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According to police, the incident occurred between April 3 and 5. A complaint in this regard was registered at the Bengaluru East division cybercrime police station.
The 29-year-old victim from the city received a call from a person claiming to be from the customer care of Fedex, international courier giant, who told her parcel had been returned and she has to speak to the customer care executive.
The executive told her the parcel contained five passports, three credit cards and 140 synthetic narcotics (MDMA) sent from Mumbai to Thailand in her name.
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“After I confirmed that yes, I want to make an identity theft complaint, they transferred my call to cyber crime team in Mumbai. The cyber crime team asked me to download Skype and enter an email id in order to chat with them,” she said in her complaint.
They then asked her about the ‘illegal parcel’ and her Aadhaar card details. The ‘cyber crime team’ then said they would speak to higher authorities.
‘I was then informed that my Aadhaar card was on high alert for human trafficking and drugs. After this, the Skype call was transferred to an alleged senior CBI officer named Abhishek Chauhan where I was asked to switch on the camera and start a conversation,’ the complainant said.
The ‘CBI officer’ informed her that there is a case of human trafficking, money laundering and identity theft, she said.
‘They kept grilling me about my bank account details such as existing balance, my annual CTC, my monthly income and my investments. I gave them all the needed information,’ the victim told police.
She was forced to take an oath not to disclose any details with anyone until the investigation was completed as this was a ‘highly sensitive case.’
The victim was prevented from speaking to her parents and police and told to cooperate with them because ‘there were police and politicians involved in this case.’ She was asked to remain online with the camera on and share her screen so that they could check whether she called or texted anyone.
‘For an entire day I was watched even during the night. I was asked to keep the camera on and sleep,’ she said in her complaint.
On April 4, she was asked to transfer Rs 10,78,993 from her bank account to the account holder name Nithin Joseph, which she diligently did.
Further, they made two separate transactions of Rs 2.04 lakh and Rs 1.74 lakh on Amazon on April 5.
On the pretext of conducting ‘narcotic tests’, she was forced to strip and pose on camera, the woman said in the complaint.
She alleged she was threatened to continue doing it or else she and her family would be arrested in a drug case.
‘The alleged officer later blackmailed me that if I don’t give him Rs 10 lakh by 3 pm on April 5, he will sell her video to multiple people including dark web,’ she said in her complaint.