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A couple of months ago, Shaheen* was looking for a MacBook Air. She was weighing her options – being a student, she did not have the budget for an expensive purchase. A second-hand or a refurbished version would have done the job. While researching online, she chanced upon an advertisement for a website called Voot Unboxed. She clicked on the pop-up and it led her to this Facebook page:
The page looked promising. It was offering bright and shiny Apple products at almost 60% of their original cost.
Shaheen really didn’t care about the box too much. She called the number listed on the website to have a one-on-one with the seller. Prashant, the man who identified himself as the owner of the company, spoke about the varieties his company had.
Later that night, Shaheen began receiving a string of messages from an unknown number. The messages ranged from talking about her ‘pretty Facebook display picture’ to ‘I want to talk to you again’, to ‘you have a beautiful voice’. Angry, Shaheen replied to the message asking who the person was – it turned out to be Prashant from Voot Unboxed.
Within minutes of this, Shaheen started receiving a flurry of messages from several unknown numbers all at once.
The messages continued for days. Being an outstation student, Shaheen was at a loss for what to do. So she did what anyone feeling threatened might think to do; went to the nearest police station to register a complaint.
The cop then took the number of the accused and called him.
After hanging up, according to the cop, the case was resolved. He resisted filing an FIR.
Dejected, Shaheen left the police station. A few hours later, she received the following message:
Her friend was aware of The Quint’s and Quint NEON’s #TalkingStalking campaign to make stalking a non-bailable offence. Shaheen got in touch with us. We immediately told her to go back to the police station and file an FIR. The offences were cognisable and no cop can refuse to file an FIR.
Shaheen went back to the police station with renewed determination. This time, she didn’t leave until she got her FIR filed.
Meanwhile, Shaheen’s friends began researching the website and its ‘clients’. One Google search about the website opened a can of worms:
Shaheen informed the police about this larger online racket as well.
The Quint independently tried calling Prashant’s many numbers, but all of them were ‘not available’ or went unanswered. The District Magistrate has recorded Shaheen’s statement and the cops have taken her phone for forensic examination.
But no arrests have been made so far.
The accused is thus still at large, and could be planning his next fraudulent effort.
Many victims of cyber crime do not come out in the open and register a complaint –and even if they do, they are too often not taken seriously, as happened with Shaheen.
We spoke to cyber security expert Rakshit Tandon to find out what a person can do if s/he has faced any form of cyber crime. Here is what he had to say.
Do you know that stalking is a bailable offence under Indian criminal law? This allows stalkers to get bail without serious scrutiny, often putting victims at risk of facing acid attacks, rapes, and even murder.
According to the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB):
This is why The Quint has launched a petition along with Varnika Kundu and MP Shashi Tharoor to appeal that Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh make stalking a non-bailable offence. Sign our petition here.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)
Published: 26 Mar 2018,05:40 PM IST