With the arrest of 18 people including two Nigerian nationals, Delhi Police has claimed to have busted a major racket in which fraudulent mails offering jobs to gullible youths in several reputed companies were sent to dupe them of lakhs of rupees.
The gang especially
targeted people living in southern part of the country as they were
under the impression the victims will not come searching for them in
Delhi or approach police.
Delhi Police had received around
300 complaints of this nature from across the country acting on which an
FIR was registered at Crime Branch Police Station in August this year.
"The gang also perceived that as people from southern cities like Hyderabad and Bangalore were more tech-savvy and fluent in English, cheating them through email will be easier," said Additional Commissioner of Police (Crime) Ravindra Yadav.
Although
such cases have been reported in the past as well, but in this case,
what is interesting is that the kingpin of the gang operated from
Nigeria and ran the entire gang with the help of two modules which had
no clue about each other's existence.
"There were two
modules of this gang, the first part consisted of the two Nigerians,
identified as Chinedu Cyprial (24) and Dubuisi Charles (28) and two
other associates who are still absconding.
"They used to
procure email IDs of gullible job seekers from various job search
engines and sent them fake job offers in the name of reputed and well
known companies," said Yadav.
The duo procured activated SIM cards
of various service providers from mobile shops on high rates. These
were issued on fake documents.
They then used to create fake email
IDs which looked like official email ids of the company and sent
fraudulent offer letters to the victims quoting handsome salary packages
to the tune of lakhs of rupees, police said.
"Once their
victim was convinced. They asked them to deposit an 'Interview Security
Deposit' in bank accounts specified by them. The amount varied from
person to person. They also asked them to send payment slip through
email.
"When the victim deposited money, they asked for more money on one pretext or the other," said Yadav.
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