"Don't Freak Out, We Found Your House": Scammer Payback Hunts, Hacks, And Exposes An Entire Scam Call Center

"Don't freak out, we found your house." Scammer Payback, the vigilante scambaiting crew, just exposed an entire call center in Kolkata, hacking their systems, finding their real names, and delivering them to the police.

“If you are not cooperating… It’s gonna be your worst nightmare.” This is the chilling threat a PayPal refund scammer thought he was delivering to a helpless victim. His mistake? The person on the other end of the line was Pierogi from Scammer Payback, and the nightmare was about to become his own.

In a stunning new video that reads like a high-tech spy thriller, the vigilante scambaiting hackers didn’t just stop a scam; they declared war. The Scammer Payback Kolkata operation saw the team hunt, hack, and publicly expose an entire ring of four interconnected scammers, pinpointing their exact locations and delivering a dossier of evidence to the police.

The operation began with a classic bait. The team called a number associated with a fake PayPal refund scam. As soon as the scammer, “Alan Wilson,” connected to their virtual machine to “help,” the trap was sprung. The Scammer Payback crew was in.

What followed was a masterclass in digital warfare. While the scammers were busy fighting with each other on unmuted mics, the Payback team was quietly pulling their digital footprints apart. Using sophisticated geolocation techniques that go far beyond a simple IP address, they located the first scammer’s building on Abhinash Choudhury Lane in Kolkata. But they didn’t stop there.

They called the number again and got a second scammer, “Steve.” They hacked him just as easily and discovered his location was just an eight-minute drive from the first. A third call yielded a third scammer, and a fourth call on a members-only stream pinpointed the final member of the ring. The entire operation was working within a 13-minute radius in Kolkata.

“We are able to utilize all of these connections to find exactly with true accuracy where these scammers are hiding out,” Pierogi explained, noting they use a web of data from cell phones and other network devices. He issued a chilling warning to all scammers: “The only way that you’re going to be safe is either not scamming or literally being in the middle of nowhere… So we’re going to find you.”

While tracking the criminals, the team unleashed a series of hilarious and frustrating viruses to torment them in real-time. In one of the video’s most satisfying moments, a senior scammer named “Muller-Alton” tries to manipulate the victim’s bank page. The Payback crew activates a virus that scrambles his typing and makes his mouse jitter uncontrollably.

Desperate, the scammer tries to get the “victim” to type in a refund amount, planning to add extra numbers to fake a mistake. But the virus strikes again, forcing the scammer’s input to only type the word “torture.” The scammer’s confusion and panic are palpable as he tries and fails to understand why his system is betraying him.

But the goal of Pierogi Scammer Payback isn’t just trolling; it’s about real-world justice. While inside the scammers’ systems, they uncovered a treasure trove of personal information. They found an email from “Alan Wilson” to his child’s principal, signed with his real name: Mohamed Hasib Rehman. They even found a low-quality but visible profile photo of him from a text conversation with his wife.

In an incredible twist, they discovered another scammer in the ring, “Faizan,” was the exact same person that fellow scambaiter Ryan Montgomery had hacked and exposed just weeks earlier, proving these criminals are repeat offenders.

Armed with names, locations, and irrefutable proof, Scammer Payback executed their final, devastating move. While on a live call with one of the scammers, Pierogi revealed he knew exactly where he was.

“I love to go to Kolkata,” Pierogi said casually, as the scammer listened, his own stream open in the background. “To the apartment complex near Cake and Bakes Home Bakery. Over at ward number 60, Kolkata, West Bengal… That’s exactly where you are.” The scammer’s stunned silence was deafening.

The operation concluded with Scammer Payback compiling all the data—every location, every name, every piece of evidence—and formally sending it to the West Bengal Cybercrime Police, noting that their past collaborations have led to real-world arrests.

This is the new frontier of fighting back. It’s a powerful message to scammers everywhere that their anonymity is an illusion. The hunters have become the hunted, and Scammer Payback is leading the charge.


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