Raids Expose Crypto Trail in Multi-Crore Tech Scam

TheCryptoTimesОпубликовано 2025-10-07Обновлено 2025-10-07

The Enforcement Directorate (ED) conducted search operations at 15 locations across Delhi, Noida, Gurugram, Haryana, and Mumbai in connection with a massive tech-support fraud case. They have found a crypto link in these operations. 

According to a local report, the Delhi Police filed FIRs against an individual named Karan Verma and others for allegedly cheating foreigners out of money by offering fake technical support services. The ED’s searches, which were done under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), revealed a complex scheme. 

Officials say that the investigation has indicated that a group of fake call centers in Rohini, Paschim Vihar, and Rajouri Garden in Delhi was targeting people in other countries, specifically in the US and Europe. The accused pretended to be employees of well-known companies like Microsoft, Apple, and Charles Schwab, as well as police officers, to trick people into thinking their accounts or computers were compromised. Threats of legal or criminal action forced victims to pay rescue fees.

The ED’s investigation found that proceeds of the crime were converted into cryptocurrencies and gift cards, which were then sent to accounts held by the suspects and their friends in other countries. Investigators have found several crypto wallets associated with the scam, involving a total of millions of dollars.

A high-ranking official in the ED called the racket “well-organized” and said it crossed borders, which shows that it was linked to more than one jurisdiction. The raids that are still going on at homes and businesses are likely to find digital devices, papers, and records of cryptocurrency transactions. 

Crypto crimes on the rise 

This is the most recent crime related to cryptocurrencies that has happened around the world. France and the UK are two European countries where crypto-related crimes are on the rise. In India, last month, the Income Tax Department found a fake crypto scheme in the southern states of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh. The scheme involved stealing people’s identities so that the criminals could use them to trade without anyone knowing.

In August, an Indian court sentenced a former member of Parliament and high-ranking police officers to life in prison for their roles in a Bitcoin extortion and kidnapping case from 2018. These events show how important it is to have strict laws in the crypto space.

Also Read: Malaysia Gives Nod To Fasset for Stablecoin-Based Islamic Bank


Mobile Only Image

Похожее

Global Crypto Regulation "Closing the Net": Hong Kong, EU, US Simultaneously Take Action, Is the Compliance Window Closing?

Global Crypto Regulation Tightens: Hong Kong, EU, and US Simultaneously Enforce Rules, Closing the Compliance Window? The global virtual asset regulatory landscape is shifting from rule-making to enforcement. Recent moves by Hong Kong, the EU, and the US signal a coordinated push towards market restructuring based on licensing, product classification, custody, and client segmentation. **Hong Kong**'s SFC issued a circular on "Relevant Stablecoins" on May 27, formally establishing a two-tier regulatory architecture where the HKMA oversees issuance and the SFC oversees trading and distribution. This creates differentiated, often lighter-touch, rules for compliant, licensed stablecoins compared to other virtual assets, fitting into a broader strategy to develop stablecoins as settlement infrastructure, tokenized securities as investment products, and licensed VATP platforms as distribution channels. The **European Union** is approaching a critical deadline, with the MiCA transition period ending on July 1. After this date, unlicensed Crypto-Asset Service Providers (CASPs) must cease serving EU clients. With only about 210 authorized CASPs across 23 member states so far, a significant market consolidation is expected, as the application process now takes 6-9 months. In the **United States**, the CLARITY Act passed a key Senate committee vote on May 14. This landmark bill aims to clarify jurisdiction between the SEC and CFTC, establish registration rules for trading platforms and custodians, and create a federal framework for stablecoin regulation. A key compromise prohibits "passive yield" on stablecoin balances but allows "activity rewards" tied to specific functions like payments. The convergence of these regulatory actions highlights a fundamental shift: stablecoins, with a payment volume rivaling major card networks, are being treated as critical financial infrastructure rather than unregulated digital assets. The core message is clear: compliance is transitioning from an operational cost to a mandatory license for market access, determining which players will participate in the next phase of the digital asset economy.

marsbit15 мин. назад

Global Crypto Regulation "Closing the Net": Hong Kong, EU, US Simultaneously Take Action, Is the Compliance Window Closing?

marsbit15 мин. назад

Торговля

Спот
Фьючерсы
活动图片