BENGALURU - It was a tense day in late August for 82-year-old S.P. Oswal as he logged in to Skype to attend an online trial at the Supreme Court of India.
He heard Chief Justice D.Y.Chandrachud bang the gavel twice and say: "Order, order, please present your case." textile After the judge delivered a verdict on the alleged money laundering case, the chairman of Vardhman Group, one of India's largest manufacturers, transferred 70 million rupees (S$1.09 million) into "a secret supervision account" to avoid arrest.
The next day, when Mr Oswal confided in a colleague about what had happened, he realised that he had been scammed.
The scheme involved a fabricated money laundering case with forged documents by a fake Central Bureau of Investigation; uniformed officials who took Mr Oswal into "digital custody", where he was kept under "digital surveillance" for two days via Skype; threats not to speak to anyone; a fake courtroom; a staged trial with someone impersonating the Chief Justice of India; and a secret bank account.
This was perhaps the boldest and most elaborate cyberfraud in India to date.
"My ordeal is nothing short of a movie script," the textile tycoon told reporters in Delhi.
Fortunately, he went to the police quickly and was able to recover about 52.5 million rupees, but the rest had been withdrawn from bank accounts across Assam, West Bengal and Delhi.
Indians lose 150,000 rupees (S$2,300) to cyber criminals every minute, and only 20 per cent of the money lost is recovered, as crossborder and interstate syndicates develop increasingly elaborate methods that the police are finding harder to pin down.
Cybercrime ranks among the most prolific organised crimes worldwide. By 2025, it is projected to cause losses of US$10.5 trillion (S$13.7 trillion).
Bu hikaye The Straits Times dergisinin October 08, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye The Straits Times dergisinin October 08, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Dedication To Sushi Tradition
An iron law of sushi holds that the more impressive the restaurant, the smaller the sign.
Squid Game 2 cast play five stones, sepak takraw
In K-drama Squid Game (2021 to present), players take on children's games for a hefty cash prize in the hit Netflix series. But how would the cast fare playing children's games known to Singaporean and regional audiences?
Sequels take nine of 10 slots in US box office in 2024
In 2023, Hollywood's creative community was celebrating the apparent decline of corporate, paint-by-numbers sequels and remakes.
Zhao Lusi says she was abused and is suffering from depression
The year may have just begun, but the Chinese entertainment scene has already been hit by controversy. Chinese actress Zhao Lusi (right) revealed in a post on Weibo on Jan 1 that she was a victim of physical abuse at the workplace and is now suffering from depression.
Jungkook Is First Asian Artiste To Surpass 2.1 Billion Streams With One Song On Spotify
K-pop boy band juggernaut BTS’ member Jungkook is the first Asian artiste to surpass 2.1 billion streams on Spotify with one song.
Comfort Meets Style
Young employees are increasingly switching out formal suits and ties for more expressive dressing styles
Down-to-earth home with stories to tell
Artist and stylist Geraldine Toh's apartment project combines art, design elements and an earthy sensibility with the colour ochre
Tampines legend Kopitovic makes staggering Bali move
When Boris Kopitovic first arrived in Singapore to join BG Tampines Rovers in 2020, few expected the Montenegrin forward to make a lasting impact.
LEE IMMERSING IN GREECE
World Aquatics scholarship recipient quits job to pursue water polo dreams
Gunners On Fire Despite Virus
They overcome bug outbreak to overturn Brentford's advantage for crucial victory