– The victim was contacted by a woman claiming to be “chandhini Chowdary” via Happn, later shifting interaction to WhatsApp.
– She identified herself as an advisor for trading platform Optinex Markets and encouraged investments.
– The victim initially invested ₹50,000 and successfully withdrew earnings, which built trust in the scheme.
– Later, he made larger deposits amounting to ₹8,00,000 while being shown fake profits.
– When attempting withdrawals, his account was frozen; he transferred additional funds (₹5.31 lakh and ₹4.55 lakh) under false pretexts like unfreezing fees and taxes.
This case highlights new vulnerabilities arising from intersections between social media/dating platforms and financial frauds.Such scams exploit emotional and psychological factors alongside financial trust-first gaining personal access via apps like Happn before escalating into systematic frauds through fabricated investment opportunities.
From a broader outlook:
Ultimately, this incident underscores the pressing need for multi-agency collaboration-between technology providers (dating/trading apps), cybercrime units of law enforcement agencies, and public awareness campaigns-to mitigate growing online scam risks effectively.
Read more at the Hindu.