He set up a fake embassy, made countless profits for 10 years before being discovered. How did he do it?
In India, a 47-year-old man named Jain rented a two-story building in 2016, painted it flamboyantly, and hung a sign for the 'Embassy of the Principality of Westakdika,' claiming to be the representative of several 'fictional countries' in India.
I couldn't help but laugh while checking the information—he hired 4 people as 'subordinates' to serve tea and call him 'Ambassador' every day; he put fake diplomatic license plates on 4 luxury cars, and before going out, he had his 'secretary' report with a forged schedule; the walls of the room were covered with photoshopped pictures of him with leaders from various countries, and in the drawers were fake seals from 36 countries, even the seal of the Indian Ministry of External Affairs was forged to look real, and he always bragged, 'I have an MBA from London, and my dad is a big boss.'
With this, he deceived people into thinking he could arrange overseas jobs and obtain 'diplomatic passports,' and many believed him. On July 24, the police came to his door and found 370,000 cash, 18 fake license plates, and 12 fake passports, all his 'tools of the trade.'
The Indian government angrily scolded him for 'making a joke of sovereignty.' You have to wonder, if he used this acting skill in movies, would he become an award-winning actor? $ETH