Kuwait Times

Indian police fear the US tax scam spread across country

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A multi-million-dollar racket that used fake Indian call centers to trick US citizens into paying bogus tax bills may be the tip of the iceberg, with police warning similar scams could be operating across the country. School leavers or college dropouts would be trained to speak with an American accent, posing as US Internal Revenue Service officials and scare people into believing they owed the government cash, detectives said. The scheme, which had been operating for over a year, netted more than 10 million rupees ($150,000) a day, they added.

More than 70 people have been arrested after police this month swooped on call centers in western India, from Mumbai to the Gujarat capital of Ahmedabad, but they suspect the network could stretch even further. “We believe that the racket is spread across India, including in the north,” Parambir Singh, commission­er of police in the Mumbai suburb of Thane said. Police from Thane, on the outskirts of India’s financial capital, rounded up at least 770 employees of bogus call centers on October 4. Most were let go pending further investigat­ions but 72 were arrested while another suspect was detained this week as police try to close in on the 23-year-old alleged mastermind.

It is claimed the accused would berate victims for falsely failing to pay taxes and then threaten them with jail if they did not cough up immediatel­y. The con artists would use an altered caller ID number that made it look like they were ringing from the United States and often quoted IRS badge numbers to make them appear legitimate. The fraudsters would trick the victim into sending money, often through pre-paid debit cards that can be purchased at stores like Walmart, or even by buying Apple iTunes gift cards. In both instances transfers are made by the victim handing over the card’s registrati­on number.

The iTunes scam has even led Apple to issue a global warning on its website urging people not to give the number to someone they do not know. The IRS has been warning about identical scams for a few years with reports in US media that such schemes might have been operating out of India. In January, the US Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administra­tion said it was aware of more than 5,000 victims who had paid a total of more than $26.5 million in such scams since October 2013. —AFP

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