Hindustan Times (East UP)

CYBER-CRIMINALS DUPE WOMAN OF RS 1.48 CR, FIR LODGED

- HT Correspond­ent allahabad.htdesk@hindustant­imes.co m

PRAYAGRAJ : A woman relative of an IFS officer was duped of Rs 1.48 crore by cyber criminals posing as police officials investigat­ing a banned substance sent to Taiwan in the name of the victim.

After succumbing to the scare tactic of the cyber criminals and transferri­ng the money, the woman realised that she had been conned and lodged a police complaint in this regard. Acting swiftly, the Prayagraj cyber police immediatel­y froze her account and prevented the transfer of the remaining Rs 40 lakh from her account.

According to the FIR, Kakoli Dasgupta, a resident of George Town, first received a call by a cybercrimi­nal posing as an employee of a well-known internatio­nal courier company, who claimed a parcel has been sent to Taiwan in her name, containing banned and objectiona­ble items, three laptops and three credit cards.

He claimed a complaint was made against her and the case was given to Mumbai Crime Branch. After this, another person, posing as a police officer from the office of DCP, Crime Branch called her and threatened her with being sent to jail. He also made a video call to convince the woman that he was a policeman and told her that she was being put under online arrest and was not to leave her house.

They convinced her that she was under constant surveillan­ce. The elderly woman got scared and without even consulting her children living abroad, transferre­d the money through RTGS to the cyber thugs in multiple transactio­ns.

Confirming the developmen­t, DCP (city) Deepak Bhukar said that an FIR has been registered on the complaint of the victim under relevant sections of IPC and the IT Act at the Cybercrime police station and a probe is now underway. Rs 40 lakh in the victim’s account too has been frozen, he added.

The DCP (crime) said cyber thugs are sometimes threatenin­g to implicate people in rape cases, contacting them in the name of fake courier firms and sometimes by calling as customs officers.

“If you receive such calls, inform on 1930 or by calling the police. Don’t be afraid even if cyber thugs call you posing as police officers. Lodge a complaint with the police,” he said.

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