Owner of Suncity telemarketing firm denies promotion of online betting services – IAG

2022-10-01 10:46:09 By : Mr. Allen Bao

The owner of a company used by Suncity Group to send promotional text messages to clients told a Macau court on Monday that he did not know his firm had sent messages promoting online gaming and had stopped the practice as soon as he became aware.

Chau Chun Hee, who is charged with defrauding the government and concessionaires via betting under the table as well as illegal gaming has been accused of using his telemarketing firm Sonnet to promote telephone betting services offered by Suncity via SMS.

Described as an IT company, Sonnet, among other things, acted as a “middleman” to assist Suncity in sending out information about its VIP rooms.

Some of those messages also promoted Universal e-City – said to be Suncity’s online gaming portal – although Chau said Monday that he did not know this was the case and that such messages comprised only a fraction of Sonnet’s business with Suncity.

Instead, he noted that Sonnet’s revenues were directly linked to Suncity’s junket activities.

Chau revealed that between April 2018 and March 2020, Sonnet generated average monthly revenue of MOP$3 million to MOP$4 million (US$370,000 to US$495,000), mainly due to assisting Sun City in sending out messages. At its peak in 2019, monthly revenue reached over MOP$7 million (US$865,000). However, between April and October 2020, due to the poor economic environment during the pandemic, income dropped to MOP$400,000 (US$50,000) per month.

“The actual figures show that the revenue of the company is related to the VIP business of Suncity,” he said. “In 2020, there was a big drop in visitor arrivals and the VIP business also dropped, as did the revenue of the company.”

Chau explained that during the five-day period from 1 to 5 August 2019, Sonnet sent 463,000 messages for Suncity, but less than 1% of those messages were related to Universal e-City.

“In terms of figures, there was no impact at all on revenue as a result of phone betting messages sent. The drop in revenue was due to the economic environment,” he said.

As to why Sonnet was sending out messages about Universal e-City, Chau said he was not aware of the actual situation.

“At that time, a colleague in the finance department of [Sonnet’s parent firm] UO Group reported that this project had been running for two months but without my signature, so he asked me about it. I found out at that time that it was a message about Universal e-City, and I didn’t know why there was such an incident, so I immediately stopped it. I stopped sending these messages immediately and did not send them again.”

Asked if the 18th defendant in the case, Sonnet CEO Li Siu Chung, sent the messages for Universal e-City on his own, Chau responded, “I don’t agree with that… but Universal e-City was indeed sent through Sonnet and I did not clear whether anyone sent messages through the system itself.”

Chau also confirmed that he held a stake in a company used by Suncity for “betting under the table” practices but said he did not know that simply being a shareholder could be illegal.

The seventh defendant in the case against Suncity Group Chairman Alvin Chau and 20 other defendants, Lou Seak Fong, was charged with defrauding the government and concessionaires via betting under the table as well as illegal gaming. He was also found by the police to have a 2% shareholding in the company assisting with betting under the table.

Lou, Vice President of Marketing for the Suncity Group, told the court on Monday that his 2% stake was held on behalf of a friend, and that he received a share of the proceeds on behalf of this friend without any direct involvement on his part.

The court also found that a number of his subordinates had sent messages about betting under the table to Lou on chat apps. He explained that he “receives hundreds of messages every day, but I doesn’t usually read them, as his colleagues call me if they need me.”

He also said he “strongly disagrees with the allegations of betting under the table … the marketing department had absolutely no involvement in betting under the table.”

With more than five years’ experience working as a journalist in Macau, Pierce is an experienced media operator with strong skills in news writing and editing. He previously worked with Exmoo, first as a reporter covering government, gaming and tourism-related stories, then as a Deputy Assignment Editor helping set the agenda of the day. Pierce is a graduate of the University of Macau.

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