Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Five arrested for cloning foreigners’ cards to make ₹30 crore since 2013

Conmen used cards at tourist destinatio­ns to avoid suspicion, gave shop owners a cut

- HT Correspond­ent

MUMBAI: The Mumbai crime branch on Thursday arrested five men who allegedly cloned debit and credit cards of foreign nationals and used it to withdraw more than ₹30 crore since 2013. According to the police, the gang duped more than 1,000 people with the help of shopkeeper­s.the arrested accused are Zuber Sayyad, 30, Hasan Shaikh, 40, Fahim Shora, 30, Abu Bakar, 45, and Mukesh Sharma, 45. The gang members used to first procure bank data of foreign nationals with the help of bank employees. Using the details, they used to clone their credit or debit cards with card readers, said an officer.

Ready with the cards, they used to visit shops that foreign nationals usually visit in tourist destinatio­ns namely Goa, Rajasthan, Himachal Pradesh, Delhi and Gujarat. There, they used to convince shopkeeper­s to According to preliminar­y investigat­ion, Zuber Sayyad, one of the arrested accused who is said to be the mastermind, may have links with foreign banks or bought bank data with the help of some bank employees

After getting the bank data of foreign nationals, the accused used to clone their credit or debit cards card with card readers

The accused used to select shops that foreign nationals usually visit in tourist places such as Goa, Rajasthan, Himachal Pradesh, Delhi and Gujarat The accused would then convince shopkeeper­s in such get card swiping machines, offering them 20%-30% cut on each transactio­n.

The gang members would places to get swiping machines by offering them

20%-30% paybacks

They would bring the machines home and swipe the cloned cards on the machines

They would do so mostly at the time of bank closing, so that even if card holders got transactio­n alerts, they could at most inform the customer care to block the cards

The swiped amount would enter the shopkeeper­s’ accounts. then get the machines home and swipe the cloned cards on it. They would do so mostly at the time the bank shuts, so even if The accused would give the shopkeeper­s their share and take the rest of the money.

card holders got transactio­n alerts, they could at the most ask the customer care to block the cards, but not the transactio­n, said deputy commission­er of police (DCP) Dilip Sawant of Mumbai crime branch.

The swiped amount would enter the shopkeeper­s’ accounts. The accused would give the shopkeeper­s their share and take the rest of the money, said Sawant.

“The accused studied banking patterns. Most of the victims are foreign nationals,” said Sawant. Two shopkeeper­s have been arrested and five police teams have gone out of the city to nab the other shopkeeper­s from all states.

The police have seized 51 swiping machines, 65 duplicate credit and debit cards, card readers and several cheque books from the accused.

The police arrested the accused after they got a tip-off about the racket and their modus operandi. After investigat­ion, all accused were brought to the unit office, where they confessed to running the scam for five years, police said.

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