Key Highlights
- Delhi Police Crime Branch arrested two accused in a ₹74 lakh online investment fraud that laundered money through cryptocurrency and mule bank accounts.
- Investigators traced links to foreign handlers, with stolen rupees allegedly converted into crypto before being moved out of India.
- The case adds to a growing list of crypto-enabled investment scams across Indian cities in 2026, following recent busts in Ahmedabad, Bhopal, and Pune.
India’s crypto fraud problem has claimed another set of victims, this time in the national capital. The Cyber Cell of Delhi Police’s Crime Branch has dismantled an organized cyber fraud network that allegedly used cryptocurrency rails to launder more than ₹74 lakh swindled from investors through a fake online investment platform, arresting two key accused in the process.
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According to ANI, the racket followed a now-familiar template in India’s crypto scam landscape: lure victims with promises of outsized returns, funnel their deposits through layers of mule bank accounts, and then convert the proceeds into digital assets that could be moved abroad with minimal friction.
How the scam worked
Police said the fraudsters were operating a sophisticated online investment platform that promised high, guaranteed returns. Victims who signed up were directed to deposit money into a rotating set of bank accounts controlled by the gang. From there, the funds were quickly layered across multiple accounts before being converted into cryptocurrency and routed to handlers operating outside India.
“The investigation also exposed links to foreign handlers and the use of cryptocurrency transactions to move the stolen funds,” a senior Crime Branch official said. The crypto leg of the operation, investigators noted, made the money trail significantly harder to follow than a pure bank-to-bank fraud—a reason digital assets have become the default off-ramp for Indian cyber fraud syndicates.
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Two arrests, two separate cases
In the first case, the main facilitator was arrested from Greater Noida for allegedly cheating a single victim of ₹27.82 lakh. In the second, a mule account holder was nabbed for his role in routing ₹47 lakh obtained through a parallel fraud operation run by the same network.
During the probe, the team recovered multiple misused SIM cards, several mule bank accounts, and other digital footprints that helped investigators connect the two cases and identify the crypto off-ramps the gang relied on. The operation was executed by Inspector Sandeep Singh and Inspector Vinay Kumar under the supervision of ACP Patil Swagat Rajkumar and DCP Aditya Gautam.
Senior Crime Branch officials said efforts are underway to identify and arrest the remaining members of the gang, including the foreign handlers suspected of controlling the crypto wallets that received the laundered funds.
Part of a wider pattern in India
The Delhi bust fits into a rapidly growing pattern that Indian law enforcement has been flagging through 2025 and into 2026. Just last week, Ahmedabad’s Cyber Crime Branch arrested six people linked to a ₹1.5 crore fake crypto investment operation that used USDT deposits and social media grooming to reel in victims. Around the same time, a property dealer in Bhopal lost ₹18.5 lakh to a fake share trading app that demanded a “processing fee” when he tried to withdraw fabricated profits.
The playbook across these cases is consistent: targets are approached on Facebook, WhatsApp, or Telegram; trust is built over days or weeks; victims are pushed to invest through a fake platform or app; and withdrawals are blocked unless additional “fees” are paid. By the time victims realize what has happened, the funds have typically already been cycled through mule accounts and converted into stablecoins like USDT.
A reminder for Indian investors
Crime Branch officials once again urged the public to remain cautious while making online investments and to verify the credentials of any platform before transferring money. They specifically flagged schemes that pressure users to route funds through unfamiliar wallets, exchanges, or bank accounts linked to individuals rather than registered entities.
As India’s regulatory framework for digital assets continues to tighten, enforcement agencies are leaning more heavily on blockchain analytics and coordination with exchanges to trace illicit flows. But with each bust exposing fresh links to cross-border handlers, the gap between the scammers and the systems built to stop them remains wide.
Also Read: India Reports ₹1.5 Cr Crypto Scam in Ahmedabad, ₹18.5 Lakh Lost in Bhopal


















