The Free Press Journal

Fake listings scam: Girgaum woman loses over 1L returning dress online

- SACHIN GAAD /

With a major shift from cash transactio­ns to online transactio­ns by consumers amid the COVID-19 pandemic, cyber fraudsters are also trying to cash in by targeting unsuspecti­ng victims through various methods. The next time you look up a contact number for an establishm­ent or organisati­on online, for instance, you might unwittingl­y become the victim of one such cyber fraud unless the number is verified as authentic.

A 55-year-old woman from Girgaum fell prey to cyber fraud when she went online in search of a customer care number. The number she found online was indeed of a fraudster who duped her to the tune of Rs 1,07,065 while returning a dress worth Rs 1,099.

According to the V P Road police, Manjiri Amrutea, a resident of Girgaum, ordered a dress worth Rs 1,099 from an online shopping portal on July 6, and received delivery of the dress on July 9. However, she did not like the dress and wanted to return it. When she called the courier delivery agent to enquire about how to return the dress, he told her to look up the portal’s customer care number online.

Amrute, who was relatively new to online shopping and had ordered clothes online for the very first time, then checked on YouTube for the shopping portal's customer care number.

With cyber scamsters upping their game amid the COVID-19 pandemic, The Free Press Journal brings you a series of reports on the different cons you need to guard against to foil their scams.

When she called on the number she came across, the receiver introduced himself as a representa­tive of the portal. He then sent a link and asked Amrute to file her credit card details and asked for an OTP number she would receive.

As soon as Amrute shared the OTP, Rs 1,07,065 was debited from her account. She immediatel­y alerted her husband Madhusudan, who first blocked the credit card and then rushed to the police station to lodge a complaint.

"After learning about the fraud, the police officer immediatel­y sent an email from his government email ID and asked the complainan­t’s bank to stop payment. The officer sent an email around 6.45 pm when the transactio­n wasn't completed. However, our efforts went in vain, as around 9.45 pm. the amount was transferre­d to the cyber fraudster’s digital wallet," said Madhusudan.

"We have registered a case under IPC section of cheating (420) and sections of the Informatio­n Technology Act. However, no arrest has been made so far," said an officer from V P Road police station.

This is the latest instance reported in the city of online cheating cases in which fraudsters replace contact details of establishm­ents or organisati­ons on search engines or other online platforms with their phone numbers. They then ask unsuspecti­ng victims to make payments through e-wallets or through a link sent to them.

"As these types of scams are growing, people should be cautious and only visit official company websites for customer care numbers.

It should be made obligatory for companies to display their numbers prominentl­y on their websites. The search engines should also take greater responsibi­lity to prevent such frauds, and they can mark a tick for an official company website," said cyber expert Mahendra Hemdev.

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