Authorities Warn of Honey-Trap Threat
Honey Trap Scams in Pakistan are becoming increasingly common, marking a dangerous rise in online trickery across the country. Scammers are setting up fake accounts on social media to win people’s trust, then luring them into private conversations or meetups. Once the trap is set, they use threats or recordings to demand money. Officials are now warning the public to stay alert and not take these cases lightly.
What’s Happening?
Fake Profiles, Real Danger
Scammers create fictitious female profiles on WhatsApp, TikTok, Facebook, and Instagram to befriend men. After befriending them, they arrange in-person meets where victims are ambushed, recorded, robbed, or blackmailed with compromising footage
Criminal Gangs, Including Police Officials
Punjab and Lahore police have arrested multiple gangs involved in these scams. One incident in Kot Lakhpat involved young women coordinating with armed accomplices to torture and extort victims after luring them through TikTok connections
In Rawalpindi and Islamabad, separate cases involved police officers pretending to “raid” victims involving honey‑trap setups.
Widespread Impacts
One Lahore gang had extorted more than 50 victims; recovered items include mobile phones, weapons, handcuffs, cash, and video recordings intended for coercion.
What Authorities Are Saying
The Punjab Home Department has launched a public awareness campaign, urging citizens to avoid sharing personal information or clicking on suspicious links. As part of efforts to curb Honey Trap Scams in Pakistan, officials are warning that women proposing friendships on social media may be part of such schemes and should be treated with caution.
FIA / NCCIA (formerly Cyber Crime Wing) is handling the cyber aspect of these scams. Citizens are strongly urged to report suspect activity promptly, including contacts from unknown profiles and extortion attempts
Real Voices from the Ground
On Reddit, many Pakistanis have urged victims to report scams to the FIA rather than exposing cases publicly. One user stressed, “FIA takes this very seriously, punishment is 14 years in prison,” and encouraged people to hold offenders through legal channels rather than online posts
Another user shared a disturbing experience with a scam call, where the callers impersonated police officers and delivered fake procedural announcements. Scammers falsely demanded money, claiming they needed it for court-related “verification.” The scam revealed just how sophisticated these tactics have become.
Practical Safety Tips
Avoid giving out personal information or one-time passwords to anyone you don’t fully trust. Scammers often use that data to take over your accounts or blackmail you later.
Avoid meeting social media contacts in person
Physical meetups frequently end in ambush or recording.
Report suspicious messages or profiles to the Cyber Crime Agency (FIA/NCCIA). Immediate reporting improves chances of arrest and helps protect others.
Stay skeptical of invitations from unknown profiles, especially romantic ones. Many are part of orchestrated honey‑trap setups.
Summary
Latest News: Honey-trap scams in Pakistan are quickly turning into a real danger in cities like Lahore and Rawalpindi. These schemes often use fake female accounts and, in some cases, involve help from corrupt officials. Scammers trick victims, secretly record them, and then issue threats to extort money. To tackle this growing threat, both the Punjab Home Department and the NCCIA are urging people to stay cautious and report anything suspicious right away.











