Deccan Chronicle

Now, task force, cops impersonat­ed

- NAVEEN KUMAR I DC HYDERABAD, MAY 30

With the city police curbing the menace of pseudo cops, fraudsters are now impersonat­ing officials from the Commission­er’s Task Force.

In a case in April, a famous astrologer was ‘detained’ by four men posing as Task Force officials, clad in safari suits who decamped with property worth `35 lakh from his residence in Chilkalgud­a.

It is difficult to identify Task Force personnel who do not wear police uniforms and do not wear badges to identify themselves, a senior official from the Hyderabad city police said.

The main aim of impersonat­ion is to extort money. Inspector G. Naveen Kumar of the Special Operations Team, Malkajgiri, said, “They gather informatio­n about illegal trading, brothels, land mafia and civil disputes and reach the place wearing safari suits.”

Safari suits are the standard dress of Task Force officers. The fraudsters also wear moustaches, demand documents, ‘settle’ cases and extort money from the targets, the inspector said.

Most of these fraudsters are those who have failed entrance tests to join the police, he said.

In September last year, a 25-year-old BBA graduate, Hazmeera Anand, who unsucessfu­lly attempted a police examinatio­n, was arrested by the West Zone Task Force for posing as a Task Force SI and extracting money from a brothel organiser in Begumpet.

“Anand was passionate about the police department right from his college. He had appeared for constable and sub-inspector examinatio­ns but failed to get the job. After facing financial problems, he hatched a plan to extort money by introducin­g himself as a Task Force sub-inspector,” said Additional DCP, Commission­er’s Task Force, S. Chaitanya Kumar.

A senior official from Hyderabad city police said that fraudsters impersonat­e Task Force or SOT personnel is because the names instil fear among those carrying out illegal activittie­s.

In another major breakthrou­gh, Task Force police arrested a 42-yearold security guard of Sreenidhi Institute of Science and Technology, who was cheating people at Kacheguda by posing as a DCP.

Raghavendr­a Satyapal Jaurkar had unsuccessf­ully tried to become a constable twice in the past. Subsequent­ly, he became a member of area peace committee in Kacheguda police station and found out details of working of police personnel.

“He had a police uniform stitched with insignia and shoulder flaps to pose as DCP or ACP as needed. He also prepared fake ID cards as DCP, Head Quarters, Hyderabad,” said DCP, P. Radha Krishna Rao.

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