How Digital Arrest Scam Works?

How Digital Arrest Scam Works
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The Alarming Call

The Alarming Call: A victim receives a sudden call from someone posing as a police or government officer. The caller accuses them of being linked to crimes like money laundering or drug trafficking. The caller ID is often spoofed to look official, making the threat appear real and urgent.

Fear Trigger

Fear Trigger: The scammer uses fear tactics: threatening arrest, freezing bank accounts, or imprisonment. They claim the victim’s Aadhaar, SIM, or bank account is misused. Shocked and terrified, the victim struggles to think logically, believing the only way out is to comply with the so-called investigation.

Fake Video Arrest

Fake Video Arrest: The victim is pushed onto a video call. On screen, scammers wear uniforms, display forged documents, or use fake police station backdrops. This staged “digital arrest” convinces the victim they are truly under surveillance, deepening fear and making them more vulnerable to manipulation.

Isolation Tactics

Isolation Tactics: Scammers instruct victims not to disconnect, talk to family, or seek advice. They keep the victim online for hours, cutting them off from help. By isolating the victim, fraudsters gain full psychological control, ensuring the target follows instructions without questioning authenticity or legality.

The Money Trap

The Money Trap: The victim is told to transfer money to “verify innocence,” pay bail, or secure a clearance certificate. Payments are demanded via UPI, net banking, or even crypto wallets. In reality, this money goes straight to fraudsters’ accounts, often routed through multiple countries.

The Vanishing Act

The Vanishing Act: Once the money is transferred, scammers vanish instantly, calls blocked, chats deleted, video backgrounds gone. The victim realizes too late they’ve been duped. Law enforcement confirms there’s no such thing as a “digital arrest.” The fraud leaves behind financial loss and deep emotional trauma.

Stay Alert

Stay Alert: No police or government agency arrests people over phone or video call. If threatened, hang up and verify through official numbers. Never share sensitive information or transfer money under pressure. Report such calls to 1930 or cybercrime.gov.in. Awareness is the strongest shield against digital arrest scams.

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