Odisha Police arrest 3 Assam cyber fraudsters in ₹8.5 lakh UCO Bank scam
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Bhubaneswar's Commissionerate Police on Sunday, 28 June 2025, arrested three Assam-based cyber fraudsters accused of swindling ₹8,50,000 from a 64-year-old retired bank employee in Bhubaneswar through a fake UCO Bank Life Certificate link. The arrests mark a significant breakthrough in an interstate cyber fraud syndicate stretching from Assam to the notorious Jamtara network in Jharkhand.
Who Was Arrested
The three accused, all from Assam, were identified as Harun Rashid (29) of Rupahihat, Nagaon district, and Junaidur Islam (22) and Ejajul Hoque (23), both of Laharighat, Morigaon district. The arrests were made in connection with case number 206/25 registered at the Cyber Crime and Economic Offence (CC & EO) Police Station in Bhubaneswar.
How the Fraud Unfolded
The victim, Bulu Dash of Trinath Bazar, Bhubaneswar, a retired bank employee, filed a complaint on 5 November 2025 alleging that the fraudsters first called him, posing as bank representatives offering to help update his Life Certificate for pension disbursal. On 3 November 2025, he received a message containing a fraudulent link purportedly from UCO Bank.
'After opening the link and submitting the required details as asked by the fraudsters, he received multiple OTPs. Subsequently, he discovered that Rs 8,50,000 had been fraudulently debited from his bank account through unauthorised online transactions,' a senior police official said. Dash reported the incident to the CC & EO Police Station, triggering a months-long technical and banking investigation.
The Syndicate Behind the Scam
Police investigation revealed an organised interstate operation involving mule bank accounts and SIM cards procured in different names to route the proceeds of crime. Accused Rashid, a pharmacist by profession, along with his associate Parvez Alam Choudhary — also a pharmacist — allegedly opened bank accounts and procured SIM cards before handing them over to Kalim Ansari, a Jamtara-based cyber fraud operator who is wanted in a separate case at the same police station.
Meanwhile, accused Hoque reportedly recruited mule bank account holders in Morigaon and worked with an individual identified as Ashraful, who allegedly controls the Assam network for procuring and supplying mule accounts.
Investigation Status and What Comes Next
Efforts are ongoing to apprehend the remaining accused, including the alleged Jamtara mastermind Ansari. The case highlights the growing nexus between Assam-based mule account networks and Jamtara-linked operators — a pattern investigators say is becoming increasingly common in eastern India cyber fraud cases. Authorities used technical analysis, banking records, and KYC details to trace the accused across state lines.