Key Highlights
- Pune reported cyber fraud losses of ₹3.8 crore within a single week, highlighting the scale of India’s growing crypto-linked scam crisis.
- The scams used different entry points, including fake police calls, WhatsApp trading groups, and crypto investment platforms, but followed the same pattern of psychological manipulation.
- The use of cryptocurrency in these frauds makes tracking and recovery significantly harder, as stolen funds are quickly moved beyond the reach of Indian authorities.
Three major cyber fraud cases reported in Pune over the past week have collectively cost victims more than ₹3.8 crore. Each scam used a different entry point, but all three ran on the same operating system: manufactured trust, engineered urgency, and total psychological control over the victim’s decision-making.
The cases land at a time when Pune has already cemented its position as India’s most active cyber fraud hotspot, with crypto-linked losses across the city exceeding ₹20,000 crore when accounting for the GainBitcoin Ponzi, digital arrest frauds, and smaller investment schemes combined.
Scam 1: ‘Investigation call’ cheats 77-year-old of ₹1.62 cr
A 77-year-old resident of Kothrud lost ₹1,62,90,800 after receiving a phone call from fraudsters posing as police officials, as per a report by Pune Mirror. The caller told the victim that a bank account had been opened using his Aadhaar details and that transactions totaling ₹200 crore had been routed through it for cybercrime.
Using legal terminology and threats of arrest, the scammers created immediate panic. Under the pretext of “verification” and “clearing the case,” they instructed the victim to transfer money to multiple bank accounts. Believing the claims were genuine, the victim complied across multiple transactions. By the time the fraud was identified, ₹1.62 crore had already been moved across accounts.
“In such cases, fraudsters impersonate officials and create a sense of urgency so that victims act without verification. No investigation process involves transferring money to unknown accounts,” said Sangeeta Deokate, Police Inspector at the Pune Cyber Police Station.
This case follows a pattern that has exploded across India in recent months. The Ministry of Home Affairs told the Supreme Court that digital arrest scams alone have cost Indian citizens roughly ₹3,000 crore. Just weeks earlier, an 82-year-old Pune pensioner on Bhandarkar Road was cheated of ₹10.74 crore in nine days through the same playbook, with fraudsters arranging fake video court hearings featuring people posing as a judge and a lawyer.
Investigators traced part of those stolen funds through crypto exchanges linked to handlers in China and Hong Kong. The Supreme Court also recently denied bail in a ₹640 crore crypto scam case involving phishing and layered digital laundering, while a separate ₹2.65 crore digital arrest fraud saw bail rejected after investigators traced stolen money into cryptocurrency transactions.
Scam 2: Share trading fraud takes ₹1.51 cr from 65-year-old
A 65-year-old resident of Sahakar Nagar lost ₹1,51,44,817 in a share-trading scam that unfolded between December 2025 and February 2026.
The victim was first contacted through WhatsApp messages offering stock market tips and was added to a group where trading discussions and profit screenshots appeared genuine. The group admin posed as an expert investor and built the victim’s confidence over weeks. The group had multiple participants, regular updates and coordinated messaging, all designed to make the scheme look legitimate.
Over time, the victim was persuaded to transfer money to multiple bank accounts for “trading investments.” When the victim finally attempted to withdraw returns, no funds were released. Communication stopped entirely.
“Fraudsters often use WhatsApp groups and fake trading setups to build confidence. The presence of multiple participants and regular updates makes the scheme appear genuine,” Deokate explained.
This is the exact format that has drained Pune residents on an industrial scale. An 85-year-old lost ₹22.03 crore through a fake trading app earlier this year, leading to eight arrests. A ₹11.13 crore share market and IPO fraud was busted by the Pimpri Chinchwad cyber cell, with 8 accused arrested across Maharashtra and Rajasthan after the victim made 52 separate transfers.
According to Business Standard, more than 272 Pune residents lost a collective ₹125 crore to such trading scams between January 2024 and August 2024 alone, with each victim losing an average of over ₹45 lakh. A 51-year-old Army personnel posted at a defence establishment in Pune lost ₹40 lakh after being pulled in through Instagram and a fake trading app via WhatsApp. Even a cybersecurity expert in the city lost ₹73 lakh after being added to a WhatsApp group of over 100 members sharing fabricated profit screenshots.
Scam 3: Crypto fraud drains tech professional of ₹69 lakh
A tech professional from Lohegaon lost ₹69 lakh in a cryptocurrency investment scam that unfolded over several months in 2025. The case was later reported to the cyber police.
The fraud started with a message containing a suspicious link. After clicking it, the victim was contacted by individuals posing as crypto trading experts who guided him to download a trading application and invest in digital assets. The platform appeared legitimate and displayed rising profits, encouraging further investment. The victim transferred ₹69 lakh across multiple bank accounts linked to the fraudsters.
Despite the app showing profits exceeding ₹80 lakh, the victim was unable to withdraw any funds. Eventually, communication stopped, and the fraud became clear.
“In crypto-related frauds, fake platforms are designed to show profits on screen to gain trust. However, these figures are controlled by the fraudsters and do not reflect real investments,” said Swapnali Shinde, Senior Police Inspector at the Pune Cyber Police Station.
This crypto-specific fraud sits alongside a rapidly growing list of similar cases. A 66-year-old Kothrud businessman lost ₹21.63 lakh after a Facebook honey trap led him to a fraudulent crypto app that initially paid out 200 USDT and ₹60,000 to build trust before blocking withdrawals and demanding ₹29 lakh as a “processing charge.”
A 22-year-old Pune resident lost ₹2.5 lakh in crypto after being targeted through a fake Web3 job offer. An IT professional lost ₹1.5 lakh in Bitcoin after being threatened with arrest by someone posing as a Mumbai Police officer.
In a separate case reported in Ahmedabad, a 70-year-old advocate lost ₹57.9 lakh in a crypto scam using a fake U.S. exchange app and the same USDT hook tactic. And three senior citizens in Hyderabad lost a combined ₹4.4 crore to a WhatsApp investment scam, a digital arrest hoax, and a fake AI-powered crypto trading platform, with one 69-year-old retiree alone losing ₹1.89 crore.
Why crypto keeps showing up in India’s fraud cases
The reason cryptocurrency surfaces repeatedly in these cases is structural. Once stolen money enters the banking system, police can freeze accounts during what investigators call the “golden hours.” But when funds are converted into USDT or Bitcoin and moved through decentralized wallets, the trail breaks across blockchains and jurisdictions where Indian law enforcement has no reach.
India ranks first globally in grassroots crypto adoption per Chainalysis data, but still has no dedicated crypto regulatory framework. The 30% flat tax and 1% TDS have pushed an estimated 72.7% of trading volume offshore, onto platforms outside Indian compliance. Scammers exploit these same unregulated channels. Even legitimate exchanges are not immune to the crisis. CoinDCX identified more than 1,212 fake websites impersonating its platform between April 2024 and January 2026, and its co-founders were recently questioned after an FIR linked to a ₹71 lakh fraud carried out through a cloned domain.
The government’s PRAHAAR counter-terrorism strategy flagged the growing use of crypto wallets by criminal networks in February 2026. The CBI arrested Darwin Labs CTO Ayush Varshney at Mumbai airport on March 9 in connection with the ₹6,000 crore GainBitcoin Ponzi, India’s largest crypto scam.
A ₹19 crore USDT theft through a fake KYC scheme saw one of the three arrested suspects traced to Pune. And police in Madhya Pradesh uncovered a ₹100 crore crypto money trail leading to China, where scammers converted stolen funds into digital assets to bypass national banking rules entirely.
From April 1, 2026, new powers under the Income Tax Bill allow authorities to access crypto wallets, emails, and social media during authorized searches. Whether these tools translate into actual recoveries for victims remains an open question.
Why Pune cannot escape this tag
Pune is not India’s financial capital and not its largest tech hub. But it sits at a specific intersection that makes it disproportionately vulnerable: one of India’s largest retiree populations with significant savings and limited digital security awareness, a massive IT workforce that creates a wide surface for social engineering, proximity to Mumbai’s banking infrastructure, and a cybercrime policing setup that has not scaled with the threat. The city accounted for 26% of India’s total reported cyber fraud losses in 2024.
Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis announced the establishment of a Centre of Excellence in Digital Forensics in Pune. But the proposal for additional cyber police stations and senior posts remains pending with the state government.
Nationally, over 24 lakh cybercrime complaints were filed in 2025 with reported losses of ₹22,495 crore. Of the ₹36,448 crore in cumulative losses reported since the portal launched, only ₹60.52 crore has been returned to victims.
Police advise citizens to report suspected fraud immediately through the national cyber helpline at 1930 or via cybercrime.gov.in. No government agency in India demands money over phone calls. No investigation process requires transferring funds to unknown accounts. No concept of “digital arrest” exists under Indian law.
Also Read: Industrialist Arrested in ₹315 Cr Crypto Fraud Case in India