Townhall Times, New Delhi
Reporter: Bhavika Kalra
By: Regional Crime Desk | Tuesday, February 24, 2026
While the rest of the country is busy with UPI and digital gold, a specialized wing of the UP Police has been chasing a ghost—a “factory on wheels” that has been flooding local markets with high-quality fake ₹500 notes.
The arrests of three key operatives today have finally exposed the “Scientific” method behind the madness.
1. The ‘Pathologist’ Mastermind
In a surreal twist, the mastermind behind the most sophisticated local racket wasn’t a street thug. It was Nafees Ahmed, a trained pathologist known in the underworld as “Doctor.”
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The operation: He treated counterfeiting like a science. He didn’t just print notes; he experimented with chemical baths to give the paper that specific “RBI crunch.”
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The Mobile Lab: To stay ahead of surveillance, the gang was reportedly printing notes inside a moving SUV. They would park in secluded spots near highway dhabas, run their high-end lamination machines, and then move to the next district before the ink was dry.
2. The Shahjahanpur-Delhi Connection
Today’s deep-dive reveals that the three arrested—Ravi Arora, Vivek Maurya, and Rakesh Arora—weren’t just small-timers. They were an interstate bridge.
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The Setup: While Vivek Maurya handled the high-detail printing in a rented room in Shahjahanpur, Rakesh Arora was the “distributor” working the crowded markets of Delhi and Noida.
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The Materials: Police recovered specialized green tape (used to mimic the security ribbon), chemicals for embossing images, and even “bond paper” that closely mimics official currency stock.
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The Haul: Over ₹3.24 lakh in fake notes were seized today alone.
[Image: A forensic close-up of a counterfeit ₹500 note, showing a crude green tape strip where the color-shifting security thread should be.]
3. The 2026 Profit Margin: Why They Risk It
Why risk a lifetime in jail for paper? The math is simple and brutal.
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The Exchange: The gang sold fake notes to local middlemen at a 1:5 ratio.
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The Deal: You give them ₹20,000 in “real” money, and they give you ₹1 lakh in “funny money.”
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The Targets: They targeted weekly Haat (village markets) and small petrol pumps at night—places where vendors are too busy or too tired to check the watermark.
4. 2026 Security: How to Beat the Fakes
| Feature | The Real Deal | The 2026 Fake Sign |
| Security Thread | Changes color (Green to Blue) when tilted. | Stitched green tape; no color shift; feels “thick.” |
| Raised Printing | The Ashoka Pillar and Gandhi feel “rough” (Intaglio). | Feels smooth, like a standard laser printout. |
| Latent Image | See “500” in the band when held at 45 degrees. | Band is flat; no hidden number appears. |
| Watermark | Sharp Gandhi face with “500” in the light. | Looks like it was drawn with a pencil; blurry. |
The Status Right Now
As of tonight, the UP Special Task Force (STF) has widened the net. They are currently tracing a Hong Kong connection related to the high-quality security paper found in recent raids. The message from the Lucknow headquarters is clear: If the paper feels like a photocopy, it probably is.












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