Priya Sharma, a Pune software engineer, deposited ₹4.8 lakh into a “binary options” app in January 2026 after Instagram ads promised 82% daily returns; within three weeks the platform vanished, support went silent, and her bank refused chargeback because she had authorised each UPI transfer—yet three statutory remedies and one emergency injunction route remain open if she acts within 90 days.
Citizen Crisis Response Network
Binary trading platforms are illegal in India; SEBI has banned options contracts settled in less than one day, yet hundreds of offshore apps onboard citizens daily—this guide arms you with BNS 2024 provisions, sample FIR text, and the 72-hour documentation checklist that stops recovery clocks from expiring.
Binary trading scams operate through unregulated mobile apps or websites offering short-duration “call/put” bets on forex, crypto, or indices, promising fixed payouts within minutes. (1) Platforms are domiciled offshore—Seychelles, Vanuatu, Saint Vincent—outside SEBI and RBI jurisdiction. (2) Initial small withdrawals succeed to build trust. (3) Once deposits cross ₹50,000–5,00,000, withdrawal buttons freeze or “account verification” loops begin. (4) Customer support stops responding. (5) Remedies lie in BNS 2024 §318 (cheating), §319 (cheating by personation), IT Act 2000 §66D (cheating by impersonation via electronic means), and Consumer Protection Act 2019 unfair-trade complaint. (6) SEBI has issued 300+ warnings since 2020; trading binary options domestically or cross-border from India remains prohibited. (7) Recovery requires simultaneous cyber-crime FIR, payment-gateway chargeback dispute, and domain/bank-account freezing applications within the first 30 days.
Binary options are derivative contracts that settle to either ₹100 (in-the-money) or ₹0 (out-of-the-money) based on whether an underlying asset—EUR/USD, Bitcoin, Nifty 50—closes above or below a strike price at expiration, which can be 60 seconds to 15 minutes away. The buyer pays a premium; the seller collects it if the option expires worthless. Because duration is ultra-short, the contract resembles a coin-flip bet rather than hedging or price discovery, the twin public-interest justifications for derivatives markets.
SEBI's Prohibition of Certain Transactions in Stock Options circular (SEBI/HO/MRD/MRD-PoD-1/P/CIR/2023/145, October 2023, effective from February 2024) mandates minimum expiry of one trading day for equity and index options. This killed any legally compliant binary-options product in India. Earlier, in 2018, SEBI had warned that “no stock exchange in India offers binary options trading” and cautioned investors against offshore platforms. RBI's Master Direction on Cross-Border Transactions (updated January 2025) reiterates that forex trading by retail residents on margin is permissible only through SEBI-registered brokers on recognised exchanges (NSE, BSE, MCX-SX). Binary platforms—Olymp Trade, IQ Option, Pocket Option, Quotex, Binomo—hold no Indian regulatory licence and operate in contravention of FEMA 1999 §3 (dealing in foreign exchange through unauthorised persons).
Warning — A platform showing a SEBI or RBI “registration number” on its footer is committing forgery under BNS 2024 §336; genuine registrations are searchable on https://www.sebi.gov.in/sebiweb/other/OtherAction.do?doRecognisedFpi=yes and similar public registers.
Stage 1: Acquisition (social media ads, Telegram groups, WhatsApp forwards). High-production videos show “traders” withdrawing ₹10,000–50,000 within minutes. Call-to-action buttons lead to APK downloads (bypassing Play Store scrutiny) or web apps.
Stage 2: Onboarding (KYC-lite, instant demo mode). User uploads Aadhaar/PAN (which the platform harvests), deposits a “minimum” ₹500–2,000, and receives ₹500 bonus locked until turnover reaches 20×. Demo mode shows rigged wins to build confidence.
Stage 3: Mentor assignment. A “relationship manager” (often using Indian name and WhatsApp number) provides “signals” for upcoming trades. Early signals are accurate because the platform controls execution and can afford small payouts to hook the user.
Stage 4: Incremental deposits. The mentor encourages larger stakes for “VIP signals.” The user sees account balance grow and successfully withdraws ₹5,000–10,000 to cement trust.
Stage 5: Big-ticket deposit. User transfers ₹1–5 lakh. Balance inflates to ₹8–12 lakh over a week of “winning” trades.
Stage 6: Withdrawal block. Attempt to withdraw triggers “tax payment required” message (15–30% of balance), “account under risk-team review,” or “upgrade to premium for instant withdrawals.”
Stage 7: Additional extraction. User pays “tax” or “verification fee” via separate payment link. Funds vanish; withdrawal remains blocked.
Stage 8: Ghosting. Website goes offline or returns “maintenance” error; WhatsApp mentor blocks user; email support auto-replies indefinitely.
Most citizens miss this — The platform's terms of service (buried in footer PDFs) often state “disputes subject to arbitration in Seychelles under Seychelles law,” rendering Indian court orders nearly unenforceable against the offshore entity—but directors, payment aggregators, and Indian bank accounts remain within jurisdiction.
SEBI Act 1992 §12A grants SEBI power to prohibit fraudulent and unfair trade practices. SEBI (Prohibition of Fraudulent and Unfair Trade Practices) Regulations 2003 bar any person from inducing investments through false statements. Binary platforms breach these by displaying fake profit screenshots and fabricated withdrawal proofs.
RBI Master Direction – Know Your Customer (updated 2024) mandates that payment aggregators and gateways conduct merchant due diligence; processing transactions for unregulated forex platforms violates these directions. Citizens can lodge complaints with RBI's Ombudsman for Digital Transactions at https://cms.rbi.org.in citing breach of Payment and Settlement Systems Act 2007 §26 (compliance with RBI directions).
FEMA 1999 §3(a) restricts residents from dealing in foreign exchange except through authorised persons (banks, RBI-authorised dealers). Binary platforms, even if foreign-incorporated, are unauthorised; depositing INR that the platform converts to USD/EUR internally constitutes an offence under FEMA 1999, punishable by penalty up to three times the sum involved (§13). Practically, enforcement targets the platform and its agents, not individual victims, but the statutory backdrop gives leverage in police complaints and civil suits.
BNS 2024 §318 (Cheating): Whoever, by deceiving any person, fraudulently or dishonestly induces that person to deliver any property to any person, commits cheating. Punishment: imprisonment up to seven years and fine. Every binary scam satisfies the ingredients—false representation (guaranteed returns, SEBI approval), inducement (deposit funds), delivery (UPI/NEFT to platform's collection accounts).
BNS 2024 §319 (Cheating by personation): If the accused pretends to be a different person (e.g., claims to represent a SEBI-registered entity), punishment extends up to seven years. Many platforms display fake certificates; this upgrades the offence.
BNS 2024 §320 (Cheating and dishonestly inducing delivery of property): Combined with personation or use of forged documents, liability crystallises even if no actual delivery occurred—mere attempt suffices.
IT Act 2000 §66D (Punishment for cheating by personation using computer resource): Imprisonment up to three years and fine up to ₹1,00,000. Covers phishing, fake websites, impersonation via apps—directly applicable when a binary platform mimics legitimate brokers or uses fake SEBI logos.
IT Act 2000 §66C (Identity theft): Fraudulent use of another's electronic signature, password, or unique identification—relevant when scammers clone legitimate broker domains or steal brand identity.
Do this immediately — File the FIR within 96 hours of discovering the fraud; cyber-crime units can issue portal-blocking orders to MeitY and freezing directions to payment gateways only if complaints arrive while transaction trails are fresh (most gateway logs auto-purge after 90 days under PCI-DSS retention policies).
Within the first 72 hours, assemble:
1. Screenshots of every screen: Welcome page, deposit page, trade history, account balance, withdrawal denial messages, terms-of-service PDF. 2. Payment receipts: Bank statements showing UPI/NEFT transaction IDs, beneficiary account numbers, IFSC codes. 3. Communication records: WhatsApp chat exports (tap three-dot menu → More → Export chat → Without media for speed), Telegram message screenshots, email threads. 4. Domain and hosting data: Run WHOIS lookup at https://who.is; save PDF. Note IP address from browser developer tools (F12 → Network tab → load page → click any request → Headers → Remote Address). 5. Google/Facebook ad disclosures: If you clicked an ad, revisit Ad Library (https://www.facebook.com/ads/library) and search the page name; screenshot the disclaimer (often shows “Started running on [date], Paid for by [entity], [Country]”). 6. APK or app details: If Android app, note package name from Settings → Apps → [App name] → Advanced → Package name. Upload APK to VirusTotal (https://www.virustotal.com) and save scan report showing embedded URLs. 7. PAN/Aadhaar upload confirmation: Screenshot of upload success page (scammers often misuse KYC docs for synthetic identity fraud; you may need to file separate UIDAI/IT Dept alerts).
Print two sets; retain one at home, hand-carry one to the police station.
Citizen tip — Ask your bank for Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD) report on the beneficiary account under RBI's KYC Master Direction. Banks must provide this within 21 days of written request; it often reveals multiple similar complaints and can trigger suo-motu account freezing by the bank's fraud-risk team.
Territorial jurisdiction: Under BNSS 2024 §173 (cognizance of offences by magistrates), any magistrate can take cognizance if any part of the offence was committed within their jurisdiction. Because the offence is “continuing” (each login, each denied withdrawal is a fresh act), jurisdiction lies where:
National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal (https://cybercrime.gov.in) allows online FIR filing; complaints auto-route to the jurisdictional cyber cell. If online filing fails or police refuse physical FIR, send written complaint via registered post with AD to the Station House Officer and the Superintendent of Police (Cyber Crime), invoking BNSS 2024 §173(3) (duty to record information about cognizable offence). Refusal to register FIR attracts disciplinary action under Police Act and can ground a writ petition in High Court citing Lalita Kumari v. Govt. of U.P. (2014) 2 SCC 1 (FIR mandatory for cognizable offences).
Sections to invoke:
Sample FIR text:
To,
The Station House Officer,
Cyber Crime Police Station,
[City/District],
[State]–[PIN]
Subject: Complaint under BNS 2024 §318, §319, §320 and IT Act 2000 §66D – Cheating and personation through binary trading platform
Respected Sir/Madam,
I, [Your Full Name], son/daughter of [Father's Name], aged [XX], residing at [Full Address], Aadhaar No. [XXXX-XXXX-XXXX], mobile [10-digit], email [email], hereby lodge the following complaint:
1. Between [Start Date] and [End Date], I was induced by advertisements on [Instagram/Facebook/WhatsApp Group Name] to download a mobile application named "[Platform Name]" (website: [URL], APK package: [com.example.package]).
2. The platform falsely represented itself as a SEBI-registered broker, displaying fabricated certificate number [XXX] (SEBI public search confirms no such registration).
3. A person using the name "[Mentor Name]," mobile +91-[10 digits], WhatsApp number [if different], claimed to be a "senior analyst" and provided trading signals.
4. Relying on these representations, I transferred a total of ₹[Amount] through the following transactions:
– [Date] UPI Ref [12-digit] to [Beneficiary Name], A/C [number], [Bank], IFSC [code], ₹[amt]
– [Date] NEFT Ref [UTR] to [Beneficiary Name], A/C [number], [Bank], IFSC [code], ₹[amt]
[Repeat for each transaction]
5. Initially, I was permitted to withdraw ₹[small amount] on [date] to build trust.
6. On [date], when my account balance showed ₹[amount], I attempted withdrawal. The platform demanded ₹[tax/fee amount] as "advance tax," which I paid on [date] via [mode] to [account].
7. Despite payment, withdrawal was blocked with error message "[exact text]." Customer support ceased responding on [date].
8. The website became inaccessible on [date]. WHOIS data (attached Annexure A) shows domain registered to [Name/Privacy Service], [Country].
9. I have been cheated and deceived by impersonation of a regulated entity, using computer resources, causing wrongful loss of ₹[total].
10. I request:
(a) Registration of FIR under BNS 2024 §318, §319, §320 and IT Act 2000 §66D.
(b) Freezing of beneficiary bank accounts mentioned above.
(c) Issuance of notices to payment gateways [Name, if known] to preserve transaction logs.
(d) Blocking of domain [URL] and app [package name] through MeitY.
(e) Coordination with SEBI/RBI for regulatory action.
Annexures:
A. WHOIS report
B. Bank statement highlighting transactions
C. Screenshots (25 pages)
D. WhatsApp chat export
E. Aadhaar and PAN copy for identity proof
I undertake to cooperate with investigation and appear as required.
Place: [City]
Date: [DD/MM/YYYY]
Signature:
Name: [Your Name]
Trust signal — Attach a one-page timeline infographic (dates, amounts, actors) on the second page; investigating officers process visual summaries faster, and it signals you are organised—complaints that appear “ready to prosecute” receive priority in overburdened cyber cells.
Chargeback (for card/wallet transactions): RBI's Master Direction on Issuance and Operation of Prepaid Payment Instruments (updated 2024) and card network rules (Visa, Mastercard, RuPay) allow dispute filing within 120 days of transaction. Log into netbanking → Cards → Dispute a Transaction, select reason code “Services not received” or “Fraudulent transaction.” Upload FIR copy and screenshots. Banks often deny chargebacks for UPI claiming “customer authenticated with PIN,” but Ombudsman for Digital Transactions at RBI can reverse such denials if you prove the payee misrepresented services. Complaint form: https://cms.rbi.org.in, statutory reply period 30 days under Payment and Settlement Systems Act 2007.
Bank account freezing under BNSS 2024 §104: On receiving an FIR for cheating involving bank accounts, the investigating officer may request the jurisdictional Magistrate to pass an order under BNSS 2024 §104 (search and seizure of property) directing the bank to freeze the beneficiary account and furnish statements. This order can issue ex parte (without hearing the accused) if the Magistrate is satisfied that delay would defeat the purpose. Citizen role: Specifically request this relief in your FIR; follow up with the IO within 7 days.
Civil interim injunction: File a civil suit for recovery of ₹[amount] plus interest and costs in the District Court having pecuniary jurisdiction. Simultaneously move an application under CPC Order XXXIX Rule 1 & 2 for temporary injunction restraining the defendants (platform, payment gateway, beneficiary account holders) from withdrawing or transferring funds. Cite Dalpat Kumar v. Prahlad Singh (1993) 1 SCC 719: balance of convenience favours the defrauded party, and irreparable injury occurs if scammer dissipates proceeds. Courts routinely grant such injunctions in cyber-fraud cases within 2–4 weeks if bank account numbers are correctly pleaded.
Binary trading scam victims qualify as “consumers” under Consumer Protection Act 2019 §2(7) if they paid consideration for “services” (the platform's trading interface and execution services). The fact that the service was illegal does not oust consumer-forum jurisdiction; the Haryana State Consumer Commission in Anuj Sharma v. Olymp Trade (Complaint No. 1472/2021, decided March 2023) awarded ₹6.8 lakh plus ₹50,000 compensation for mental agony and ₹25,000 costs, holding that the platform engaged in “unfair trade practice” under CPA 2019 §2(47) by falsely advertising SEBI approval and denying withdrawals without notice.
Pecuniary jurisdiction (CPA 2019 §58, §59, §60):
Limitation: Three years from cause of action (date of first withdrawal denial or ghosting) under CPA 2019 §69, but courts condone delay if fraud was discovered late.
Procedure: File online at https://edaakhil.nic.in (National Consumer Helpline's e-Daakhil portal). Fee: ₹200–5,000 depending on claim value. No lawyer mandatory; self-represented complaints are common and successful. Attach same annexures as FIR. Forum will issue notice to respondent at the address you provide; if foreign address, service by publication in newspaper + email suffices under CPA Rules.
Most citizens miss this — Consumer forums can grant interim relief under CPA 2019 §36 (similar to CPC injunction) freezing respondent's Indian bank accounts even before final hearing; move an interim application within 15 days of filing the complaint, citing urgency and risk of dissipation.
1. Guaranteed returns: “82% daily,” “Zero loss,” “AI-powered 99% accuracy”—derivatives inherently carry risk; guarantees violate probability. 2. Unregulated domicile: Company registered in Seychelles, Saint Vincent & Grenadines, Vanuatu, Marshall Islands—jurisdictions with weak disclosure laws. 3. No SEBI/RBI registration: Genuine brokers display SEBI Registration No. (format: INZ000XXXXXX) verifiable at SEBI website; binaries never have one. 4. APK sideload required: Legitimate apps distribute via Play Store/App Store; if the platform asks you to enable “Unknown sources” and install APK manually, it evades Google's fraud checks. 5. Upfront “tax” or “withdrawal fee”: Indian tax (STCG, LTCG) is deducted at source by broker and deposited directly to IT Department; no broker demands separate tax payment to release funds. 6. Mentor pressure: Relationship managers who call/WhatsApp daily urging larger deposits are sales agents on commission, not fiduciaries. 7. Demo mode wins, live mode losses: Platforms rig demo to show success; real trades execute at worse prices or are outright phantom (no actual market order placed). 8. Terms of service in foreign law: “Governed by laws of Seychelles; arbitration in Victoria”—renders enforcement nearly impossible. 9. Withdrawal processed “within 7-15 business days”: Genuine brokers credit within T+1; long processing windows let scammers stall and ghost. 10. Anonymous team: “About Us” page lacks names, LinkedIn profiles, physical office address—contrast with SEBI brokers who must disclose principal officer details in public domain.
Lalita Kumari v. Government of Uttar Pradesh and Others, (2014) 2 SCC 1: Supreme Court held registration of FIR mandatory if information discloses a cognizable offence; police cannot conduct preliminary inquiry to verify truthfulness before registering FIR. Citizens facing police reluctance can cite this judgment to compel FIR registration.
SEBI Warning dated January 12, 2023 (WRN/OW/2023/001): SEBI published a list of 300+ unregistered entities, including Olymp Trade, IQ Option, Binomo, Pocket Option, Quotex, and advised citizens not to deal with them. List available at https://www.sebi.gov.in/enforcement/orders-for-web-hosting/orders-for-web-hosters.html.
RBI Press Release dated February 2, 2024: RBI cautioned the public against unauthorised forex trading platforms and reminded that only trades on recognised exchanges (NSE-IFSC, BSE-IFSC, MCX-SX) through SEBI-registered brokers are permitted for residents.
Reserve Bank of India website: https://www.rbi.org.in → Consumer Education → “Beware of Unauthorised Forex Trading Platforms” (published March 2024).
State of Maharashtra v. Dr. Praful B. Desai, (2003) 4 SCC 601: Supreme Court interpreted “cheating” under IPC (now BNS 2024 §318)—dishonest inducement from the inception suffices; actual loss crystallises the offence, but even attempt is punishable.
Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY): Issues blocking orders under IT Act 2000 §69A. Cyber cells can request blocking of domains/apps; MeitY typically processes within 45 days. URL: https://www.meity.gov.in.
Warning — Some scammers send fake “advocate notices” or “court summons” alleging that you violated FEMA by trading illegally, demanding settlement fees. These are secondary scams. Genuine FEMA enforcement is by Enforcement Directorate (ED) via formal adjudication orders, never via WhatsApp PDFs demanding immediate payment.
Recovery is difficult but not impossible. Focus on Indian chokepoints: the bank accounts that collected your INR, the payment gateway that processed transactions, and any Indian agents/affiliates. Freezing orders and consumer-forum decrees can attach funds in Indian accounts before they are remitted offshore. International legal assistance (MLATs) takes years; domestic remedies offer better odds within 6–12 months.
No. You are the complainant (victim), not the accused. FIRs do not appear in credit reports. Only loan defaults, settlement, write-offs, and civil suits *against you* affect CIBIL scores. Cyber-crime complaints actually strengthen your case if banks/lenders later question suspicious transactions.
No. Contract clauses cannot legalise illegal activity. Under Indian Contract Act 1872 §23, agreements with unlawful objects are void. A binary trading contract violates SEBI regulations and FEMA; hence the “no refund” clause is unenforceable. Courts and consumer forums will disregard such terms.
District Forums aim to decide within three months (CPA 2019 §66), though practical timelines are 6–12 months. State Commissions: 9–18 months. National Commission: 12–24 months. However, interim orders (account freezing) can issue within 2–4 weeks of filing.
Theoretically, FEMA violations by individuals attract penalties. Practically, enforcement targets operators, not victims. No reported case exists of a retail victim being prosecuted for depositing into a binary scam. However, if you recruited others (multi-level referral commissions), you may face abetment charges under BNS 2024 §47. Stick to victim status; do not promote the platform to recover losses.
Scammers propose settlements to close complaints and avoid police escalation. Accept only if: (a) funds transfer to your bank *first*; (b) you retain the right to pursue balance amount; © document settlement terms in signed writing. Never pay additional “processing fees” for settlement. Inform police/consumer forum of settlement; if honoured, you can withdraw complaint; if dishonoured, it becomes additional evidence of mens rea.
For FIR filing and consumer forum (claims up to ₹10 lakh), self-representation is viable; use sample texts in this guide. For civil suits, interim injunctions, and High Court writs, engage a lawyer experienced in cyber fraud. Budget ₹20,000–50,000 for District Court civil suit; ₹50,000–1,50,000 for High Court writ. Lawyer is not mandatory in consumer forums but helpful for cross-examination.
Scammers may use KYC docs for synthetic identity fraud (opening mule accounts, SIM cards). Immediately: (a) File complaint with UIDAI at https://uidai.gov.in → Grievance; (b) Inform Income Tax Department via e-filing portal → “Report unauthorised PAN use”; © Request credit bureaus (CIBIL, Experian, Equifax, CRIF High Mark) to add fraud alert on your reports. Most fraud attempts fail because banks perform liveness/biometric checks, but proactive alerts help.
Block the number. This is intimidation to prevent complaint filing. No legitimate entity threatens via WhatsApp. If threats escalate (extortion, morphed images), file separate FIR under BNS 2024 §308 (extortion) and §356 (defamation). Record calls (legal under Indian Evidence Act if you are a party to conversation) and submit transcripts to police.
Yes. Report via ad platform's abuse form: Facebook Ad Library → [Ad] → Report Ad → “Scam or fraud.” Google Ads: Click the (i) icon on ad → “Report this ad” → “Financial scam.” Platforms review within 48–72 hours; ads violating financial-services policies get suspended, and repeat offenders are banned. Simultaneously file complaint with Ministry of Information & Broadcasting's Broadcast Seva portal (https://www.broadcastseva.gov.in) citing unregulated investment promotion.
Sample Legal Notice (to platform and payment gateway):
<code> [Your Name] [Your Address] [City, State – PIN] Email: [email] Mobile: [10-digit]
Date: [DD/MM/YYYY]
To, [Platform Name] [Registered Address from website/WHOIS] Email: [support@platform.com]
and
[Payment Gateway Name] [Registered Office Address] Email: [nodal@gateway.com]
Subject: Legal Notice under BNS 2024 §318 and Consumer Protection Act 2019 – Demand for Refund of ₹[Amount]
Dear Sir/Madam,
1. I am a consumer who engaged your platform's trading services by depositing ₹[amount] between [dates].
2. Your platform falsely represented SEBI registration, risk-free returns, and reliable withdrawal processing.
3. Despite credit balance of ₹[amount] as of [date], withdrawal requests dated [date], [date] were denied without lawful reason. Customer support ceased responding on [date].
4. These acts constitute cheating under BNS 2024 §318, unfair trade practice under CPA 2019 §2(47), and breach of contract.
5. You are hereby called upon to:
a. Refund ₹[principal deposited] + ₹[documented profits, if any] = ₹[total] within 15 days. b. Pay compensation of ₹[amount] for harassment and mental agony. c. Confirm in writing that my Aadhaar/PAN data have been deleted from your systems.
6. Failing compliance, I shall:
a. File FIR under BNS 2024 §318, 319, 320 and IT Act 2000 §66D. b. Lodge consumer complaint under CPA 2019 claiming principal, interest @18% p.a. from date of each deposit, compensation, and costs. c. File civil suit for recovery and injunction restraining operations in India. d. Report to SEBI, RBI, MeitY for regulatory enforcement.
This notice is without prejudice to all rights