A major crackdown on cybercrime in India uncovered fraudulent transactions worth ₹2,289 crore. Gujarat authorities acted against 913 mule bank accounts used to route illicit funds. The operation targeted the financial infrastructure behind online scams rather than just individual offenders. Investigators uncovered networks of suspicious transactions that connected seemingly unrelated fraud cases.
Under Operation Mule Hunt 1.0, authorities registered 565 FIRs and arrested 638 individuals. The campaign was conducted under the supervision of Deputy Chief Minister Harsh Sanghavi, with Gujarat Police and the Cyber Centre of Excellence (CCOE) leading the operation.
Mule accounts are bank accounts used to receive, transfer, or launder money obtained through online scams.
Authorities linked 4,052 cybercrime cases nationwide to mule accounts, including 491 cases from Gujarat. Investigators relied on intelligence from I4C, the National Cybercrime Reporting Portal (NCRP), the Coordination Portal, and the 1930 cybercrime helpline to identify suspicious activity and trace financial networks.
Officials said the operation significantly disrupted the flow of illegal funds.
Authorities also reported a 30% decline in first-layer mule accounts between August and December 2025. ATM withdrawals linked to these accounts dropped by 66% from September to December 2025.
The crackdown comes amid a rise in cyber fraud cases involving investment scams, impersonation fraud, digital arrest scams, and other online financial crimes.
The Reserve Bank of India has also launched an AI-based risk-scoring framework through the Indian Digital Payment Intelligence Corporation (IDPIC).
Authorities have additionally launched MuleHunter.ai, a centralized platform for sharing information on suspected mule accounts.
Read the original article:
