Specialized Defense against Cyber Cell Freezes under BNSS 2026
In mid-2025, a prominent P2P merchant in Kolkata found his primary business account (Current Account) placed under a "Total Debit Freeze" by the Kerala Cyber Cell. The freeze originated from a single transaction of ₹45,000, which the Cyber Cell claimed was "Tainted Money" linked to a Part-Time Job Scam.
The client was a "Layer-4" recipient. The money had passed through four different accounts before reaching him. Under the old CrPC regime, this would take months to resolve. However, using the BNSS 2026 framework, we initiated a "Speedy Recovery Protocol."
The Court observed that blanket freezes violate Article 21 and Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution. Within 18 working days, the Court ordered the bank to lift the Debit Freeze and maintain a Lien only on the disputed ₹45,000. The remaining ₹24.55 Lakhs were released for business operations immediately.
In 2026, the National Cybercrime Reporting Portal (1930) has integrated AI-driven tracking. Here is why your account is likely frozen:
Buying or selling USDT on platforms like Binance often involves "Mule Accounts" that inject stolen funds into your ledger.
If you receive money from someone who received money from a scammer, you are automatically flagged as a suspect recipient.
Withdrawals from unauthorized betting apps trigger AML (Anti-Money Laundering) alerts under the new finance laws.
Banks often freeze the entire balance instead of just the disputed amount to simplify their compliance, which is illegal.
Under Section 107 of BNSS, the police are now required to provide a report to the Magistrate within 48 hours of seizure. Most Cyber Cells fail this compliance, giving us a strong ground for a Writ Petition in the High Court.
Ignoring a bank freeze for more than 60 days can lead to Section 107(4) forfeiture, where the government can permanently seize the funds. Call us now to protect your assets.