Delhi Police Apprehends Telecom Agent for Unlawfully Activating SIM Cards Tied to Cyber Fraud

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Delhi Police Apprehends Telecom Agent for Unlawfully Activating SIM Cards Tied to Cyber Fraud

A licensed Point of Sale (PoS) telecom agent has been arrested for illegally activating SIM cards, violating Know Your Customer (KYC) regulations, and distributing these cards to individuals involved in cyber fraud. The arrest of Shivam, who operated under the name Shivam Telecom, took place on July 2 near Hindu Rao Hospital in North Delhi. This operation was carried out by the Cyber Police Station of Delhi Police’s Central District, as confirmed by Deputy Commissioner of Police Rohit Rajbir Singh.

The Modus Operandi of the Accused

Shivam operated from a temporary roadside setup, where he confessed to activating additional SIM cards by misusing the identity documents and biometric data of legitimate customers. He sold these pre-activated cards for prices ranging from ₹500 to ₹600 each, while disregarding mandatory KYC protocols. Authorities recovered incriminating digital logs and activation documents linked to blacklisted SIM profiles from Shivam, who resides in Baljeet Nagar and has connections to Siddharthnagar district in Uttar Pradesh. His criminal history includes involvement in a First Information Report (FIR) filed under sections of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita and the Arms Act at Paschim Vihar Police Station.

How Intelligence Analysis Led Police to the Storefront

The investigation into Shivam’s activities was initiated through a systematic intelligence analysis rather than a singular tip-off. Police began examining intelligence inputs related to PoS agents operating in the National Capital Territory, whose activated SIM cards were frequently associated with cyber fraud cases across the country. This analysis identified three retail outlets—Shiva SIMs, Nitish Telecom, and Shivam Telecom—as potential suspects. Initial investigations revealed that SIM cards were activated in the names of unsuspecting individuals and subsequently supplied to both local and interstate cyber fraud syndicates.

According to police reports, these illegally activated SIM cards were exploited by cybercriminals to contact victims, facilitate financial fraud, create digital payment accounts, and obscure their identities during cyber offenses. This anonymity complicates efforts to trace the fraud back to the actual perpetrators.

A Vulnerability at the Heart of India’s Telecom Verification System

The case of Shivam Telecom highlights a significant structural vulnerability that Indian authorities have been grappling with for years. Despite advancements in backend verification technology, the point of sale remains reliant on the integrity of the individual agent. This incident is not an isolated failure. A nationwide review conducted under the Department of Telecommunications’ Sanchar Saathi initiative, which analyzed over 1.14 billion mobile connections, found that approximately 2.1 million connections were linked to invalid, non-existent, or counterfeit documents. Additional cases revealed individuals holding more SIM cards than allowed across various service providers.

The extent of criminal reliance on fraudulently issued SIMs is alarming. The Director-General of Police in Tamil Nadu reported that nearly 90% of online fraud crimes in India are perpetrated using SIMs activated through fake or misused documents. This statistic positions cases like Shivam’s arrest as part of a larger supply chain that fuels the cyber fraud economy. In August 2025, the government blacklisted nearly 4 million SIM cards nationwide as part of an AI-driven initiative utilizing the Financial Risk Indicator system, which flags around 2,000 suspicious numbers daily based on unusual calling or transaction patterns.

Regulatory Tightening Around PoS Agents

In response to these vulnerabilities, the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) has taken steps to formalize accountability among PoS agents. New regulations require all franchisees, PoS agents, and distributors to register with telecom operators within a specified compliance window. Major private telecom companies have already completed their agent registration processes. This requirement aims to establish a traceable and auditable record of who is authorized to activate SIM connections on behalf of telecom operators, thereby closing the loophole that allowed entities like Shivam Telecom to operate from unregulated, temporary setups while still holding formal PoS licenses.

Simultaneously, the DoT has developed citizen-facing tools to help individuals identify if their identity has been misused. The Sanchar Saathi portal, launched in 2023 and significantly expanded through 2025, enables citizens to check how many mobile connections are registered under their identity documents and report unauthorized numbers for disconnection. This initiative serves as a direct countermeasure against identity misuse, similar to the activities Shivam allegedly engaged in against unsuspecting customers.

What Comes Next

With Shivam now in custody and digital evidence linking his activation records to blacklisted SIM profiles already collected, investigators are expected to trace the downstream buyers of these fraudulently activated connections. This will help establish the full extent of the interstate cyber fraud network allegedly supported by his operations. The ongoing investigation into two other retail outlets, Shiva SIMs and Nitish Telecom, suggests that this may not be an isolated incident but rather a network of PoS agents operating in concert within the same district.

For the telecom sector in India, this case underscores a persistent enforcement challenge. Technological safeguards, such as AI-driven fraud detection and biometric verification, can only be as effective as the human agents responsible for implementing them at the point of sale. Until accountability at the PoS level is robust, the identity documents of ordinary, unsuspecting customers will continue to be a resource that cybercriminal networks can exploit for as little as ₹500 to ₹600 per SIM.

For ongoing coverage and breaking updates, visit our Latest News section.

Source: cyberwarriorsmiddleeast.com

Published on 2026-07-05 21:06:00 • By the Editorial Desk

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