Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Staff ensure users don’t smell a rat

- Leena Dhankhar

GURUGRAM : Most of those who have been arrested from 17 call centres, at the centre of a global cyber fraud in the name of IT giant Microsoft, are aged between 20 and 35 years with varying educationa­l qualificat­ions, investigat­ors have said.

They said these call centre executives had come to work in the Delhi-ncr from several states, including Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Delhi-ncr, and northeaste­rn states such as Manipur. Most of those arrested have pleaded innocence, claiming they thought they were actually working for authorised technical support companies. The police said they were recording their statements.

At least 4,000 to 5,000 calls were made by each call centre daily to unsuspecti­ng people, who were told that their systems had been infected and their personal and financial data and informatio­n could be compromise­d. Most of the workers were paid ₹20,000 to ₹25,000 per month. Seniors were paid double this amount, depending on their education and soft skills. They were also paid commission­s on the number of deals they managed to cut in a month.

Gurugram Police suspect that most of these call centre workers and those who set up such facilities had earlier worked in the BPO industry. Investigat­ors said they had experience and, therefore, managed to buy personal and financial informatio­n of people online. “Investigat­ion is ongoing and we are questionin­g the workers to establish how the system worked and how people were duped,” said Shamsher Singh, ACP (crime), Gurugram.

These illegal set-ups were spread across the city, operating out of premises as small as one room to as big as an entire a building. They were concentrat­ed in Udyog Vihar, Sohna Road, Golf Course Road, Sector 18, Sector 10, Sushant Lok, and other sectors. “Earlier most of these were small operations and managed to remain below the police’s radar. But this time, they were involved in complex operations with global implicatio­ns. Analysis of data recovered from their equipment will reveal the extent of their operations,” said ACP Singh.

The call centre culture mushroomed in Gurugram in the early 2000s. It witnessed huge business margins until 2006 when the businesses went bust. “The city has emerged as one of the top BPO destinatio­ns. The scamsters could easily find skilled BPO workforce in Gurugram. These youngsters possess the required technical skills, good language proficienc­y and are ready to work for low wages. Also, setting up a call centre here is easier,” Singh said.

Investigat­ors said some of the workers arrested did not have a formal education, but spoke English fluently and managed to dupe foreign nationals with their impeccable accent.

Cyber law expert Pavan Duggal said duping people online by directing them to scrupulous call centres is not new. “There is a lack of a dedicated framework. There is no enforcemen­t to check the services offered by these call centres. The absence of a centralise­d regulator ensures that such illegal activities are not curbed once and for all,” said Duggal.

In fact, even after such scams are busted, the police find it difficult to get conviction­s in the court.

The police are battling in courts to get even a single conviction done in the 6,500-odd cases registered ever since the cyber crime branch of the Gurugram police was formed in 2008.

Earlier in 2017, the Gurugram police had busted 38 call centres operating in different buildings in Udyog Vihar Phase 5, Sector 18, Sohna Road and Palam Vihar, which duped foreign nationals from United States of America, Canada, Australia, United Kingdom and others on the pretext of providing cheap loans, lotteries and tax benefits.

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