MUMBAI, Feb. 4 -- In connection with a Rs.10.98-crore cyber fraud case, the South Mumbai Cyber Cell on Tuesday arrested seven people from five states, including Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Odisha, Haryana and Maharashtra. "Around Rs.2.06 crore was credited to the accused persons' bank accounts in the present case, while transactions worth nearly Rs.13 crore linked to 91 other cyber fraud cases were also detected," said a police officer. The arrested accused have been identified as Kuvarlal Yele from Gondia in Maharashtra, Adarshen Anand from Uttar Pradesh, Sunil Gupta from Odisha, Rasraj Bauri from Bihar, Sanjay Singh from Punjab and Khirod Sahoo from Odisha, the officer said, adding that further arrests are likely as the investigation progresses. Police said nine police teams were formed to crack the case. The accused formed the "first layer" of the fraud network, with victims directly transferring money into their bank accounts. These accounts were projected as belonging to a US-based investment firm, while in reality, they were operated from different parts of India, making tracing difficult. "The frauds have given bank accounts from various parts of India, making it difficult for the investigators to trace them," the officer added. During further investigation, police found that the same bank accounts were used to cheat at least 91 other victims, with deposits totalling about Rs.13 crore. "So far, we have frozen around Rs.2.13 crore in this Rs.10.98-crore cheating case," he said. The case was registered on January 20 following a complaint by a 68-year-old businessman from Churchgate, who was allegedly duped of Rs.10.98 crore by cyber fraudsters posing as investment advisors. According to the police, the complainant is a regular share market investor and was looking for some other investment options when he received a call from an unknown number. The caller identified himself as Mohan Sharma and informed him that he can make high profits by investing through their firm. Sharma asked him to join a WhatsApp group, named Trader Titan VIP group, where "tips" were being shared for making higher profits on investment in the share market and members of the group were also sharing details of the profits that they had made. Impressed by the tips and lured by the high returns, the 68-year-old expressed his willingness to invest through the firm of the accused. Sharma then introduced him to one Alex, who claimed to be the general manager and part of an American private equity firm, and added the complainant to another WhatsApp group, which they claimed was a premium group. Between December 30, 2025 and January 17, 2026, the 68-year-old ended up "investing" around Rs.10.98 crore through the fraud application of the racket, a police officer said. On January 17, the complainant could not withdraw any money from his account and also noticed that the activity on the WhatsApp group had stopped abruptly, the officer added. He added that the accused also threatened to block his account and all his investments if he failed to invest Rs.8 crore more, after which the complainant suspected something was wrong and approached the police on January 20....