TIME

Workers at Fake Indian Caller Centers Were ‘Posing as IRS Officials and Scamming Americans’

Dozens of suspects are accused of asking Americans to pay bogus tax fines through iTunes gift cards

Indian police have arrested 70 people in relation to an alleged call center scam in the city of Mumbai, accusing them of being part of a scheme that conned more than $100,000 a day from U.S. citizens.

Some 200 officers raided the reportedly bogus call centers on Tuesday after an anonymous tip about an international phone scam, reports the Guardian.

Police claim the scam operated for more than a year and employed more than 750 people.

According to the Hindu, alleged scammers duped Americans into giving out their bank details by pretending to be IRS officers. They would tell their targets that there were irregularities in their tax payments and that they could face up to three months in prison. When the victims believed them, they would be duped into paying fines.

“After an amount agreeable to both parties was reached, the targets would be asked to pay via international gift cards or iTunes,” Police Commissioner Param Bir Singh told the Hindu.

A Mumbai police spokesperson told the Guardian that U.S. authorities were not involved in the case.

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