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regular-article-logo Tuesday, 14 January 2025

MP: Fraudsters swap QR codes outside shops, divert payments to their bank accounts

Police have received complaints from 10 to 12 shops and arrested one person as of now

PTI Published 14.01.25, 01:39 PM
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A group of tech-savvy fraudsters cheated 10 shopkeepers by allegedly swapping QR codes pasted outside shops to divert payments to their bank accounts in Madhya Pradesh's Khajuraho, police said on Tuesday.

The police have arrested one accused and are looking for two others involved in the scam that came to light recently at the famous tourist spot, about 45 km from the district headquarters in Chhatarpur, an official said.

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According to the police, the fraudsters swapped QR codes stuck outside shops for online payments with their own to redirect the money to their bank accounts.

Officials said a medical store owner suspected that payments made by his customers were not being credited to his bank account.

On checking the CCTV footage, he found a man swapping the QR code, following which he approached the police with a complaint, and later, several such cases were found, they said.

Chhatarpur's Superintendent of Police (SP) Agam Jain said they had received complaints from 10 to 12 shops that some persons had changed the QR codes, following which a first information report was registered.

He said the three accused, who hail from Jhansi district of Uttar Pradesh, replaced the QR codes with their own to divert the payment.

One of the accused, Chhota Tiwari, has been arrested while a search is underway for his two associates, Jain said.

He said the preliminary investigation had revealed that the trio would go to Saharanpur for work but didn't earn enough.

The official said while travelling back home to Jhansi, they decided to create QR codes on their phones and paste them in different places to earn money.

The SP said they used this method and stuck QR codes at 10 to 12 places, including street food stalls and medical shops.

He said it is yet to be ascertained how much money the accused managed to divert to their bank accounts, and a probe is underway to find out if they used the QR code technique in other places as well.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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