Tech

College Students Busted For Allegedly Conning Apple Out Of Almost $1 Million

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Mary Margaret Olohan Social Issues Reporter
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Two Oregon college students from China were charged for allegedly conning Apple out of $900,000 by returning hundreds of fake iPhones to Apple and selling the iPhones Apple sent back for profit.

Yangyang Zhou and Quon Jiang are students studying in the United States legally on foreign student visas, according to ABC News. The pair allegedly garnered almost $1 million by returning fake iPhones to Apple and claiming they would not power on, whereupon Apple would send them real iPhones they would sell for profit through a broker, usually overseas, according to a federal complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Oregon.

“Jiang explained that in exchange for his labor and efforts, his associate in China pays Jiang’s mother, who also resides in China, who in tum deposits the proceeds into a [bank] account that Jiang is able to access here in the United States,” the court filing says.

A customer compares the size of the new iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max at the Apple Store in Singapore September 21, 2018. REUTERS/Edgar Su

Two Oregon college students con apple out of almost $1 million. (Photocred Shutterstock, hurricanehank)

Investigators found 216 warranty claims were put in by Zhou, while 3,069 claims were put in by Jiang. Apple rejected about 1,600 of the claims but accepted about 1,500, bringing in about $895,800 for Zhou and Jiang, according to the court filing. The pair allegedly would have iPhones shipped to a variety of addresses, including the homes of family members. (RELATED: Sarah Lawrence Students Demand Free Fabric Softener To Combat Racism)

An investigation began in 2017 when U.S. Customs and Border Protection tipped off investigators to a shipment of fake iPhones in Portland, according to ABC News.

Zhou was attending Oregon State and Jiang was a student at Linn Benton Community College. Both students could face prison time if convicted; Jiang, who allegedly took the lead in the scheme, faces up to 30 years in jail and $2 million in fines while Zhou could pay up to $10,000 in fines and serve five years, ABC News reported.

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