India’s National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has expressed serious concern over the rapid rise of digital arrest scams, warning that cyber-enabled frauds are destroying the financial security and fundamental rights of ordinary citizens at an alarming rate.
During an open-house discussion on safeguarding human rights against these scams, the NHRC revealed that Indians have lost an estimated ₹52,976 crore to cyber-enabled frauds over the past six years, with nearly 8% of those losses directly linked to digital arrest schemes.
What a Digital Arrest Scam Is
The scam works by exploiting trust in government institutions and fear of law enforcement. Fraudsters impersonate police officers, CBI agents, ED officials, TRAI representatives, and judges, then falsely tell victims they are implicated in money laundering, identity theft, or financial crimes.
Through phone calls and WhatsApp video calls, sometimes using AI-generated deepfakes of real judicial figures, they keep victims on continuous calls to prevent them from seeking advice, create panic through explicit arrest threats, and pressure them into transferring money or revealing sensitive information.
The National Cybercrime Reporting Portal received more than 30,000 digital arrest complaints in 2025 alone, averaging nearly 90 complaints every day. The Supreme Court estimated nationwide losses at nearly ₹3,000 crore in the same year. A 93-year-old retired railway engineer in Karnataka lost over ₹60 lakh in life savings through WhatsApp video calls.
What the NHRC Is Recommending
The Commission called for a series of reforms targeting both the legal framework and the victim protection system:
- Recognizing digital arrest scams as a distinct criminal offense with a clear legal definition
- Criminalizing mule accounts and other infrastructure that enables cyber fraud
- Strengthening oversight of messaging platforms used by scam networks
- Creating a dedicated compensation fund for cyber fraud victims
- Building faster transaction freeze mechanisms during the critical golden hour after a scam is reported
- Establishing a single government verification portal, allowing citizens to confirm the authenticity of law enforcement notices and official communications
India’s I4C coordination centre, the 1930 helpline, and anti-spoofing controls on international calls have already saved over ₹4,386 crore across more than 13 lakh complaints. The NHRC’s intervention signals that institutional momentum needs to accelerate further before digital arrest fraud moves from a devastating national problem to an uncontrollable one.
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