Sunday, June 15, 2025
HomeCyber AttackCosmos Bank Cyber Attack - 11 Accused in Cyber Fraud Case

Cosmos Bank Cyber Attack – 11 Accused in Cyber Fraud Case

Published on

SIEM as a Service

Follow Us on Google News

The Cosmos cooperative bank in Pune, among the city’s oldest urban cooperative banks, has fallen prey to cyber fraudsters. Hackers gained access to the bank’s system and stole Rs 94 crore.

A court in Maharashtra’s Pune had found 11 persons guilty. Fahim Shaikh and Mohammad Saeed Iqbal Hussain Jafari of Bhiwandi, Fahim Khan and Shaikh Mohammed Abdul Jabbar of Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar, Mahesh Rathod of Nanded, Naresh Maharana of Palghar, U A Waz alias Anthony, Bashir Ahmed and Feroz Shaikh of Mumbai, and Abdulla Shaikh and Salman Baig of Thane were convicted.

The Largest Cyber Assaults on An Indian Bank

On August 11, 2018, numerous cloned debit cards of Cosmos Bank were used for thousands of ATM transactions from India and 28 other countries over seven hours.

- Advertisement - Google News

Reports say a further set of 2,800 transactions totaling Rs 2.5 crore were done in various locations nationwide, while more than 12,000 ATM withdrawals totaling almost Rs 78 crore were made outside of India.

The Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) service was also used to transfer an additional Rs 13.92 crore to a Hong Kong-based organization on August 13, 2018. 

According to the police investigation, Visa cards were used for transactions outside India, while RuPay cards were used for transactions within India.

Notably, in this case, which was reported to the Chaturshringi police station under the provisions of sections 120B, 420, 467, 468, 469, 471, and 34 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and the corresponding sections of the Information Technology Act, a total of Rs 94 crore was siphoned.

A bank official claims that early investigation indicates that the hacking activity originated in Canada.

According to the Indian bank, cybercriminals targeted its ATM infrastructure in the first intrusion. It did not disclose how the attack occurred.

Still, it did say that malware was used to disconnect the ATM infrastructure from the central switching system, preventing it from receiving real-time information about cash withdrawals from ATMs.

“We have filed a complaint and are also taking help from the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) and the RBI to see what can be done,” said Krishnakumar Goyal, a director of the cooperative bank.

He continued by saying that no clients were impacted and that the bank had suffered a loss due to the money being taken out of a pool account.

Pune Court Declares the Accused Guilty

The police arrested 18 people throughout their investigation for their claimed involvement in the cyberattack, who came from various areas. According to the authorities, one accused had passed away, and 17 were being held behind bars.

The majority of people arrested, according to the police, were primarily involved in following handlers’ instructions to withdraw cash from various ATMs using Cosmos Bank cloned cards. The police believe that some of the money they withdrew was given to them as a commission by the racketeers.

Fahim Shaikh, Fahim Khan, Shaikh Mohammed Abdul Jabbar, Mahesh Rathod, Naresh Maharana, Mohammad Saeed Iqbal Hussain Jafari, and Anthony were among the 11 found guilty and given simple imprisonment of four years and seven months, according to the press statement.

According to the release, Feroz Shaikh and Salman Baig received three years of simple jail, while Abdulla Shaikh and Bashir Ahmed received four years each.

Four additional people are still wanted in connection with the investigation, three of whom — Kunal Shukla, Abdul Bhai, and Sumer Shaikh — are believed to be in Dubai, according to the police.

Finally, the Pune City Police and Cosmos Bank successfully recovered Rs 5.72 crore that the scammers had fraudulently placed into a bank in Hong Kong after the malware assault.

Struggling to Apply The Security Patch in Your System? – 
Try All-in-One Patch Manager Plus

Gurubaran
Gurubaran
Gurubaran is a co-founder of Cyber Security News and GBHackers On Security. He has 10+ years of experience as a Security Consultant, Editor, and Analyst in cybersecurity, technology, and communications.

Latest articles

Kali Linux 2025.2 Released: New Tools, Smartwatch and Car Hacking Added

Kali Linux, the preferred distribution for security professionals, has launched its second major release...

Arsen Launches AI-Powered Vishing Simulation to Help Organizations Combat Voice Phishing at Scale

Arsen, the cybersecurity startup known for defending organizations against social engineering threats, has announced...

NIST Releases New Guide – 19 Strategies for Building Zero Trust Architectures

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has released groundbreaking guidance to help...

Spring Framework Flaw Enables Remote File Disclosure via “Content‑Disposition” Header

A medium-severity reflected file download (RFD) vulnerability (CVE-2025-41234) in VMware's Spring Framework has been...

Credential Abuse: 15-Min Attack Simulation

Credential Abuse Unmasked

Credential abuse is #1 attack vector in web and API breaches today (Verizon DBIR 2025). Join our live, 15-min attack simulation with Karthik Krishnamoorthy (CTO - Indusface) and Phani Deepak Akella (VP of Marketing - Indusface) to see hackers move from first probe to full account takeover.

Discussion points


Username & email enumeration – how a stray status-code reveals valid accounts.
Password spraying – low-and-slow guesses that evade basic lockouts.
Credential stuffing – lightning-fast reuse of breach combos at scale.
MFA / session-token bypass – sliding past second factors with stolen cookies.

More like this

Kali Linux 2025.2 Released: New Tools, Smartwatch and Car Hacking Added

Kali Linux, the preferred distribution for security professionals, has launched its second major release...

NIST Releases New Guide – 19 Strategies for Building Zero Trust Architectures

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has released groundbreaking guidance to help...

Spring Framework Flaw Enables Remote File Disclosure via “Content‑Disposition” Header

A medium-severity reflected file download (RFD) vulnerability (CVE-2025-41234) in VMware's Spring Framework has been...