched 160 rooms and the basement of the hotel in
the western Charlottenburg district late Monday, dpa said.
About 100 people were inside the hotel at the time of the
raid, local media reported.
The raids in Berlin and western Germany did not appear
related to a global sting operation announced Tuesday that involved an
encrypted communications platform developed by the FBI.
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