yeah well i have a problem and i wrote 25 emails not 1 response and not fixing my problem, they asked or my bank details where uptodate because they would pay me 3 weeks ago this was NOTHING, they start from the last till the firsat once iám one of the first last once did not invest so much, that is why are just jerks
yeah well i have a problem and i wrote 25 emails not 1 response and not fixing my problem, they asked or my bank details where uptodate because they would pay me 3 weeks ago this was NOTHING, they start from the last till the firsat once iám one of the first last once did not invest so much, that is why are just jerks
wrote to asianpay that only sends you around always same person, send pm's on the forum to admin no answers even try to post 3 times post not added, wrote to the exchanger (recommended by asianpay) no answers , wrote now more than 50 emails to investorscorner no answers SCAM and LIARS especially this person Suppatra Charoenkun
that handles all she can better stay at home because she does NOT help at all she sends you around 50 times
Asianpay.com has problem with the police in Thailand
CHIANG MAI: More than 20 villagers in Hang Dong district yesterday filed a complaint with police accusing a chit fund operator of deceiving them into investing with him. The villagers alleged that AsianPay Co Ltd, which is operated in tambon Ban Tawai by Italian businessman Carlo Sorio, had persuaded more than 300 clients, Thais and Singaporeans, to invest with him, promising to provide them very good returns. The company's website www.asianpay.com shows it also has an office in Singapore. Each client was required to invest a minimum of 20,000 baht over a certain period, varying from 15 and up to to 360 days, the villagers said. At the end of the investment period, they were to receive the invested capital and the interest. The villagers said the company, which was established about four years ago, paid daily returns to its clients, or members, in the first few years. One villager who asked not to be named, said he invested 50,000 baht in the company. The company initially paid him US$3 a day. He then advised his relatives to become members. All transferred money to the chit fund via commercial banks. The villagers complained the company stopped making payments to the members, saying it had encountered money flow problems. Pol Lt-Col Tikawut Banditchusakul, the inspector at Hang Dong, said police would send the case on to the Department of Special Investigation if it was found to be a type of chit fund scam, luring people with false promises. It is believed the fund had a lot of clients in Chiang Mai.