Live
- Anarkali suits for everyday elegance
- HMWSSB ED inspects Khajakunta STP
- Bhumi Pednekar: Became an actor in a time where the way I looked was secondary
- PM Modi meets 31 global leaders during 3-nation tour
- Sneha Wagh says she couldn’t recognise herself in divine avatar
- Study shows why you regain lost weight
- Boosting digital health and AI research
- Adani Group stocks rebound as Sensex and Nifty surge
- Future-proofing career with industry-ready essential skills
- ‘Nation First’ key to India’s progress: Prez
Just In
Investigations revealed that money received by the accused in different Paytm wallets were transferred from Paytm to a Kotak Mahindra Bank account.
NEW DELHI: A 24-year-old man was arrested for allegedly duping people on the pretext of offering jobs in southeast Delhi, the police said on Saturday.
Gautam Kashyap, a resident of Burari, was arrested on Thursday, they added. He used to make calls to people claiming to be a representative from a job offering company and ask to transfer money as facilitation and other fees for job to his Paytm wallet, the police said.
In October 2018, a 34-year-old call centre employee had reported that a gang of cheats fraudulently induced him to transfer money on the pretext of a job offer, they said.
And in the past 28 months, he has been cheated of Rs. 9.5 lakh by the accused persons, said Chinmoy Biswal, senior police official. The victim had enrolled for a job change in various online job portals in 2016 while he was working in the call centre, he said.
Investigations revealed that money received by the accused in different Paytm wallets were transferred from Paytm to a Kotak Mahindra Bank account.
The Paytm wallet and the bank account were registered in the name of Kashyap, the officer said.
Kashyap worked at a call centre in Noida from 2013-16, which was owned by Vaibhav Mishra while Amar Singh was manager. He along with his associates Mishra, Singh and Gagan Sharma run the syndicate, he said.
Vaibhav used to provide them details of job aspirants after which Kashyap and Sharma called the targets claiming to be consultants of some firm and asked for money to be transferred in Paytm or bank accounts to facilitate their jobs, the senior official said.
When this victim stopped making payments in 2018, Singh, along with his associates, told him that he would refund his entire amount and made some fake documents of HDFC Life Insurance and the Reserve Bank of India, which were sent to the victim and induced him to deposit more money, he said.
The accused made several calls to the victim and on the pretext of joining fees, facilitation charges, refundable security cheated him of Rs. 9.5 lakh, police said. Efforts are on to arrest the associates of the accused, they said.
© 2024 Hyderabad Media House Limited/The Hans India. All rights reserved. Powered by hocalwire.com