Monday, December 09, 2024 - Three Nigerian men were arrested by Cybercrime police in Vadodara, India for duping a woman of over Rs 2.62 lakh.
Police
said that the accused, identified as Lezhu John, Gibril Mohammed, and Egboola
Ekena, were running a cyber racket and duped hundreds of people across the
country.
All three
were nabbed from Delhi, the Vadodara police said in a statement on Saturday,
December 7, 2024.
A woman, who is in her late
20s, filed a complaint at the Cybercrime police station a few months ago after
she realised that she was being cheated.
The
complainant told police that she had come in contact with the accused while
surfing her Instagram account.
The
accused, who used the alais Sohn Yunmin, claimed to be a US chemical engineer
and said he was working in a big energy firm in the UK.
He told
the woman that he was soon going to be working in Assam and befriended
her.
Police
said that the complainant became a very close friend of the accused and she
even sent him a gift.
In April
this year, the accused told the woman that he needed to buy some machinery and
his friend, who was supposed to pay for it, didn't have money in his bank
account. He asked her to transfer him Rs 50,000 and she obliged.
After some
days, the accused told her that he was coming to Assam as he got a job offer
there and his parcel would soon land in India.
After some
days, she got a call from a woman called Niharika who asked for Rs 35,500 for
the parcel that had US dollars. She transferred the amount but Niharika kept
asking for more money by giving various reasons. The complainant ended up
transferring Rs 1.69 lakh but she soon realised that she was being duped.
Police
tracked down the accused on the basis of the bank account transactions.
"Investigations
revealed that the accused used over 500 bank accounts to commit the fraud. Over
900 complaints have been filed across the country in connection with these bank
accounts," said M M Rajput, ACP (Cybercrime), Vadodara.
The
accused trio had a lot of photographs of men and women in their mobile
phones.
They used these photos to make fake profiles on social media and dupe people.
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