When job seekers register online and go to offline companies, they find that salary is not the "high salary" boasted in the release information. Scam 3: "Pay as you meet" recruitment fraud. After the interview, the swindler tricked the job seeker into collecting money in the name of paying clothing fees and medical examination fees. Or promise to pay a deposit before going to work. After the job seeker pays the fee, the swindler either finds an excuse not to arrange a job for him, or goes to the building empty and there is no news. Receiving a deposit is actually cheating money: some employers claim to charge a certain amount of deposit or security deposit to applicants for convenience of management, and promise to return it after work. But when the work is over, college students can only get paid, but their savings are gone. What's more, sometimes after the students pay the money, the recruitment unit shirks that the position is temporarily full, or there is no work to do for the time being, so that the students can wait for news, and then there is no news.
Legal basis:
Criminal law of the people's Republic of China
Article 266
Whoever defrauds public or private property in a relatively large amount shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not more than three years, criminal detention or public surveillance, and shall also, or shall only, be fined; If the amount is huge or there are other serious circumstances, he shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not less than three years but not more than ten years and shall also be fined; If the amount is especially huge or there are other especially serious circumstances, he shall be sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment of not less than 10 years or life imprisonment, and shall also be fined or confiscated.