This story is from March 07, 2024
Jamtara in Rajasthan: Operating Telegram channels and other techniques that a 21-year-old student used to train 500 youths in online fraud
Jamtara seems to be getting replicated in other villages of the country as well. Police in Rajasthan's Bundi district recently arrested a 21-year-old man named Yogesh Meena. Meena allegedly gave training to as many as 500 youngsters from his village in online fraud. He was arrested by the local Police along with three others, one of whom is a minor. Meena is believed to be behind at least 50 cases of cyber fraud committed in the past year. During the arrest, police recovered a gold ring from Meena and Rs 82,000 cash along with four cellphones from the other three accused.
The Police investigation revealed that Meena selected youths from three villages in Bundi and Sawai Madhopur districts - Rawal, Babai, and Chamanganj - for his cyber fraud training sessions. A BA student himself at a college in Sawai Madhopur district, he is said to have learnt the art of conning from another villager, whose whereabouts Police is still trying to find out.
The search for Yogesh began after the cybercrime branch received a complaint about a Rs 1 lakh fraud in September last year. The victim had been added to a Telegram channel by the fraudsters, who promised high returns on stock trading investments. Based on the complaint, a case was registered and the investigators traced the money trail to a bank account linked to a 19-year-old student named Dayaram Meena. Dayaram, a Class 11 student from Babai, revealed Yogesh's involvement when he was arrested on March 1.
Yogesh admitted to training at least 500 youths in cyber fraud, a scheme reminiscent of the notorious cybercrime hub in Jamtara, Jharkhand. Along with Dayaram, Vikas Meena from Chamanganj and a 15-year-old juvenile from Bundi, both trained by Yogesh, were also apprehended. Dayaram cheated 30 people, Vikas conned 12, and the juvenile scammed four individuals.
How he gave classes in cyberfraud
According to Sandeep Ahlawat, inspector of cybercrime in Manesar, Yogesh conducted hour-long classes for the youths. In these training classes, he taught them how to operate Telegram channels and communicate with potential targets. The fraudsters were trained to pose as salespersons on popular trading platforms, adding people to their Telegram groups and sending fake stock postings to trick them into investing. Once the victims sent money, the fraudsters would block their numbers or disable their Telegram channels.The search for Yogesh began after the cybercrime branch received a complaint about a Rs 1 lakh fraud in September last year. The victim had been added to a Telegram channel by the fraudsters, who promised high returns on stock trading investments. Based on the complaint, a case was registered and the investigators traced the money trail to a bank account linked to a 19-year-old student named Dayaram Meena. Dayaram, a Class 11 student from Babai, revealed Yogesh's involvement when he was arrested on March 1.
Yogesh admitted to training at least 500 youths in cyber fraud, a scheme reminiscent of the notorious cybercrime hub in Jamtara, Jharkhand. Along with Dayaram, Vikas Meena from Chamanganj and a 15-year-old juvenile from Bundi, both trained by Yogesh, were also apprehended. Dayaram cheated 30 people, Vikas conned 12, and the juvenile scammed four individuals.
Top Comment
A
Anirban
462 days ago
These news indicates a very ominous trend in India. That's of increased destitution and poverty amongst the lowest common people and youth. In general crime rates remain high in the Hindi belt, now adding to it the unemployment and decreasing opportunities the youth are actively taking to crime. The coming decade will be VERY hard for India and it's people and i doubt the government has much capacity to deal with it...Read allPost comment
Popular from Technology
- Air India plane that crashed in Ahmedabad was same that the dead Boeing whistleblower warned about in 2024, claims report
- Microsoft's top executive to software engineers: If you're going to work with AI-generated code, you need…
- Google gives these employees three-days ‘warning’ to …. or leave the company
- Amazon founder Jeff Bezos loses world’s second-richest title after 8-long years to….
- 5 Biggest UPI apps in India right now; what’s behind the slow growth and why it is not a worry sign
end of article
Trending Stories
- Steve Jobs was brilliant but don’t copy this 'one habit' of him; warns Pixar's Pete Docter
- Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says Anthropic CEO is very wrong, and on almost everything he said about AI: Don’t do it in a dark room and tell me ...
- Booking tatkal tickets on IRCTC? Aadhaar and OTP are a must from July 1; know how to book tatkal ticket online on IRCTC through website and app
- World's Richest List has a new No. 2, the technology company behind him and why its market value is soaring
- Flying suitcases packed with Hard Drives to China, taking hundreds of servers on rent and ...: How Chinese AI companies dodge US chip ban
- Delete these dangerous apps immediately from your phone to protect your crypto wallet
- Why this German state is banning Microsoft Teams and other tools from its government operations
Photostories
- Weekly Cosmic Message from June 15 to June 21, 2025 for Each Zodiac Sign
- Devoleena shares a glimpse of their multi-cultural celebrations
- 7 ways to add jaggery to daily diet without spiking sugar
- 5 silent ways anger is ruining your life without you realizing it
- 5 (worrying) things that can happen if the body is dehydrated
- 5 protein-rich desi breakfasts to try during summer season
- 5 valley treks that are worth all your efforts
- 5 Yoga asanas that help improve skin health and give a natural glow
- 8 fruits that are known to flush out toxins from liver and kidneys when consumed daily
Top Trends
Up Next