Reviewed on: 2026-06-19.
Direct answer. “Digital arrest” is not a legal concept in India. No police officer, CBI officer, ED officer or any government agency has the power to arrest or detain you over a video call. If you receive such a call, hang up immediately and report it on cybercrime.gov.in or call 1930.
The scam works like this: you get a video call from someone dressed in a uniform, sitting in front of what looks like a police control room. They claim you are under “digital arrest” for a serious crime: drug trafficking, money laundering, illegal package interception, or a fake Aadhaar-linked offence. They tell you to stay on the call, not contact anyone, and transfer money immediately or face prison.
Every single element of this is a lie.
No Indian law creates a procedure called digital arrest: not the Code of Criminal Procedure, not the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS) 2023, not any special act. An arrest in law means a physical act. It requires a warrant (in most cases), a police officer physically present, and formal custody. A video call cannot constitute an arrest, a summons or any lawful compulsion whatsoever.
The Indian Cybercrime Coordination Centre (I4C), the nodal agency under the Ministry of Home Affairs, has publicly identified this scheme as a fraud where criminals pose as police officers, CBI officers, anti-narcotics (NCB) officials, or RBI and customs officers in order to extort money. The National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal run by I4C has issued fraud alerts noting that fake communications impersonating I4C officials, Intelligence Bureau officers and Delhi Police are entirely fabricated.
The scam is not a grey area. It is extortion, plain and simple.
Understanding the script helps you recognise and break it.
The isolation instruction is the clearest red flag: no real law enforcement agency asks you to stay silent and on camera while they “investigate” you.
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| Police can arrest you over a video call. | No law in India permits arrest via video call. An arrest requires physical presence. |
| CBI or ED can hold you in digital custody. | CBI and ED do not operate through WhatsApp or Skype. They serve written notices and conduct physical proceedings. |
| You must stay on the call or face prison. | This “isolation” demand is a pressure tactic used only by scammers, not by any government agency. |
| Paying will settle the case quickly. | Payment goes directly to criminals. No genuine case is settled by a fund transfer to an unofficial account. |
| The officer badge and uniform mean it is real. | Uniforms, badges, and fake control-room backgrounds are easily staged. Impersonating a government officer is a criminal offence under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) 2023. |
| Disconnecting the call will make things worse. | Disconnecting is exactly the right action. Real officers do not lose jurisdiction because you ended a call. |
You have two channels, both managed by I4C under the Ministry of Home Affairs.
Option A: Online (preferred):
Option B: Helpline:
For a full walkthrough of the complaint process, see how to report cyber fraud on 1930 and cybercrime.gov.in.
After filing your complaint, you can track its progress: see how to check your cybercrime complaint status.
Report immediately. Do not wait. The cybercrime helpline 1930 and the National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal can flag and freeze destination accounts if the complaint is lodged quickly.
Also read:
If you are on such a call at this moment:
Real law enforcement does not conduct interrogations through WhatsApp. If a genuine agency needs you, they send a written notice to your address and ask you to appear in person.
A recorded video call has no legal standing as a substitute for an arrest, summons or court appearance. Scammers sometimes record the call to intimidate you later, but that recording itself is evidence of their fraud, not of any offence by you.
Documents shown on a screen cannot be verified and are trivially forged. A genuine arrest warrant is served physically, not displayed over a video call. If you are in doubt, call your local police station directly (not on the number the caller gives you) and ask whether any case is registered against you.
No. You cannot be penalised for ending a fraudulent call. Ignoring or disconnecting a call from a scammer is not obstruction of justice.
Report to 1930 and cybercrime.gov.in immediately. Also report to your bank's 24×7 fraud helpline and ask for a transaction hold. See cyber fraud refund guide for the full process.
Change your bank login password and UPI PIN immediately. Call your bank and ask for a transaction alert review. File a report on cybercrime.gov.in so the number is flagged in the suspect database.
Real agencies contact you by registered post or by visiting you in person. They do not use personal WhatsApp, Skype or unknown numbers. You can independently verify any case by calling the agency's official number listed on its official website. Never call back on a number the caller provides.
Yes. If the original hook was a job offer or parcel delivery that turned into a digital arrest threat, you may also file under online job scam reporting for the separate offence.
File an RTI to: the State Cyber Cell and the I4C (Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre)
→ Use our free AI RTI Drafter to generate a complete Section 6(1) application.
By Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak