International crackdown dismantles transnational police impersonation scam networks
A coordinated international crackdown on fraudulent police impersonation scams has led to the arrest of 51 suspects in Istanbul, including six Czechs, as authorities dismantle a transnational network that duped victims out of millions by posing as law enforcement or central bank officials. Czech police, working alongside Turkish counterparts, executed simultaneous raids on a call centre in Istanbul on Friday, seizing equipment and falsified identification documents used to deceive callers across Europe.
The operation, coordinated by the Czech National Centre Against Terrorism, Extremism and Cybercrime, targeted a professionalised criminal group that specialised in high-pressure phone scams. Victims were contacted under the pretence of urgent investigations, often involving fabricated allegations of financial misconduct, and coerced into transferring funds to supposedly “safe” accounts controlled by the fraudsters. According to spokesperson Jakub Vinčálka, the network’s sophistication extended to impersonating officials from the Czech National Bank, exploiting public trust in state institutions to extract payments ranging from thousands to tens of thousands of euros per victim .
The Czech operation follows a parallel initiative in French-speaking Switzerland, where six cantons—Fribourg, Geneva, Jura, Neuchâtel, Vaud and Valais—launched a joint investigation on Friday targeting similar scams that have cost victims CHF18 million ($22.5 million) since 2022. Police in Neuchâtel, led by judicial police chief Simon Baechler, described the fraud as “a phenomenon of truly exceptional scale,” noting a steady rise in cases despite previous prevention campaigns. Investigators have identified organised criminal networks operating primarily from France, recruiting “couriers”—often young adults from France or French-speaking Switzerland—via social media with promises of “easy and quick” money. These couriers facilitate the transfer of illicit funds within Switzerland, complicating recovery efforts for law enforcement .
In Romania, a 33-year-old man from Neamț lost nearly 32,000 lei after being contacted by a fraudster posing as an inspector from the National Agency for Fiscal Administration (ANAF). The caller claimed the victim was owed a tax refund of 4,120 lei but needed to transfer 31,950 lei to “secure” the funds. Police in Neamț have opened a criminal case for fraud and requested the blocking of the transferred amount, while urging the public to verify unsolicited calls purporting to be from public institutions or banks .
Meanwhile, in Finland, a 20-year-old man was sentenced to four and a half years in prison for orchestrating a sophisticated scam that defrauded over 20 victims of more than €630,000. Jasper Jon Mikael Laine impersonated bank employees in text messages and phone calls, convincing victims to disclose banking credentials and approve transfers under the guise of protecting their accounts. Investigators found that Laine, who received €30,000 in cryptocurrency as payment, had accessed multiple accounts belonging to victims’ relatives and organisations. Despite his claims of acting alone, authorities believe he followed instructions from an unidentified criminal network .
Across Europe, law enforcement agencies are intensifying cross-border cooperation to dismantle these networks, which exploit digital communication to evade detection. The coordinated actions in Istanbul and French-speaking Switzerland underscore the transnational nature of such fraud, with victims and perpetrators often separated by hundreds of kilometres. Authorities continue to warn the public against sharing financial or personal information over the phone, emphasising that legitimate institutions will never demand urgent transfers or sensitive data in unsolicited calls.
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