Cyber Crime Lawyer in Kota
Expert legal representation in Cyber Crime Lawyer in Kota, Rajasthan
💬 Book Your AppointmentAdvocate Prakhar Gupta is an experienced Cyber Crime Lawyer based in Kota, Rajasthan, practicing since 2020 after graduating from NALSAR University of Law, Hyderabad. He handles online fraud, account-freeze, social-media defamation, sextortion, UPI/Binance trading scams and impersonation complaints under the BNS and the Information Technology Act, 2000.
Why Choose Advocate Prakhar Gupta as Your Cyber Crime Lawyer
- NALSAR alumnus & 5+ years in practice — focused work in cyber crime lawyer matters across Kota district since 2020.
- Court-side expertise — regularly appears before the District & Sessions Court Kota, Family Court Kota, Consumer Forum, MACT Kota and the Rajasthan High Court Bench at Jaipur and Jodhpur.
- Drafting that holds up — pleadings, applications and notices that anticipate the other side’s response.
- Transparent fees — written engagement letter; no surprise charges.
- Reachable — same-day reply on WhatsApp/email for urgent matters; office in Kota for in-person consultation.
What counts as cyber crime in India today?
Cyber offences are prosecuted under two parallel statutes: the Information Technology Act, 2000 (IT Act) for offences like hacking (S. 66), identity theft (S. 66C), cheating by personation using a computer resource (S. 66D), violation of privacy (S. 66E) and obscene/sexually explicit material online (S. 67, 67A, 67B); and the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023 (BNS) for the underlying offence — cheating is S. 318 BNS (earlier 420 IPC), criminal intimidation is S. 351 BNS (earlier 506 IPC), and forgery is S. 336 BNS (earlier 463 IPC).
Common matters handled
Typical briefs from Kota include: (i) UPI / net-banking fraud and refund recovery; (ii) sudden account-freeze by police on the suspicion that proceeds of crime have been credited (commonly via Binance / crypto P2P trades); (iii) sextortion and morphed-image extortion; (iv) social-media defamation and harassment under Sections 79 and 69-A IT Act; (v) e-commerce and matrimonial-site frauds; (vi) data leaks by employees and breach of NDAs.
Account freeze — what to do in the first 48 hours
A police lien on the bank account, often communicated as a hold on credit without explanation, must be challenged quickly: (i) obtain the LR/complaint number from the bank; (ii) trace the originating police station — usually outside Rajasthan; (iii) reply with proof of legitimate source — tax returns, ledger, KYC, GST invoices; (iv) move an application before the Magistrate having jurisdiction under Section 457 CrPC (now Section 503 BNSS) for release of the account/funds. A writ petition under Article 226 is also available if police inaction continues.
Sextortion and morphed-image complaints
Where the victim is the client, complaints are registered under Sections 354A, 354D BNS (stalking and harassment, earlier 354A/D IPC), Section 67 IT Act and, if minor, Section 14 POCSO. Where the client is wrongly accused, the strategy combines (a) anticipatory bail under Section 482 BNSS, (b) Section 528 BNSS / 482 CrPC quashing petition where the FIR is malicious, and (c) preservation of digital evidence — call recordings, screen recordings, WhatsApp metadata.
Filing a complaint
Most cyber FIRs in Kota are registered at the Cyber Police Station, Kota and online via the National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal (cybercrime.gov.in). For frauds, the 1930 helpline must be called within the “golden hour” to freeze the recipient account before the money is layered. Prompt 24-hour follow-through significantly improves chances of recovery.
Frequently Asked Questions
My UPI account was frozen because of a suspicious credit — what now?
You need a clear paper trail of legitimate source for the credited amount and a formal reply to the originating police station. We file a Section 503 BNSS application (earlier 457 CrPC) before the jurisdictional Magistrate seeking release. In urgent cases, we approach the High Court under Article 226 for directions.
Can I file a cyber complaint sitting in Kota when the accused is in another state?
Yes. Cyber offences are continuing offences and the FIR can be registered where the victim resides, where the money was received, or where the offending content was accessed. Online filing via the National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal is also valid.
How do I preserve WhatsApp chats and screenshots as evidence?
Take screen recordings showing the contact name, number and timestamps; export the chat with media; obtain a Section 65-B certificate (Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023, Section 63 — earlier Section 65-B Evidence Act) from your service provider where possible. Notarisation of the screenshots is helpful.
I am being blackmailed with a morphed video — should I pay?
No. Paying rarely ends the demand. We approach Cyber Police, file under Section 67 IT Act, Section 308 BNS (extortion, earlier 383 IPC) and Section 354D BNS where applicable, and use the 1930 helpline to track the money trail.
Can the FIR be quashed if I prove innocence?
Yes, the Rajasthan High Court can quash an FIR under Section 528 BNSS (earlier 482 CrPC) where allegations do not disclose any offence, where the dispute is purely civil, or where continuation of proceedings would be an abuse of process — see State of Haryana v. Bhajan Lal (1992).
Speak to Advocate Prakhar Gupta
Office in Kota — consultations by appointment. Call, WhatsApp or email to discuss your matter. Urgent bail / interim matters handled on priority.
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