Maharashtra Cyber Department announced ₹5 lakh reward for information leading to arrest of Devender Satyanarayan Saini (Kekri, Ajmer, Rajasthan)—mastermind behind India’s largest ₹58.13 crore digital arrest fraud that wiped out a victim’s entire life savings over 40 days. Seven arrested, 20,000 mule accounts traced across 13 layers.
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40-Day Psychological Terror: Victim’s Total Ruin
The unprecedented scam began with international number posing as TRAI officer alleging victim’s mobile misused for illegal messages. Call transferred to fake Mumbai Crime Branch official claiming money laundering via bank accounts.
Victim endured elaborate fake police station/court video proceedings with scammers impersonating officers and judges. Under digital arrest threat, transferred ₹58.13 crore—complete life savings—to “verification accounts” promising refund post-clearance.
20,000 Mules, 13 Layers: Industrial-Scale Laundering
Maharashtra Cyber’s financial forensics masterpiece:
Call Detail Records + IPDR analysis confirmed foreign IP via VPN/TOR anonymization. Banking trails exposed 20,000 mule current accounts in shell companies across layers, opened by poor individuals surrendering control for small payments.
Victim visited bank 27 times making crore-level transfers—staff failed to flag suspicious pattern. Seven arrests include mule operators/receivers directly linked to initial laundering layers.
Rajasthan Kingpin’s Elusive Role Exposed
Devender Saini (Ajmer) orchestrated key coordination:
- Mule account sourcing/management
- Layered fund movement
- Cambodia server communication
- Victim escalation protocols
Absconding since FIR registration, Saini evaded through constant relocation. ₹5 lakh reward leverages public intelligence for capture, marking Maharashtra Cyber’s aggressive fugitive hunt.
Digital Arrest 2.0: Statecraft-Level Deception
Scam sophistication rivals intelligence operations:
Fake TRAI → Crime Branch progression built credibility. Video court/police station setups with actors crushed resistance. Refund promises maintained compliance through 40 days.
Maharashtra Cyber warns: “₹58 Cr signals digital arrest industrialisation—single victims now fund syndicates.” Banking vigilance gaps exposed—27 visits undetected.
National Enforcement Recalibration
Case catalyzes systemic response:
- Mule account KYC overhaul demanded
- Bank staff cyber training mandatory
- Video call verification protocols
- TRAI number spoofing blocks
20,000 mules traced demonstrates financial forensics maturity. Devender Saini hunt tests reward-driven public intelligence. ₹58 Cr recovery potential hinges on kingpin capture.
Victim advisory: 1930 helpline verification—no legitimate agency demands phone payments. Maharashtra Cyber’s reward poster signals zero tolerance for digital terrorism.
About the author – Rehan Khan is a law student and legal journalist with a keen interest in cybercrime, digital fraud, and emerging technology laws. He writes on the intersection of law, cybersecurity, and online safety, focusing on developments that impact individuals and institutions in India.