Indian authorities have warned that the nation’s youth are being used as involuntary global fraud couriers. These bad actors typically use them to move the proceeds of criminal funds without their knowledge. Indian police recently apprehended 24-year-old waiter Ajay, who said he stumbled on an easy way to make money.
In his testimony, Ajay said he thought he had found a way to make money on the side to supplement his income. Ajay, who lives in the winding lanes in Lucknow, said a friend introduced him to a crypto trader who offered him Rs. 20,000 (approximately $240) to allow him to use Ajay’s bank account for a day’s transaction.
Ajay noted that after serious consideration, he felt tempted by the offer and accepted it. The next morning, the crypto traders sent several lakhs of rupees into his account, giving him instructions on how to withdraw them and how to meet up with the people who would take the cash.
Indian authorities issue warnings to youths
According to Ajay, within weeks of carrying out these kinds of services, the Indian police knocked on his door and demanded to see him. It was at that point that the police told him that the money he had been helping the crypto trader move was part of an elaborate international financial crime. They told him that the criminals were routing the funds through his account to mask their trail.
After being apprehended by the Indian police, Ajay started helping them, pointing them in the right direction. Investigators said they were able to identify other account holders and middlemen involved in the syndicate that shared a link from Chowk, Indira Nagar, and Sushant Golf City to handlers out of Cambodia , Laos, Vietnam, and Thailand.
Investigations carried out by the Crime Branch and Cyber Cell division of the Indian police in the past three months have uncovered dozens of mule accounts. These accounts, typically belonging to young boys and girls in the area, have been turned into tools to move illicit proceeds.
Many of these account holders are regular people, with most of them working in restaurants, small shops, and contractual jobs. Others are college students who were hired with the promise of Rs. 10,000 to Rs. 30,000 in commission to lend their accounts to facilitators, who move cyber fraud proceeds into them. Some of these funds are moved to digital assets, especially USDT, using peer-to-peer networks.
Police say operations are carried out on Telegram
According to the Indian police, the operations are carried out on encrypted Telegram channels run by Chinese handlers. Local recruiters are often charged with collecting accounts, bypassing proper KYC . On the days of transactions, mule account holders are taken to the bank to withdraw these funds before handing them over to brokers who convert them into crypto.
Most of the funds are from different kinds of cybercrime carried out across India. In the past month, police in Lucknow said they have tracked as much as Rs. 5 crore ($570,000) being laundered through such accounts. The networks avoid legal routes, disguising their activities as crypto trading so they can go under the radar without being noticed by authorities.
Police said it has already detailed around 60 young men because their accounts were used as mules in cases involving crores of rupees. “These young people aren’t hardened criminals, but their actions enable large-scale fraud,” Additional Deputy Commissioner of Police (Lucknow South) Rallapalli Vasanth Kumar told PTI. “Several youths have confessed regret, admitting they underestimated the legal risks,” he added.
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