Indian police arrest ringleaders of internet scam that duped thousands


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NEW DELHI // Indian police have broken up an internet scam in which about 650,000 people lost a combined 37 billion rupees (Dh2bn) after sending money to a company that promised they would earn cash by clicking on web links.

Three ringleaders were arrested on the outskirts of New Delhi, and more than 5bn rupees has been seized from bank accounts, police said on Friday.

They described the pyramid-style scheme as one of India’s biggest yet.

“They learned that if you give some money back to members, the investments would go up exponentially,” said Amit Pathak, head of a police cyber crime unit in India’s northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

The men ran a series of websites that promised subscribers a chance to earn five rupees each time they clicked or liked web links sent to their mobile phones, police said.

The investors each paid thousands of rupees into the company’s bank accounts to join the scheme, but the web links they received were fake.

The company running the scam had operated for years, but earned almost all the money over a few months from last August, after it began to distribute some of the proceeds, using the beneficiaries to draw in more investors.

Police said the ringleaders had not yet appointed lawyers as the chargesheet was still being prepared.

When police raided the company’s head office in the city of Noida they found 250 passports of employees and members who had been rewarded with a holiday to Australia.

The scammers planned to film the holiday and then post it online as promotional material to lure more subscribers.

The alleged mastermind spent some of the proceeds on houses, cars and celebrity parties.

Mr Pathak said it would take time to trace most of the money, and several bank employees were believed to be involved.

“It’s a very big task for us. We have brought in the income-tax department, and other government agencies, to trace the money,” he said.

Cyber crime in India, home to the world’s second-largest number of internet users, rose 350 per cent in the three years to 2014 as criminals exploited booming smartphone use, a study by auditing services firm PwC and industry lobby group Assocham showed last year.

* Reuters