
2 Nigerians among 6 arrested for running lottery scam in Delhi
'He revealed that victims were duped through fake lottery schemes and were induced to transfer money into designated accounts. They were promised significant wins in returns. These funds were subsequently withdrawn by Raza and handed over to his Nigerian associates,' said Vikram Singh, Deputy Commissioner of Police (Crime).
Raza revealed the name of the Nigerian mastermind, Shedrack Onainor, 29, who was allegedly residing illegally in India. The police conducted a raid at Khanpur and arrested Onainor.
'Onainor arrived in India on a medical visa in 2013, which expired in 2018, but he continued to stay illegally and engaged in cheating Indian citizens by luring them with fake lotteries, gifts, and parcels to earn easy money. He operated with his Nigerian associates and collected cheated money from Indian accomplices Raza and his son-in-law Shahrukh, which was later shared among his Nigerian partners,' DCP Singh said.
The police said that Onainar disclosed that he had been running the scam since 2023, after meeting another Nigerian national, Liberty, in Delhi.
'Liberty arrived in India on a business visa in 2023. Although his visa expired the following year, he continued to reside in the country unlawfully. During this period, he became actively involved in fraudulent schemes, duping Indian citizens by luring them with fictitious offers of high-value gifts, lottery winnings, and parcels, as a means to generate illicit income,' DCP Singh said. On Onainor's instance, the police arrested Liberty from his house in Mehrauli.
The police said Liberty revealed that he would travel across Delhi in an autorickshaw to collect the defrauded amount in cash from Shahrukh and Raza.
On July 10, the police arrested Shahrukh, who subsequently revealed the names of two more associates, Rakesh and Vikas. The brothers would facilitate the creation of SIM cards that would later be used to set up mule accounts, according to the police.
'They fraudulently altered Aadhaar addresses (to Delhi-based locations), obtained new SIM cards, and opened 1820 bank accounts in Vikas's name using forged documents,' said DCP Singh.
The police said Shahrukh and Raza would then create UPI addresses based on these accounts and use them to transfer the defrauded money. Shahid would then take out the cash and hand it out to his Nigerian associates, they added. On Shahrukh's instance, the police arrested Rakesh and Vikas on July 17.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Mint
an hour ago
- Mint
Wait, what? 261 IPL jerseys worth ₹6.5 lakh stolen from Wankhede Stadium
A security guard at the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) office in Mumbai was arrested for stealing IPL 2025 team jerseys worth ₹ 6.5 lakh. The theft took place at the iconic Wankhede Stadium. The accused, identified as 40-year-old Farooque Aslam Khan, allegedly stole 261 jerseys, each valued at around ₹ 2,500. Police said Khan committed the theft to fund his online gambling habit. The incident reportedly occurred on June 13 but only came to light after a routine audit revealed missing stock from the storeroom. Upon checking CCTV footage, BCCI officials saw Khan walking out with a box full of jerseys. The stolen kits were of different IPL teams, though it remains unclear whether they were meant for players or for public sale. Investigators said Khan sold the jerseys to an online dealer based in Haryana, whom he had connected with through social media. "The guard claims he haggled a bit with the online dealer, but he hasn't yet specified how much he got for the deal," a police source told TOI. The police further stated that the jerseys were sent via courier to the Haryana-based dealer, who has now been summoned for questioning. "The online dealer says he was not aware that the jerseys had been stolen," a police official said. "The guard had told the man in Haryana that the jerseys were part of a stock clearance sale due to renovation work that was going on at the office." So far, 50 of the 261 stolen jerseys have been recovered. Khan has reportedly told police that he received payment directly into his bank account but lost all the money to online gambling. "He the guard claims he lost it all to online gambling," the police source added. Authorities are now verifying his bank details to confirm his version of events.


NDTV
an hour ago
- NDTV
Man Takes Sick Woman To Hospital, Spends 13 Months In Jail After She Dies
Bhopal: In a cramped, makeshift room in Bhopal's Adarsh Nagar slum, Rajesh Vishwakarma sits quietly, trying to piece together a life that was unjustly snatched away from him. For 395 days, he lived in jail -- not because he committed a crime, but because he tried to help someone. A daily-wage laborer with no land, no parents, and no legal awareness, Rajesh became yet another invisible casualty of a flawed, apathetic system that punished his humanity. On June 16, 2024, he took an unwell woman from his neighborhood to a nearby hospital near DIG Bungalow. She was in pain, and Rajesh did what any decent human being might have -- got her treated and left for work. By evening, the woman had died. And the next morning, Rajesh was arrested for murder. "I just took her to the hospital because she asked me," Rajesh said, his voice heavy with disbelief. "By evening, the police picked me up, interrogated me, and the next day I was arrested. I told them I had taken her for treatment. They didn't let me talk to my family. I was kept at the police station for nine days, then sent straight to jail. I had no money to hire a lawyer," he added. His rented room was locked by the police without warning, leaving him homeless. "Now, I have to pay 13 months' rent. No one is giving me work. Everyone says I have come from jail. I was innocent, yet I stayed behind bars. I have no land, no parents, nothing... I have been defamed too," he added. For over a year, Rajesh languished in jail without trial, with no access to legal counsel or family. His sister Kamlesh, already struggling to support her own family, was informed nine days after his arrest. "They called me at 4 pm and asked me to come to court. I was alone and couldn't go. When I met him a week later, he told me everything. When I went to the police station to collect his Aadhaar card and phone, they made me run around and then demanded 500 rupees to return them. It was another expense for us. He is trying to do something now, but if the police had investigated properly, this would never have happened. No one in our family is educated. I used to visit him when I could," she said. The court eventually declared Rajesh innocent. But the road to justice was paved not by the police, but by court-appointed legal aid lawyer Reena Verma. "He had no money to hire a lawyer. The court appointed me, and we work with complete honesty to ensure justice is served. This is a completely free facility," she said. But the price Rajesh paid was still enormous. The investigation that put him behind bars was riddled with negligence. "There were documents that showed the woman died due to illness, but the postmortem said it was death by strangulation. The police didn't collect CCTV footage from the hospital. The medical report showed inconsistencies in the clothing of the deceased. It wasn't even clear who the woman was. On what basis was the man who dropped her off accused of murder? There was no evidence. The investigation was careless and weak," Ms Verma added. This miscarriage of justice isn't an isolated case. According to the Prison Statistics India 2022 and the India Justice Report 2025 of the National Crime Records Bureau or NCRB, a staggering 75.8 per cent of prisoners in Indian jails are undertrials. In Madhya Pradesh alone, 6,185 undertrial prisoners have been incarcerated for more than a year -- not convicted, just waiting for their day in court. The average annual cost per prisoner in the state is Rs 27,865, and the prison population is at 164 per cent capacity. 24 per cent of prisoners in Madhya Pradesh have been undertrials for one to three years. Rajesh's life is now in limbo. Cleared by the court, but burdened by stigma, poverty, and loss, he speaks little. His pain is in his silence, his courage in his survival. "Who will compensate me for 13 lost months?" he asks, not expecting an answer. The police station from where his ordeal began has not been questioned. The officers who destroyed his life still hold their positions. Now, though the court has said "he is innocent," the real question remains -- will he ever get his time, dignity, and identity back? Or will he forever remain the man who went to jail for trying to help?


India Today
an hour ago
- India Today
14 Tamil Nadu fishermen arrested by Sri Lankan Navy, Stalin writes to S Jaishankar
14 Indian fishermen from Tamil Nadu were arrested by the Sri Lankan Navy today for allegedly crossing the International Maritime Boundary Line (IMBL). Along with the fishermen, their mechanised fishing boats were also response to today's arrests, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister MK Stalin has written to External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, urging him to take swift diplomatic measures to ensure the immediate release of the fishermen and their incident comes close on the heels of a similar episode last week, when four fishermen from Rameswaram were arrested and their boat was confiscated. On that day, about 400 fishermen had ventured into the sea from Rameswaram Fishing Port in 88 boats. While fishing in the waters between Thalaimannar and Dhanushkodi, a Sri Lankan Navy patrol vessel intercepted one of the boats. The boat, said to belong to a fisherman named Muniyasamy, was seized and the four men on board were arrested. After a preliminary inquiry, the arrested fishermen were expected to be handed over to Mannar Fisheries Department officials for further January 2025 alone, at least 185 Indian fishermen have been arrested and 25 boats seized for alleged violations of the maritime boundary.- EndsMust Watch