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Helper stole $30k from employer in 28 days, sent it to husband in Indonesia and spent it on mobile games
Helper stole $30k from employer in 28 days, sent it to husband in Indonesia and spent it on mobile games

Straits Times

time5 days ago

  • Straits Times

Helper stole $30k from employer in 28 days, sent it to husband in Indonesia and spent it on mobile games

Helper stole $30k from employer in 28 days, sent it to husband in Indonesia and spent it on mobile games Ethel Tseng TNP July 18, 2025 An Indonesian domestic helper, left alone at home, repeatedly entered her employer's sister-in-law's room, stealing more than $30,000 over a span of 28 days. Most of the money was sent to her husband in Indonesia, while the remaining amount was spent on mobile games. On July 15, 28-year-old Mei Santi Andriani (transliterated) was jailed for 10 months after pleading guilty to two counts of theft. Three other charges were taken into consideration for sentencing. Shin Min Daily News reported that Andriani was employed by a 59-year-old woman but did not live with her. Instead, her primary duties were to care for the employer's 82-year-old mother-in-law and father-in-law, carrying out household chores such as cleaning and cooking. The elderly couple initially lived in a private residence in the Mandai area. On March 26, due to ongoing renovation works at the elderly couple's home, they temporarily relocated to a public housing unit along Yishun Ring Road. The elderly couple shared one bedroom, while Andriani and the employer's 53-year-old sister-in-law occupied separate rooms. Intruded into private room to steal The employer's sister-in-law told Andriani that she was only allowed to enter the sister-in-law's room for cleaning when she was at home, and that the room would usually be locked. However, while doing the laundry, Andriani discovered a key in a pair of trousers that belonged to the sister-in-law. She kept the key with the intention of using it to steal from the room. On May 6, Andriani used the key to unlock the room and discovered a large sum of cash in a wardrobe drawer. She took a bundle of cash and locked up after leaving. Counting the money in her own room, she found she had taken $4,700, which she deposited into her bank account later that day. Emboldened, Andriani continued stealing from the room. Between May 6 and May 28, she stole on at least 14 occasions, taking a total of $30,140 in cash. Each time, she deposited the stolen money into her bank account on the same day. She later sent a large portion of the money to her husband, who resides in Indonesia, while the rest was spent on mobile games and personal expenses. Click here to contribute a story or submit it to our WhatsApp Get more of Stomp's latest updates by following us on:

Helper stole $30,000 from employer in 28 days; spends money on husband, mobile games
Helper stole $30,000 from employer in 28 days; spends money on husband, mobile games

New Paper

time7 days ago

  • New Paper

Helper stole $30,000 from employer in 28 days; spends money on husband, mobile games

An Indonesian domestic helper, left alone at home, repeatedly entered her employer's sister-in-law's room, stealing more than $30,000 over a span of 28 days. Most of the money was sent to her husband in Indonesia, while the remaining amount was spent on mobile games. On July 15, 28-year-old Mei Santi Andriani (transliterated) was jailed for 10 months after pleading guilty to two counts of theft. Three other charges were taken into consideration for sentencing. Shin Min Daily News reported that Andriani was employed by a 59-year-old woman but did not live with her. Instead, her primary duties were to care for the employer's 82-year-old mother-in-law and father-in-law, carrying out household chores such as cleaning and cooking. The elderly couple initially lived in a private residence in the Mandai area. On March 26, due to ongoing renovation works at the elderly couple's home, they temporarily relocated to a public housing unit along Yishun Ring Road. The elderly couple shared one bedroom, while Andriani and the employer's 53-year-old sister-in-law occupied separate rooms. Intruded into private room to steal The employer's sister-in-law told Andriani that she was only allowed to enter the sister-in-law's room for cleaning when she was at home, and that the room would usually be locked. However, while doing the laundry, Andriani discovered a key in a pair of trousers that belonged to the sister-in-law. She kept the key with the intention of using it to steal from the room. On May 6, Andriani used the key to unlock the room and discovered a large sum of cash in a wardrobe drawer. She took a bundle of cash and locked up after leaving. Counting the money in her own room, she found she had taken $4,700, which she deposited into her bank account later that day. Emboldened, Andriani continued stealing from the room. Between May 6 and May 28, she stole on at least 14 occasions, taking a total of $30,140 in cash. Each time, she deposited the stolen money into her bank account on the same day. She later sent a large portion of the money to her husband, who resides in Indonesia, while the rest was spent on mobile games and personal expenses.

AI-Powered SmartCycle(TM) Intelligently Prioritizes DDoS Vulnerabilities to Cut Time to DDoS Identification and Remediation
AI-Powered SmartCycle(TM) Intelligently Prioritizes DDoS Vulnerabilities to Cut Time to DDoS Identification and Remediation

Associated Press

time25-03-2025

  • Business
  • Associated Press

AI-Powered SmartCycle(TM) Intelligently Prioritizes DDoS Vulnerabilities to Cut Time to DDoS Identification and Remediation

MazeBolt launched its new SmartCycle feature to further enhance the DDoS Vulnerability Management provided by the RADAR™ solution. RAMAT GAN, ISRAEL / ACCESS Newswire / March 25, 2025 / MazeBolt, a leading provider of DDoS Vulnerability Management solutions, has introduced SmartCycle, a new enhancement to its RADAR offering. SmartCycle is an AI-powered DDoS simulation engine that intelligently prioritizes the attack vectors that are most likely to cause damage to a specific environment, during an RADAR Dashboard - DDoS Vulnerability Management MazeBolt RADAR Dashboard - DDoS Vulnerability Management Leveraging MazeBolt's unique vulnerability data to train its AI engine, SmartCycle can reliably predict which attack vectors are highly likely to bypass an organization's defenses - and enables RADAR to test them first. This capability ensures that organizations receive the most critical information up front. SmartCycle makes DDoS vulnerability validation a realistic possibility even when faced with extensive attack surfaces spanning millions of potential attack points. By leveraging AI to very accurately pinpoint the most serious threats, RADAR can then verify their real-world status. This approach transforms how the largest organizations can identify and remediate DDoS vulnerabilities at scale. It enables organizations to prevent damaging DDoS attacks - before they happen. MazeBolt's industry-leading RADAR technology is the only solution available that allows enterprises to eliminate all known DDoS vulnerabilities by providing complete visibility into the entire DDoS attack surface. It enables organizations to validate their DDoS Protections, remediate vulnerable protection configurations, and keep services online. MazeBolt's new AI-powered SmartCycle selects the order of DDoS attack vector testing using real-time risk data to dynamically set the DDoS simulation sequence based on each enterprise's unique protections and target attributes. SmartCycle refines and boosts RADAR's DDoS Vulnerability Management with: Effective AI simulation selection: RADAR validates AI vulnerability predictions in the environment immediately. Improved security posture: Identification and elimination of vulnerabilities quickly - increases security dramatically. Increased accuracy: Enhances the precision of DDoS simulations by focusing them on the most critical attack vectors. Optimized Resource Allocation: Helps security teams prioritize remediation efforts. Reduced Risk: Ensures business continuity by eliminating the risk of unpatched vulnerabilities and reducing time to remediate. According to Matthew Andriani, CEO MazeBolt, 'Organizations often struggle with an overwhelming number of vulnerabilities in their DDoS protections. Validating these defenses efficiently, even with the best automation, takes time.' 'MazeBolt's AI-powered SmartCycle introduces a breakthrough capability that significantly accelerates vulnerability identification,' Andriani continued. 'It rapidly guides DDoS simulations based on the specific environment - ensuring the most critical vulnerabilities are the first ones to be remediated.' About MazeBolt MazeBolt RADAR™ is a patented solution addressing the highly vulnerable DDoS protection market. Without affecting online services, through ongoing nondisruptive DDoS attack simulations, RADAR continuously identifies and enables remediation of DDoS vulnerabilities that lead to damaging downtime. Global enterprises trust RADAR to proactively prevent damaging attacks, eliminating reliance on reactive manual responses or SLA guarantees. With its unique technology, RADAR provides unparalleled visibility into defense configurations, empowering organizations to prevent attacks entirely and maintain uninterrupted business continuity. Learn more at:

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