HYDERABAD: A 20-year-old man from Yakutpura lost ₹1,02,093 after falling victim to a Telegram impersonation and extortion scam involving a fraudster posing as a woman offering paid companionship services, Hyderabad Cyber Crime Police said.
The victim was lured through Telegram messages featuring stolen photos and fabricated “customer reviews” meant to make the profile appear genuine. Believing the claims, he followed instructions from the scammer and made multiple payments described as advance booking, security fees, and room charges, all of which were falsely promised to be refundable.
After transferring the money via UPI and bank accounts shared during the chat, the victim was told to go to a hotel in Abids but no one arrived. The fraudster then demanded an additional ₹10,000 and issued threats, leading the victim to realise he had been trapped in an extortion scheme.
Investigators said such scams commonly use fake images, manipulated conversations and repeated demands for payments under various pretexts. Once a victim hesitates, scammers often escalate to intimidation or blackmail.
Police advised the public to report threats or financial fraud immediately via 1930 or www.cybercrime.gov.in. For urgent assistance, victims may also contact 8712665171. Authorities encouraged citizens to follow verified cybercrime awareness channels to stay updated on emerging scams. Source: Thehindu.com
🔍 HackWarn.com Analysis
Why This Scam Worked
1. Fake Identity With Stolen Photos
Fraudsters used attractive stolen images and fabricated testimonials to appear legitimate, triggering emotional trust and lowering the victim’s guard.
2. Step-by-Step Payment Manipulation
The scammer demanded multiple “mandatory” payments; booking fee, security deposit, room reservation. Each framed as refundable. This layered method increases the total loss before suspicion arises.
3. False Sense of Urgency
Scammers often claim payments must be made immediately to secure a booking or avoid cancellation, pressuring victims into quick decisions.
4. Switching to Threats
Once the victim hesitated, the scammer escalated to threats. This shift from persuasion to intimidation is common in online extortion frauds.
5. Victim Isolation
The fraudster kept communication limited to Telegram, preventing outside verification and making the victim rely solely on the scammer’s instructions.
🚨 Immediate Safety Recommendations
1. Never Transfer Money to Unknown Individuals
No legitimate service regardless of type will demand repeated advance payments to personal bank accounts.
2. Do Not Engage Further Once Threats Begin
Immediately stop all communication. Scammers rely on fear to coerce additional payments.
3. Preserve All Evidence
Take screenshots of:
- chat conversations
- phone numbers
- payment receipts
- usernames and Telegram IDs
This is crucial for investigation.
4. Report Immediately
India’s official channels:
- 1930 — National Cybercrime Helpline (operate 24/7)
- www.cybercrime.gov.in — File a complaint
- 8712665171 — Cyber Crime Police (Hyderabad)
5. Educate Young Adults
Individuals aged 18–30 are increasingly targeted on Telegram, Instagram and WhatsApp. Awareness reduces emotional vulnerabilities that scammers exploit.
6. Avoid Clicking Unknown Profiles or Private Telegram Links
Fraudsters commonly use:
- Fake female profiles
- Anonymous accounts
- Encrypted messaging to avoid tracing
Be cautious of unsolicited chats.
