How These Scams Work — Know the Pattern

Investment fraud has become the largest category of cybercrime complaints at Pune Cyber Cell. Understanding the pattern helps you act faster if targeted:

  • Pig butchering scam — fraudster builds a friendship or romantic relationship over weeks or months on social media or WhatsApp, then introduces a “private investment platform” with fabricated profits, before disappearing with the victim’s funds
  • Fake trading apps — apps mimicking SEBI-registered brokers (Zerodha, Groww, etc.) that show artificial profits; withdrawals are blocked or require “tax payments” before release
  • Ponzi or high-return schemes — WhatsApp or Telegram groups promising 3–10% monthly returns, paying early investors from new investors’ money
  • Crypto fraud — fake crypto exchanges or “guaranteed return” crypto investments
  • Impersonation of SEBI, RBI, or Income Tax — threatening legal action unless you “move” funds to a “safe account” controlled by the fraudster

Immediate Action — First 6 Hours Are Critical

  1. Call 1930 immediately — National Cyber Crime Helpline. Report the transaction details, recipient account, UPI IDs. The helpline can initiate an emergency hold on the recipient account before funds are withdrawn.
  2. File on cybercrime.gov.in — select “Financial Fraud.” Enter all transaction details with UTR numbers, screenshots, and account details.
  3. File written complaint with your bank — mark it urgent, request a chargeback or freeze of the recipient account. Banks have RBI-mandated timelines to investigate and respond.
  4. Do not make any further payment — fraudsters often demand “tax,” “customs duty,” or “verification fees” to release your funds. These are additional layers of the fraud. Stop all contact and payments immediately.

Legal Sections Applicable in Investment Fraud Cases

  • Section 318 BNS — cheating. The primary charge in all investment fraud cases.
  • Section 66D IT Act — cheating by personation using a computer resource. Applies to fake trading app and impersonation frauds.
  • Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) — for organized investment frauds involving money laundering. ED (Enforcement Directorate) investigates these cases and can attach properties of accused.
  • Prize Chits and Money Circulation Schemes (Banning) Act, 1978 — for Ponzi and multi-level marketing investment frauds.

How to Verify Before Investing

  • Verify broker registration at sebi.gov.in — SEBI registered brokers are listed there
  • Check for RBI authorization for financial institutions
  • Never invest through unsolicited WhatsApp tips or social media recommendations
  • If withdrawal is blocked for any reason — tax, fees, verification — the platform is a scam
  • Guaranteed returns above 12–15% annually in regulated markets are not possible — any such claim is a red flag

Frequently Asked Questions

What are my realistic chances of recovering the money?

Recovery depends entirely on speed of reporting and whether funds are still in Indian bank accounts. If you report within 1–2 hours and the 1930 helpline can freeze the recipient account, recovery of partial or full amount is possible. After 24–48 hours, scammers typically move money through multiple accounts and convert to cash or crypto — recovery becomes very difficult. For organized frauds with identified accused, ED attachment of properties can lead to eventual recovery through court proceedings, but this takes years.

Can I take legal action if the scammer is based outside India?

Yes — a complaint can still be filed in India. I4C coordinates with foreign cybercrime agencies through Interpol and bilateral arrangements. However, practical enforcement against persons based in non-cooperative jurisdictions (certain countries in Southeast Asia and Africa are used by scam syndicates) is limited. Focus on recovering money from Indian bank accounts and the Indian intermediaries used by the scammers.

Is my bank liable if I was defrauded through their platform?

Under RBI guidelines on customer liability, banks are liable for losses arising from system breaches without any customer negligence. If you were defrauded through a genuine bank data breach or without sharing credentials, the bank may be fully liable. If you shared OTP or credentials under fraud, bank liability is reduced but can still be partial. File a written complaint with the bank immediately and escalate to the Banking Ombudsman if the bank does not respond within 30 days.

Advocate Akash Chikate assists investment fraud victims in Pune with cybercrime FIR filing, bank complaints, and legal proceedings for recovery. Contact us immediately for guidance.