Background and Timeline: The South Mumbai Cyber Cell successfully cracked a high-value interstate fraud case on Tuesday, February 3, 2026. The investigation was triggered by a complaint filed on January 20 by a 68-year-old businessman from the Churchgate area. A massive enforcement drive involving nine separate police teams led to the identification and arrest of seven key suspects across five different Indian states.
Modus Operandi: The fraudsters utilized a “Trader Titan VIP” WhatsApp group to lure regular investors with high-profit trading tips. They impersonated senior executives of an American private equity firm, specifically using a persona named “Alex,” the alleged General Manager. The victim was induced to download a fraudulent application where his capital was shown to grow SPECTACULARLY; however, the gang eventually threatened to block his account unless he invested an additional ₹8 crore.
Victims and Financial Impact: The Churchgate businessman suffered a staggering total loss of ₹10.98 crore, paid out in multiple transactions between December 2025 and January 17, 2026. Investigators detected that the same mule bank accounts used in this case were linked to 91 other fraud cases nationwide, with total transactions exceeding ₹13 crore. Authorities have managed to freeze approximately ₹2.13 crore of the cheated amount in the identified “Layer 1” accounts.
Investigation and Agencies Involved: Senior PI of the South Mumbai Cyber Cell led the operation, coordinating simultaneous raids in Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Odisha, and Haryana. The investigation involved a deep technical audit of 260 bank accounts registered in the names of 105 fictitious companies. Technical surveillance of mobile numbers and IP addresses led the teams to the suspects’ operating locations in Gondia, Lucknow, and various parts of Bihar.
Arrests and Suspects: Seven accused were arrested: Kuvarlal Yele (Maharashtra), Adarshen Anand (UP), Sunil Gupta and Khirod Sahoo (Odisha), Rasraj Bauri (Bihar), and Sanjay Singh (Punjab). These individuals are suspected of being “First Layer” account suppliers who projected their Indian-based accounts as belonging to an American investment firm. All suspects have been remanded to custody as police track the “Expert Guidance” personas who managed the WhatsApp groups.
Broader Implications and Trends: This case uncovers the “VIP Group” trap, where scammers use the exclusivity of “Premium Channels” to bypass a victim’s common sense. it highlights the capability of domestic syndicates to impersonate global finance giants by exploiting the lack of multi-factor authentication on mobile messaging apps. Authorities reiterated that no legitimate equity firm will ever demand additional “blocking prevention” fees for the withdrawal of investment profits.