Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Gang that duped Sobo family of ₹1.48 crore busted, 7 held

- Manish K Pathak manish.pathak@htlive.com

MUMBAI: The cyber police officials busted a fake credit card helpline racket running from Kolkata and arrested seven persons of the gang which allegedly duped three members of a Churchgate-based family to the tune of ₹1.48 crore, by offering to help them “secure” their credit cards from frauds during an online transactio­n.

The officials said the modus operandi of the gang members was to dial numbers of middle and upper-middle-class families in India and abroad and alarm them that their credit cards might be vulnerable to fraud. They would speak convincing­ly in an American accent and slyly get details of their credit cards. They would then use the cards to purchase expensive items and later sell them in the grey market.

The police said they seized ₹50 lakh in cash, goods worth over ₹10 lakh, including 27 expensive mobile phones, 5 costly watches, 3 airpods, a Macbook, an ipad, eleven perfume bottles, two ladies’ purses, two refrigerat­ors, two air conditione­rs, t wo printers, one kitchen chimney.

All these items, the police said, were purchased by using the victim’s credit cards. The arrested accused are identified as Ryan Kaloul Shahdas, 22, Arunabha Amitabha Halder, 22, Ritam Animesh Mandal, 23, Tamojit Shekhar Sarkar, 22, Rajib Sukhchand Shaikh, 24, Sujoy Jayantho Naskar, 23, Rohit Barun Baiday, all residents of Kolkata where they were running the racket in the name of a call centre for a few months. They were produced in the court and remanded in police custody till March 19. The main accused Ryan Shahdad was earlier working in a call centre where he learnt how to run the establishm­ent and opened his own set-up with the help of other accused.

The gang is arrested for allegedly duping three members of a south Mumbai family of ₹1.48 crore between February 29 and March 3, when the prime suspect Ryan spoke to the 55-yearold complainan­t’s Londonbase­d daughter. The police have recorded a demo of the accused describing how they dupe people.

“The accused would call the victims, posing as fraud action team of internatio­nally known establishm­ents and inform the victim that the details of their credit card have been compromise­d and multiple transactio­ns were attempted on the card/s,” said Datta Nalawade, deputy commission­er of police, crime branch. He added, “The accused would then inform the victims that they were cancelling all the fraudulent transactio­ns and upgrade the security of the account.”

In this manner, Nalawade added, the gang obtained details of several cards owned by the complainan­t and two of her family members and purchased goods worth ₹1.48 crore.

The complainan­t approached the police on March 7 and an FIR was registered in the South Cyber police station.

A police team got a lead about the accused and visited Kolkata, but the accused had fled to Siliguri. “We then tracked them down to Siliguri and arrested them with the help of the local police and brought them to the city,” said senior police inspector Nandkumar Gopale.

 ?? ?? The main accused Ryan had a call centre experience which he used in running the racket.
The main accused Ryan had a call centre experience which he used in running the racket.

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