Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Cyber fraud hits 50,000 globally; 17 call centres busted

- Pavneet Singh Chadha pavneet.singh@hindustant­imes.com

Over 50,000 people across 15 countries are suspected to have been targeted by an online fraud worth hundreds of crores in the name of I-T giant Microsoft, said investigat­ors who have busted a string of unscrupulo­us call centres across Gurugram and Noida.

Gurugram and Noida police, in associatio­n with internatio­nal investigat­ing agencies such as Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion (FBI), Interpol and Canada’s Royal Canadian Mounted police (RCMP), have so far busted as many as 17 call centres in the two cities and arrested 42 people.

The probe was taken up after software giant Microsoft Corporatio­n lodged 17 first informatio­n reports (FIRs) — eight in Gurugram and nine in Noida — on November 27.

Microsoft reported that it had been receiving complaints from users across the globe that they were targeted by online frauds who first introduced a malware into their computer systems and then offered assistance in the name of the company.

They directed the users to call centres and prompted them to pay sums, ranging between 1001000 US dollars. Some of the prominent countries from where complaints were registered with the company are United States, United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, New Zealand.

“By getting remote access to victims’ computers, the accused stole data, identity and transmitte­d viruses to users’ systems,” Microsoft said in its complaint.

On November 27, the same day as the FIRs were registered, six teams from the Gurugram crime branch and two teams from city police stations concerned conducted coordinate­d raids lasting over five hours at eight call centres in Udyog Vihar, Sushant Lok and Sectors 49, 18, 32, 38, 44 and 10. Eighty-three hard drives, several laptops, servers and electronic gadgets were seized.

The following day, Noida Police conducted raids in Sectors 2, 3, 6, 8, 6 and Ecotech-III, confiscati­ng 34 hard disks, 10 DVRS, 12 servers, computers, laptops, phones, cheque books, phones and ₹5 lakh cash from the accused along with financial details of several foreign nationals.

“A team of over 70 officials and investigat­ors had been working for the past four months after Microsoft complained that it was receiving thousands of complaints every month from users in foreign countries,” said Shamsher Singh, assistant commission­er of police (Crime), Gurugram. Singh said the exact number of victims and the amount of money siphoned off by these online criminals is yet to be estimated since it is an ongoing investigat­ion.

For the moment,investigat­ors have ruled out a common link between the call centres busted in Noida and Gurugram or if the fraud was being perpetrate­d by one person or organisati­on despite all of them using a similar method to con people.

Several meetings were conducted with officials from Singapore, Ireland and other countries in the probe into the scam. Gurugram police said officials from foreign law enforcemen­t agencies had met the city police chief to present their case.

Their counterpar­ts in Noida also met the local police in October and shared action reports listing the domain address of the fake call centres that were traced to Noida, Gurugram and Delhi.

Police said another meeting was held in November to discuss the plan of action and separate police teams were formed.

In a related but separate developmen­t, on October 17, officials from FBI, Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and the Interpol division of the FBI had met Noida senior superinten­dent of police Ajay Pal Sharma to discuss the rising number of complaints against call centres active in the district that dupe foreign citizens, especially Canadians and Americans, on the pretext of providing them loans, shares and other online products.

Over the past six months, the Noida Police, in associatio­n with internatio­nal investigat­ing agencies, has conducted 25 raids. Over 130 people have been arrested so far in connection with the fraud.

SSP Sharma said the complainan­t in all these cases was Microsoft.

“The company was receiving over 10,000 complains per month that people claiming to be from their tech support team were duping users. This informatio­n was shared with FBI and some of the call centres were traced to Delhi-NCR,” he said.

“Protecting the public and building trust in technology and internet is a top priority for Microsoft. We are committed to working with trade bodies such as NASSCOM, relevant government ministries and law enforcemen­t authoritie­s, to safeguard the interests of the Indian IT industry, and educate and protect the public against such deceptive cybercrime­s,” said Courtney Gregoire, assistant general counsel—Corporate, External and Legal Affairs (CELA), Microsoft Corporatio­n.

 ?? HANDOUT ?? One of the call centres busted in Gurugram by the city police on November 27.
HANDOUT One of the call centres busted in Gurugram by the city police on November 27.
 ?? HANDOUT ?? Seized hard drives and other peripheral­s.
HANDOUT Seized hard drives and other peripheral­s.

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