Chocoholic wrote:Whatever, you guys can go live in la la land. All I know is that it HAS happened to several people I know, so yes they can and do come after you, it might not be a quick thing, it could take years, but eventually it will catch up with you. So don't sit there and tell me it doesn't!
I have asked the question several times, if you say it doesn't happen then how come it IS to a few people I know! One guy fled to Ireland and now has a European, Middle East and American travel ban - right so it's all a figment of my imagination is it? Just because it hasn't happen to you or people YOU know, doesn't mean it doesn't happen. Come on people think outside the box for once!
Oh and it's alright for GertRUDE to have a go at me is it? Yet I can't get my point of view across? Bunch of hypocrits!
End of.
Chocs I don't think Interpol spends years and years tracking down people who have left DEBT behind. Possibly your friend is wanted for embezzlement or money laundering or some major crime that calls for Interpol to get involved in and he just failed to mention it to you. Interpol is not a collection agency. Leaving debt behind is NOT a crime in most countries. If it was, half the population in the US and UK would be in jail. Yes in Dubai incurring debt and skipping is a crime, but not an
international crime as recognized under Interpol.
Britannica Precise Encyclopedia:
International organization whose purpose is to fight international crime. Interpol promotes the widest possible mutual assistance between the criminal police authorities of affiliated countries and seeks to establish and develop all institutions likely to contribute effectively to the prevention and suppression of ordinary crime. The organization traces its history to 1914, when a congress of international criminal police, attended by delegates from 14 countries, was held in Monaco. Interpol was formally founded in Austria in 1923 with 20 member countries; after World War II its headquarters moved to Paris and, in 1989, to Lyon, France. By the early 21st century, its membership exceeded 180 countries. Interpol pursues criminals who operate in more than one country (e.g., smugglers), those who stay in one country but whose crimes affect other countries (e.g., counterfeiters of foreign currency), and those who commit a crime in one country and flee to another.
Columbia Encyclopedia:
Interpol, acronym for the International Criminal Police Organization, a worldwide clearinghouse for police information. Conceived in 1914, Interpol was formally established in 1923 with headquarters at Vienna. In 1938, it was effectively disbanded by Hitler's Anschluss of Austria. After World War II, the agency was reconstituted (1946) with headquarters in Paris. Its principal services are to provide its 184 member nations with information on the whereabouts of international criminals, to organize seminars on scientific crime detection, and to facilitate the apprehension of criminals,
although it does not apprehend criminals directly.
The organization claims to avoid those crimes that deal with political, military, religious, or racial matters. Interpol has been most successful with regard to counterfeiting, forgery, smuggling, and the narcotics trade.
Intelligence Encyclopeida:
Interpol is an international organization based in Lyon, France, that fosters global police cooperation by sharing intelligence about cross-border criminal activities among its 181 member nations. Despite popular misconception, the organization maintains no police force of its own. Each member nation maintains and staffs a National Central Bureau to direct Interpol intelligence, while local authorities investigate and prosecute criminals according to national laws. Interpol's actions are limited to receiving requests for assistance; analyzing criminal activities that are not of a political, military, religious, or racial character; and disseminating notices published in four languages (English, French, Spanish, and Arabic) to its members.
It currently focuses upon public safety and terrorism, organized crime, illegal drug production and smuggling, weapons dealing, trafficking in human beings, money laundering, and financial and high technology wrongdoing.
Nowhere does it say anything about going after people who incur debt and go on the run. Incurring debt is a matter for the company to handle and if things can't be worked out then it can go to court. Rarely has anyone gone to jail for non payment of debt - of course I'm talking about in being in the "real" world, not Dubai.
All those people who you know that are being "hunted down" by Interpol are telling tall tales or not telling the truth.