The Hindu - International

‘Digital arrest’: duping people by posing as officers

- Samridhi Tewari

In November 2023, 50yearold Rohini, a resident of Noida’s Sector 34, received a phone call from “TRAI officials”. Ms. Rohini was told that a SIM card purchased using her Aadhaar credential­s had been used to launder money. At no point did she suspect that she was being led into a rabbit hole of deception that would culminate in her getting defrauded through a modus operandi known as ‘digital arrest’.

Ms. Rohini received more followup calls from “senior IPS officers” who asked her to download Skype, a videoconfe­rencing app. She was “interrogat­ed” on Skype calls and told that an arrest warrant had been issued in her name. Only after she transferre­d some money into an account and an “auditor” approved the transactio­n would she avoid getting arrested. She was asked not to talk about it as it was a “national security issue”.

Ms. Rohini ended up transferri­ng all her savings — ₹11,11,295 — into the account as instructed.

For the next three days, she tried to contact the “IPS officers” through Skype, but nobody picked up. On the fourth day, she understood that she had been scammed and called the police. Her case is still under investigat­ion.

‘Several interrogat­ions’

DCP Kuldeep Kumar R. Jain, a senior Bengaluru Traffic Police officer, who has the additional charge of cybercrime, told The Hindu: “We can say that the victims of such fraud are put in a virtual house arrest by the imposters.”

Mr. Jain is investigat­ing two cases of similar fraud in Karnataka.

In the first case, a retired IAS officer was duped of ₹11.5 lakh by scammers who introduced themselves as Mumbai Police Crime Branch officers.

A similar case from Bengaluru involved a senior journalist losing around

A journalist lost around ₹1.2 crore to scammers who called her via WhatsApp.

₹1.2 crore to who called

WhatsApp.

“So far, in the investigat­ions, we have found that there are many layers of ‘interrogat­ions’ involved, just to ensure the victim ends up believing the process. Their body language is also convincing,” the senior officer said.

He said the victims usually get their first call from a ‘constable’, then from a subinspect­orlevel officer, followed by a DCP

scammers her via level officer, to give the entire scam the veneer of authentici­ty.

When asked how such conmen get hold of one’s personal details, such as Aadhaar data, a police source said, “We haven’t been able to locate the source of data yet. But we know that bulk data is sold to these people, sometimes through the Dark Web.”

‘Contact the police’

In January, four persons, including a woman and her son, were arrested by the Delhi police from parts of Delhi and Uttar Pradesh for a ‘digital arrest’ operation, in which they posed as officers and threatened people through video calls.

One of their victims was a 65yearold retired senior manager from Air India.

The victim was told about a parcel being allegedly seized at Mumbai airport by the Customs Department. She was duped of ₹35 lakh.

“When she insisted on knowing whether they were genuine police officers, the imposters even showed the victim a cabin, where two ‘policemen’ were present,” said an officer who is investigat­ing the case.

“We are running public awareness campaigns. Those who get such calls should immediatel­y contact the police and block such callers,” the officer added.

Many such fraudsters dupe people by using profile photos of IPS officers on their WhatsApp and Truecaller IDs.

“What people often fail to notice is that the domains from which these emails are sent don’t end with .gov,” the officer added.

A source in the Bengaluru police said, “Crossquest­ioning in such situations can help a lot. When you start questionin­g who the nearest SHO is or who the DCPlevel officer is of that zone or district, the scammers feel out of depth because they don’t have access to the latest database.”

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