Several officers from the Indian Crime Branch, including an Inspector General of Police (IGP), are currently under investigation by a Special Investigation Team (SIT) in connection with a Bitcoin scam.
The SIT has issued a notice to Inspector General of Police (IGP) Sandeep Patil, who was the head of the Crime Branch during the time of the scam, to clarify discrepancies in the investigation.
The scam involves hacker Srikrishna Ramesh, also known as Sriki, and his associate Robin Khandelwal. Sriki hacked a cryptocurrency exchange, Unocoin, in 2017 and stole 60.6 Bitcoins worth βΉ1.14 crore (approximately $137,000) at the time. He also hacked various other online platforms and laundered the funds using cryptocurrency.
Sriki then traded 150 Bitcoins worth βΉ5.5 crore via Khandelwal. The duo was initially arrested in 2020 on charges of ordering drugs on the internet using Bitcoin.
According to a first information report (FIR) filed by the SIT in January, four former Crime Branch officers, Sridhar Poojar, Prashanth Babu, Chandradhar SR, and Lakshmikanthaiah, along with private cyber expert Santhosh Kumar, are being charged for illegal confinement, breach of trust by a public servant, and destruction of evidence related to the Bitcoin scam.
The allegations include manipulating the investigation to cover up the misappropriation of Bitcoins recovered during the probe.
The investigators initially claimed to have found 31 Bitcoins worth βΉ9 crore from Sriki and 0.08627702 BTC from Khandelwal. However, these Bitcoins could not be found.
The explanation provided was that Sriki had βmanipulated the Bitcoin core application to mislead the investigation.β
Despite this claim, the Crime Branch failed to investigate further into the details of how and when the manipulation occurred.
Additionally, the SITβs findings indicate that Inspector Chandradhar took Khandelwal into custody and coerced him to transfer money from his account to the crypto exchange Wazirx to purchase Bitcoins.
This was allegedly done to compensate for the Bitcoins that the Crime Branch could not recover from Khandelwal, who had exhausted his crypto resources.
The SIT is also investigating Rishab, the son of an Additional Director General of Police (ADGP), for alleged involvement in the scam. He has been accused of using illegal money acquired through Bitcoin trading. The SIT alleges that he received a cheque for βΉ40 lakh during the period when Sriki was active and that he used this money to purchase a car.
This development comes as India has seen a rise in cryptocurrency-related scams over the years. Earlier this month, the nationβs Enforcement Directorate seized over $30 million in connection with two major scams.
Prior to that, the ED collaborated with the FBI to take down a $360 million drug trafficking ring powered by cryptocurrencies.
For more updates on cryptocurrency news, stay tuned to Global Crypto News.