A police official, centre, escorts two men outside the court in Thane, outskirts of Mumbai, India, Thursday, Oct. 6, 2016. (AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade) |
Indian police have
arrested 70 people and are questioning hundreds more after uncovering a massive
scam to cheat thousands of Americans out of millions of dollars by posing as
U.S. tax authorities and demanding unpaid taxes, a police officer said
Thursday.
A police official, right, escorts two men outside the court in Thane, outskirts of Mumbai, India, Thursday, Oct. 6, 2016. (AP Photo/Rajanish Kakade) |
According
to police in Mumbai, the yearlong scam involved running fake call centers which
sent voice mail messages telling U.S. nationals to call back because they owed
back taxes.
Those
who called back and believed the threats would fork out thousands of dollars to
"settle" their case, Mumbai police officer Parag Marere said
Thursday.
The
scam brought in more than US$150,000 a day, Marere said without giving a total
sum. If the scam netted that amount daily, it would have made almost US$55
million in one year.
Some
victims were also told to buy gift vouchers from various companies, and hand
over the voucher ID numbers which the impostors then used to make purchases,
Marere said.
Police
said they are likely to file charges against many of the 600 or more people
still being questioned on suspicion of running the fake call centers, housed on
several stories of a Mumbai office building.
Those
arrested so far include several of the alleged ringleaders, as well as people
accused of providing equipment and setting up the fake call centers. The
criminal charges filed against the suspects include extortion, impersonation
and violations of India's information technology laws.
"We
are questioning those who were involved in the fraud, including those posing as
tax investigators," Marere said.
Police
raided the offices this week and seized hundreds of hard disks, hard disks,
high-end servers and other electronic equipment.
Indian
media reports said 70 percent of the scam's proceeds were retained by the
suspects in India, while the rest was paid to collaborators in the U.S.
Indian news broadcaster NDTV reported that one U.S.-based company allegedly collected the victims' personal information and passed it to the fake call centres.
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