A new begging scam on the streets of Bangalore

A few weeks ago, I’d just come out of my gym in RT Nagar when a couple with a child, looking vaguely from somewhere rural approached me. Both of them spoke on how they’d come to Bangalore on train from somewhere in Bihar, called on a job by a contractor had cheated them. Now they were without money and couldn’t go back home. It was late evening and they begged me to give them some money to buy a train ticket for home. They rightly guessed that I spoke Hindi and spoke to me in the same language to emphasis their alieness to this land. At that time, vulnerable and tired, I half fell for it. Deciding not to give money, I took them over to a biryani place nearby and got them some biryani packed for dinner.

104kjhkAsI bought the biryani, I was pretty sure the Rs 150 I was spending on them was scammed off me, but the polite me didn’t know how to say no. The reason I knew it was a scam was because I vaguely remember the same thing happening in Delhi, when I used to live there more than a decade ago. Also the cashier in that biryani restaurant looked like he’d seen that guy before. There was a flicker of recognition in his eyes. Anyway, I paid up and left, feeling vaguely scammed and hoping I see them again so I could confront them.

The same scam was repeated before me, TWICE at the Trinity Circle today. There were two families I saw. A couple with a child, usually 3-7 years of age trailing behind. One of the families was standing a bit off the other and the other had already stopped a lady who give out Rs 100 to the couple in front of me and my friend. We didn’t stop her at that moment.

Later in the evening, when I was walking out of my gym, a couple, this time on a scooter, stopped me, asking for directions to Mekhri Circle. I told them. Then they said they wanted to go to the airport. I gave more directions. By then, they’d told me they were from Maharashtra (though my first sentence to them was in Kannada and they understood it well) and had come here visiting. They’d been fined for riding a scooter without a helmet on and were now out of money to fill petrol in their scooter. ‘I’m not a beggar, miss,’ the guy said in Indian English, ‘but if you could help.’ I was surprised as these two were more middle class than the others I’d seen and observed. The woman wore a prim cotton sari, her hair neatly tied up. And they were on a scooter! But yes, it was a scam too. ‘I’m sorry sir, but I won’t give money,’ I answered politely before walking away. The woman even smiled as if to say she understood.

Now all of this could be a big coincidence, but since this has happened to me thrice in a few weeks, I get the feeling that it’s a rampant scam across Bangalore right now. Here’s how it goes:

  • Couple approaches you asking if you speak Hindi
  • They first ask you directions to get you to talk to them
  • Then they start telling you their story and say they’re migrants
  • Fourth phase is that ‘we’ve been cheated and are out of money’ play
  • By this time, it’s been five minutes and you just want to get away.
  • They insist they are not beggars only in trouble and they’re tried to ask others for help but they’ve been refused. They mumble something about being cheated or fined and being embarrassingly out of money. This is the high-level sympathy card.

By this time, you’re probably hooked. As a good Samaritan you want to help out or maybe you feel pity for them. You won’t give out Rs 10 as you usually would to a beggar. You would give no less than Rs 100 for how will a family travel back to their village, eat dinner and stay the night somewhere on a meagre Rs 10? It’s a lucrative begging idea, playing off people’s sympathies and works everytime. I’m sure it’s not even a family, just a bunch of people together made to look like a family. A new kind of a begging scam.

What to do if you’re being scammed and are too polite to say no?

Say you won’t give money. If you’re too polite for that, insist that you would like to take a photograph of them and share it as a warning for others who might be considering coming over. Hopefully, the minute you take out your phone to take a picture, the family will scoot. Never give money.


The article was first posted over at CitizenMatters where others commented on how they’d been scammed. If some of you all have faced this, please do add into this blog with your experiences. It will warn others off from getting scammed.

(image source)

2 Replies to “A new begging scam on the streets of Bangalore”

  1. Hi Swetha ji,
    Its happening in chennai too. And if you see they target only individuals or a person who is alone..they never target people who are as a gang.. Another aspect before fourth phase if you ask then where you are from they will exactly tell a city that’s 500- 600 kms away.. so the responder might be tempted to give money and leave.but one time I was alone for 10mins in a tea shop.. a couple arrived and they are asking me 250 so that it might help them for initial journey.. luckily I asked them which place ..they told a some area near. Pune. Then I asked them the address they too even had one . Then I phoned a friend who has to leave to Pune tomorrow morning..I told then he and his friends will make you reach the place safely.. then they told they have left their belongings in a temple.. and I waited for one hour they didn’t return they are absconded.. ridiculous people…They found a different approach to beg. What will happen if really a person with real problem will also be looked in this fashion in near future if they continue like this.. what a tricky wolrd!!

    1. Wow, that’s quite a story, Deepan. And it’s so good of you to patiently wait. I am usually impatient so get scammed. Others have posted more stories of the scam on Citizen Matters. If you like, you can read them here: bangalore.citizenmatters.in/articles/they-say-they-have-been-cheated-but-wait-is-it-you

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