Delhi businessman loses Rs 18.8 crore in WhatsApp investment scam

A 78-year-old textile businessman in Delhi lost Rs 18.80 crore through a fake investment app promoted via a WhatsApp group. This marks the second-largest cyber fraud case in Delhi, beginning in July 2024 and uncovered in October. The victim reported it to police in November 2024, leading investigators to a Chinese syndicate based in Cambodia.

One morning in July 2024, the Delhi-based septuagenarian textile businessman received a WhatsApp link from an unknown number inviting him to a shares trading company group. Unfamiliar with online trading, he joined on July 24, drawn by promises of 30% returns on an IPO via a website mimicking a known non-banking financial company. The group had over 50 members and seven administrators, active only during stock market hours from 9 am to 4 pm.

Members shared convincing stories of profits, such as buying shares worth Rs 100 for Rs 75 and selling for Rs 125. Inspired, he downloaded the app and on September 10 inquired about investing in the IPO. An administrator advised subscribing and waiting until Thursday, September 12, for allotment results. His first investment was Rs 25 lakh, with the app's dashboard showing a 30% profit, building his confidence.

Over time, he transferred a total of Rs 18.80 crore from his two accounts to 26 others, encouraged by the rising profit indicators. In October 2024, attempts to withdraw profits were blocked, and WhatsApp communications went silent. He recalled, 'I had two options: either fall ill or fight. I chose to fight.'

In November 2024, after calling the 1930 cybercrime helpline, he approached the IFSO unit in Dwarka on November 27. DCP Vinit Kumar explained that scammers exploit greed, fear, and urgency. Investigations revealed the group and company were fake, orchestrated by a Chinese gang in Cambodia, with some recruits lured via Nepal.

Funds were routed through mule accounts, quickly converted to cryptocurrency, and sent overseas, dispersed across 1,500 accounts in days. Police arrested over 20 mule account holders from Rajasthan, Gujarat, Maharashtra, and Punjab—mostly unemployed or laborers—with the first arrest in Surat in December 2024 and the latest in Rajasthan late November. About Rs 1 crore was recovered by freezing accounts. Delhi reported cyber frauds totaling over Rs 1,200 crore until November this year. The victim lamented, 'When they find out, everyone will laugh at me.'

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Illustration of crypto crime surge: hackers using AI to steal $17B in scams per Chainalysis report, with charts, bitcoins, and law enforcement seizures.
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Chainalysis 2026 Report: $17 Billion in 2025 Crypto Scams Amid Surging AI Fraud and Hacks

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The Chainalysis 2026 Crypto Crime Report, published January 13, 2026, reveals at least $14 billion stolen in 2025 scams—projected to reach $17 billion—driven by a 1,400% surge in AI-boosted impersonation tactics, amid broader losses including $4 billion from hacks per PeckShield and $154 billion in total illicit volumes linked to nation-state actors.

An elderly doctor couple in south delhi's greater kailash lost rs 14 crore to fraudsters in a digital arrest scam. The ruse began with a call from a fake trai official on december 24, 2025, and kept them on video calls for 17 days. The fraud came to light in january 2026, prompting a police investigation.

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Delhi police have busted a cyber fraud syndicate with the arrest of two men, who operated through a network of shell companies to route defrauded money. The syndicate is linked to 176 complaints involving around Rs 180 crore in losses. The accused claim to have worked for Pawan Ruia, a West Bengal industrialist allegedly masterminding a Rs 317 crore scam.

Federal prosecutors have charged Chen Zhi, chairman of Cambodia's Prince Holding Group, with wire fraud and money laundering in a global cryptocurrency scam that exploited forced labor. The U.S. government seized bitcoin worth approximately $15 billion, marking the largest forfeiture action in Department of Justice history. Chen remains at large, facing up to 40 years in prison if convicted.

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경찰은 캄보디아에서 송환된 한국 온라인 사기 용의자 73명 중 55명에 대해 체포영장을 발부했다고 밝혔다. 이들은 총 486억 원을 869명의 한국 피해자로부터 사기친 혐의를 받고 있으며, 이는 한 국가에서 이뤄진 최대 규모의 범죄 용의자 송환이다. 송환된 용의자들은 노쇼 사기와 딥페이크 로맨스 사기 등 다양한 수법을 사용했다.

Nearly four years after a 70-year-old woman from Pleasant Hill lost $350,000 in a cryptocurrency scam, police have recovered the majority of the stolen money. The victim reported the fraud in March 2022, and detectives tracked the funds with help from federal authorities. The money was returned to her and her family on December 31.

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홍콩 사이버보안 전문가들은 사기꾼이 세 개의 강제적 공적연금(MPF) 계좌에서 180만 홍콩달러를 도난당한 후 주민들에게 eMPF 플랫폼에 신속히 등록할 것을 촉구하고 있다. 경찰은 지난주 가짜 신분증을 사용해 사기 계좌를 만든 혐의로 5명의 용의자를 체포했다. 이 사건은 도시의 1.5조 홍콩달러 연금 자산의 보안에 대한 경종을 울렸다.

 

 

 

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