4 held from Tripura for cloning WhatsApp a/cs on 2 devices for global cyber scams
MUMBAI: What began as a probe into a digital arrest scam led cyber police to a high- tech operation where messaging and video calling apps like WhatsApp were cloned dozens of times on the same device before shipping it overseas to facilitate global cybercrime. Four men were arrested from Tripura in this connection and police are looking for their associates.
Investigators found this gang had cloned 40 WhatsApp accounts on two devices, using SIM cards registered in the names of unsuspecting Indian citizens, and shipped them to Cambodia.
A 2025 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) report stated transnational crime groups in East and Southeast Asia have emerged as global market leaders in cyber-enabled fraud, money laundering and underground banking.
The digital fraud incident dates back to Dec 2024 when a city-based designer was defrauded of Rs 33.5 lakh. The woman had received a call from an individual posing as a Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) representative, who claimed her mobile number was being used to send threatening messages and it would be deactivated in 2 hours.
The psychological pressure intensified as the "Delhi cyber crime department" got in touch with her next. A man posing as "IPS officer Rajeshwar Pradhan" from the department informed her, over video call, that she was a suspect in a money laundering probe. To heighten the ruse, the fraudsters sent her forged documents bearing the official letterheads of the CBI and the Delhi police. She was told an FIR had been lodged against her and she had been placed in "digital custody" for 7 days. On the fraudsters' instructions, she liquidated her mutual fund savings and transferred Rs 33.5 lakh into a "secret supervision account" for verification. The scammers thereafter vanished. Realising she had been duped, the woman lodged a complaint with the West cyber police station.
A team supervised by DCP Purushottam Karad and senior inspector Suvarna Shinde began a meticulous audit of the financial and digital footprints. They discovered her funds had been dispersed across 5 different bank accounts. But the pivotal clue lay in the communication logs.
One of the phone numbers was used exclusively for WhatsApp calls, leading cops to a trail that stretched to Tripura.
The operation in Tripura revealed an organised logistical chain. According to the police, a SIM card sales agent, Abhijit Sheel, provided SIM cards—registered in the names of unsuspecting Indian citizens—for the racket. To avoid detection, Sheel roped in bus drivers to deliver the cards to co-accused, Pritam S. The driver's contact details and vehicle number were shared with Pritam in advance.
Once in possession of the cards, Pritam would insert them into basic handsets and share the phone numbers with co-accused Shantanu Sen and Shubroto Burman. The gang used third-party cloning apps (available online) to clone 40 WhatsApp accounts in 2 devices. The numbers shared by Pritam were keyed into cloned WhatsApp accounts, triggering OTP on the basic handset.
The OTPs were sent by Pritam to Burman and keyed into the cloned WhatsApp accounts. The "loaded" devices were collected by a wanted accused who shipped them to Cambodia. Police suspect the devices were used in scam compounds of Cambodia to make fraud calls globally. The Tripura syndicate reportedly earned lakhs in commission for the OTPs and devices running multiple WhatsApp accounts.
From Tripura, the police team—comprising assistant inspectors Nitin Gachhe and Poonam Jadhav, and sub-inspectors Vijay Ghorpade, and Deepak Tayade—arrested Sen, Burman, Sheel and one Jaidev Roy. While Pritam is on the run, the arrests yielded a massive cache of evidence, including 360 SIM cards, fingerprinting moulds, a money-counting machine, laptops, phones and various banking documents.
Check Madhyamik Result 2026 online at TOI and real-time WB 10th result updates.
A 2025 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) report stated transnational crime groups in East and Southeast Asia have emerged as global market leaders in cyber-enabled fraud, money laundering and underground banking.
Transnational cyber crime GRPS in South East Asia
The digital fraud incident dates back to Dec 2024 when a city-based designer was defrauded of Rs 33.5 lakh. The woman had received a call from an individual posing as a Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) representative, who claimed her mobile number was being used to send threatening messages and it would be deactivated in 2 hours.
The psychological pressure intensified as the "Delhi cyber crime department" got in touch with her next. A man posing as "IPS officer Rajeshwar Pradhan" from the department informed her, over video call, that she was a suspect in a money laundering probe. To heighten the ruse, the fraudsters sent her forged documents bearing the official letterheads of the CBI and the Delhi police. She was told an FIR had been lodged against her and she had been placed in "digital custody" for 7 days. On the fraudsters' instructions, she liquidated her mutual fund savings and transferred Rs 33.5 lakh into a "secret supervision account" for verification. The scammers thereafter vanished. Realising she had been duped, the woman lodged a complaint with the West cyber police station.
A team supervised by DCP Purushottam Karad and senior inspector Suvarna Shinde began a meticulous audit of the financial and digital footprints. They discovered her funds had been dispersed across 5 different bank accounts. But the pivotal clue lay in the communication logs.
The operation in Tripura revealed an organised logistical chain. According to the police, a SIM card sales agent, Abhijit Sheel, provided SIM cards—registered in the names of unsuspecting Indian citizens—for the racket. To avoid detection, Sheel roped in bus drivers to deliver the cards to co-accused, Pritam S. The driver's contact details and vehicle number were shared with Pritam in advance.
Once in possession of the cards, Pritam would insert them into basic handsets and share the phone numbers with co-accused Shantanu Sen and Shubroto Burman. The gang used third-party cloning apps (available online) to clone 40 WhatsApp accounts in 2 devices. The numbers shared by Pritam were keyed into cloned WhatsApp accounts, triggering OTP on the basic handset.
The OTPs were sent by Pritam to Burman and keyed into the cloned WhatsApp accounts. The "loaded" devices were collected by a wanted accused who shipped them to Cambodia. Police suspect the devices were used in scam compounds of Cambodia to make fraud calls globally. The Tripura syndicate reportedly earned lakhs in commission for the OTPs and devices running multiple WhatsApp accounts.
From Tripura, the police team—comprising assistant inspectors Nitin Gachhe and Poonam Jadhav, and sub-inspectors Vijay Ghorpade, and Deepak Tayade—arrested Sen, Burman, Sheel and one Jaidev Roy. While Pritam is on the run, the arrests yielded a massive cache of evidence, including 360 SIM cards, fingerprinting moulds, a money-counting machine, laptops, phones and various banking documents.
You Can Also Check: Gold Rate in Mumbai | Silver Rate in Mumbai | Bank Holidays in Mumbai | Public Holidays in Mumbai | Mumbai AQI | Weather in Mumbai
Check Madhyamik Result 2026 online at TOI and real-time WB 10th result updates.
end of article
In Mumbai
- This new Thane- Navi Mumbai corridor could cut your commute by 40 minutes — first stretch opens this year
- Crafting experiences, handmade memories: Mother’s Day gets a creative twist
- Committee asks BMC to prepare green belt plan for Kanjur dump
- Nullah inspections expose fault lines between BJP, Sena in BMC
- What is zinc phosphide? Rat poison linked to deaths of four members of Mumbai family explained
- Bombay HC upholds acquittal of 21 cops and civilian in Sohrab ‘fake encounter’ case
- Big Bull’s cos, directors fined 1.8 crore for disregarding Sebi’s ’98 summons
Featured In City
- Minimally invasive treatments can transform chronic pain care: RMLIMS experts
- FIITJEE case: HC directs ED to remove press release with ‘judgmental aspersions’
- Lucknow Metro’s east-west corridor to get driverless trains
- TTV asks governor to invite EPS to form govt; missing MLA found
- Pigeon nuisance: PWD says not its remit, NDMC cites action
- After three Lok Bhavan visits, Vijay is one VCK step away from CM chair
- 2 days on, Sohna highway sinkhole widens, cracks appear on carriageway and service road
Photostories
- Think crocodiles are just dangerous? These 10 facts reveal how unsettling they really are
- How to make Raw Mango Dal Fry for summer dinner at home
- From Ananya Panday to Bhavitha Mandava: How Indian girls are taking over Chanel’s fashion world
- Personality test: How you make a fist reveals if you are focused, a perfectionist, or observant
- Too much cardio after 40? Why women’s bodies may respond differently from men’s
- Do common mice found in homes and gardens can spread hantavirus
- 7 things parents of highly confident children teach them differently
- Success quote of the day by Sachin Tendulkar: “The key to handling pressure situations is to..."
- Coffee vs Green Tea: Which is healthier overall?
- 10 best UNESCO spa towns of Europe where people visit for wellness and healing
Videos
05:55 Vijay Claims Support Of 118 MLAs, Likely To Take Oath As Tamil Nadu CM Tomorrow- TN Political Crisis Deepens: Stalin Pushes Governor For Swift Action
03:04 Air India AI 171 Crash Probe In Final Stage, Report Likely Within A Month07:50 Two States, Two Big Winners: Suvendu Gets Bengal, Vijay Eyes Tamil Nadu08:12 Shah Hails BJP’s Historic Bengal Victory, Credits People’s Faith In Modi03:02 BJP Names Suvendu Adhikari As West Bengal’s First BJP Chief Minister03:50 Viral MLA Preference List Shows KC Venugopal Claiming Majority Support As Kerala CM07:06 TMC Leader Kunal Ghosh Says Bengal Violence Must Be Viewed From Two Different Perspectives03:11 Congress-DMK Split And TVK Support Trigger Fresh INDIA Alliance Tensions
Hot Picks
Top Trends
Up Next
Start a Conversation
Post comment