'Digital Arrest' Scam: Fraudsters Use Delhi Blast Panic To Extort Rs 6.7 Lakh From Woman— Here's What Happened

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The scammers employed the sophisticated tactic of "digital arrest," convincing the victim that she was officially detained.  (Source: jcomp/Freepik)
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Summary is AI-generated, newsroom-reviewed
  • Kanpur resident Sunita Gaur was cheated of Rs 6.66 lakh by cyber scammers posing as ATS officers
  • Scammers falsely implicated her in Delhi car bombing and threatened digital arrest between Nov 9-11
  • Gaur transferred money via RTGS fearing prosecution and later reported the fraud to Cyber Cell
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A Kanpur resident has allegedly been cheated of Rs 6.66 lakh after cyber scammers, posing as top-ranking anti-terrorism officers, falsely implicated her in the recent Delhi car bombing case to extort money.

The incident took place between Nov. 9 and 11 when the victim, Sunita Gaur, a resident of the Cantonment police station area, was allegedly placed under "digital arrest" after which she complained to the Cyber Cell.

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Gaur reported receiving threatening phone calls on two consecutive days following the blasts. On Nov. 9, a caller claiming to be an ATS officer first contacted her. Pressure escalated the following day when another fraudster, identifying himself as an NIA officer, called her and said her name had "surfaced" in the bombing investigation and threatened her with immediate jail time.

They employed the sophisticated tactic of "digital arrest," convincing Gaur that she was officially detained and would face charges of terrorist involvement unless she complied with their demands. To "secure her safety" and clear her name, they demanded she transfer a substantial amount of money.

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