‘Predatory’
That episode opened a floodgate of complaints from Filipinos in Italy that the consulate had allegedly deadpanned their charges against Respicio.
In three separate statements to queries by DAILY TRIBUNE, the Italian Embassy in Manila confirmed that the nulla osta or mother work permit number, which is said to have been attached by Alpha Assistenza SRL to the papers of Filipino job applicants to Italy, was bogus.
Mincing no words, the embassy described the consultants behind Alpha Assistenza, who allegedly scammed over 200 jobseekers of 3,000 to 5,000 euros each, as "predatory." It went on to warn Filipinos who want to work in Italy to do due diligence to avoid being conned.
Going by the tone of its statements, the embassy found it hard to believe that so many Filipinos, including those who wanted to sponsor their relatives in coming to Italy, fell for the ruse purportedly perpetrated by the couple Krizelle Respicio and Frederick Dutaro.
At one point, having determined that close to 200 visa applications had the same fake nulla osta, the embassy said it asked its local visa servicing firm, PIASI, to stop accepting similar applications.
The embassy then informed the relevant Italian agencies of the scam with the intent to prosecute those perpetrators who were within Italian jurisdiction.
We can surmise that Italy, like the Philippines, penalizes criminally the falsification of public documents. Then, it may also have a parallel law to our own estafa, which is failure to deliver a promised good or service after payment was already made.
Meanwhile, an Italian lawyer sued Respicio and Dutaro for making it appear on Alpha Assistenza online platforms that he was connected to or working for the latter. The lawyer appeared on DAILY TRIBUNE's Usapang OFW to say that his complaint would have resulted in suspending Respicio's and Dutaro's residence permits in Italy.
Respicio, this week, appeared at the Department of Justice to say that she was not hiding and to deny the claims of the so-called Alpha 400 "victims" that she and Dutaro had scammed them of their hard-earned money amounting to from P185,850 to P298,543 each.
A co-CEO of Dutaro at Alpha Assistenza, Respicio, who had claimed closeness with Philippine Consul General to Milan Elmer Cato, went to the DoJ after several job seekers filed complaints against them.
