CHENNAI — In a major breakthrough against organised cybercrime, the Cyber
Crime Wing of the Tamil Nadu Police has arrested seven individuals from across
the country under a nationwide operation titled ‘Operation Hydra’.
In a statement, cyberpolice said that the suspects were
found to be involved in a range of frauds, including matrimonial scams,
phishing, digital loan frauds, and fake scholarship schemes.
Police teams were dispatched to various states --
Uttarakhand, Jharkhand, Assam, and New Delhi -- to apprehend the accused.
According to officials, the arrests are part of an
intensified drive to dismantle interstate cybercrime syndicates.
On May 28, two suspects, Mohammed Dawood (21) and
Mohammed Vaseem (34), were arrested in Jaspur, Uttarakhand. Both were allegedly
managing mule bank accounts used to route and launder money gained from
matrimonial fraud cases.
In another case registered at the State Cyber Crime
headquarters, a victim lost Rs 4.05 lakh to a phishing scam.
The scammer, posing as an ICICI Bank customer care
executive, sent a fake mobile application (APK file) via WhatsApp under the
pretext of updating KYC details. Once installed, the malware accessed the
victim’s personal and financial data, including PAN and debit card details.
Subsequently, on May 30, police arrested Pankaj Kumar (40) from Jharkhand,
followed by the arrest of Hiteswar Biswas (30) in Hojai, Assam on May 31, and
Nihar Ranjan Nath (51) from Nagaon, Assam on June 1.
All three were part of a wider fraud network involved in
digital lending app scams and managing fraudulent bank accounts.
In another significant case, the Thanjavur Cyber Crime
Police Station uncovered a scholarship scam where students were duped under the
pretext of receiving government aid for education. Scammers collected personal
data and nominal ‘processing fees’ before disappearing.
Acting on this complaint, police arrested Preeti Nicholas
(30) and Meshach (19) from northeast Delhi on June 1. Both were involved in
collecting student data and fabricating forged documents to support the scam.
Police officials confirmed that nine arrests have been
made so far in connection with scholarship-related fraud over the past two
months.
Investigations are ongoing to trace the remaining network
members involved in these cyber crimes.