SUMAN K SHRIVASTAVA
Ranchi, April 4: Jamtara became synonymous with cyber fraud. Wasseypur with organised gang wars. Sahibganj, quietly and over time, has built a reputation of its own — as a source of highly mobile, inter-state theft networks.
For over a decade, its trail has surfaced in police investigations across India — often briefly, often without national attention. The IPL 2026 arrests in Bengaluru have only brought that long-running story back into focus.

IPL arrests: A network in plain sight
The arrest of seven minors from Sahibganj during the IPL opener on March 28 at Bengaluru’s Chinnaswamy Stadium — along with a handler — revealed a familiar system.
The minors, brought from Tinpahar and nearby areas, were given targets, funding, and logistical support. Each was allegedly paid ₹5,000 and tasked with stealing multiple phones in crowded zones — inside the stadium, at metro stations, and in surrounding areas.
Investigators say similar patterns were seen during IPL 2025, when over 70 phones were stolen in Chennai and Bengaluru — now suspected to be linked to the same network.
Since 2012: From pickpocketing to precision theft
Police records and investigations suggest that groups linked to Sahibganj have been active since at least 2012, initially focusing on pickpocketing in crowded markets and trains before expanding their methods.
Over time, the operations became more sophisticated.
One of the most striking patterns has been the emergence of tunnel-based thefts — a method requiring planning, patience, and coordination.
In a Pune jewellery heist, thieves dug a tunnel to access the shop from below, bypassing shutters and surveillance. The crime was executed overnight, with valuables disappearing without immediate signs of forced entry. Investigators later traced one of the accused back to Sahibganj, exposing links between traditional pickpocket networks and more organised burglary techniques.
Such tunnel crimes are not isolated. Police in multiple states have noted similar methods — digging from adjacent structures or rented spaces, using basic tools but careful planning to avoid detection.
A nationwide trail of crime
The Sahibganj link repeatedly appears across major cases:
• Since 2012: Inter-state pickpocket gangs from Sahibganj flagged in trains, markets, and fairs.
• 2023 (Pune): 266 iPhones worth ₹2 crore stolen; links traced to Sahibganj.
• 2023 (Pune tunnel heist): Jewellery shop targeted through a dug-out tunnel.
• June 2024 (Ranchi): Seven gang members from Tinpahar held with 79 stolen phones.
• 2025 (IPL): Over 70 phones stolen in Chennai and Bengaluru matches.
• 2025 (Pune): Gang caught planning robbery; 30 phones recovered.
• 2026 (Noida): 800+ high-end phones seized from an inter-state racket.
• 2026 (IPL Bengaluru): Seven minors caught stealing 29 phones.
Ranchi 2024: Anatomy of a theft gang
The Ranchi case revealed the mechanics.
A minor caught at a local market led police to a rented hideout. A raid recovered 79 phones. The gang operated in coordinated chains — stealing and instantly passing devices to avoid detection.
All accused were from Sahibganj. Many were related.
The Sahibganj ecosystem
An IAS officer who earlier served as Deputy Commissioner of Sahibganj recalls how the district became a focal point for investigations:
“The circuit house in Sahibganj was almost always occupied by police teams from across India, especially southern states. They would arrive tracking stolen mobile locations to catch these thieves,” the officer said.
In one instance, a mobile phone belonging to the IAS officer’s relative stolen from Chandni Chowk in Delhi, was traced back to Maharajpur.
In Maharajpur, locals speak of a “Meena Bazaar”-like setup — an informal market where high-end phones and electronic gadgets are sold openly, sometimes even in baskets.
The district has also been notorious for illegal stone and granite mining, with smuggling routes extending towards West Bengal and Bangladesh. Investigators say such parallel networks have, at times, overlapped with theft and distribution channels.
Where crime is structured
Sahibganj-based journalist Md Imran explains that the roots run deeper than isolated gangs:
“In Sahibganj, especially in Maharajpur and Tinpahar, there are communities where pickpocketing has become a traditional occupation. You will find people from these villages in almost every major city,” he said.
He describes a system that is both organised and seasonal:
“Children are introduced early, sometimes trained. Handlers manage travel, stay, and targets. Theft peaks in summer due to lighter clothing. And between Kali Puja and Chhath, many return home, regardless of where they are,” Imran said.
Juveniles play a key role — easy to deploy, harder to prosecute, and quick to return.
A ‘Jamtara-style’ model of physical crime
Police now describe this as a “Jamtara-style” network — but on the streets instead of online.
Like Jamtara’s phishing hubs and Wasseypur’s organised gangs, Sahibganj’s model is decentralised but deeply rooted — combining local training grounds with national reach.
What began as pickpocketing has, over the years, expanded into high-value theft, tunnel burglaries, and organised rackets.
The cycle continues
Despite arrests across states, the network persists. Legal delays, jurisdictional gaps, and the use of minors allow the system to regenerate.
The IPL arrests have once again drawn attention. But for investigators, this is a familiar pattern — one that has been unfolding quietly since at least 2012.
And as crowds swell across India — in stadiums, markets, and transit hubs — the thieves of Sahibganj continue to move within them, adapting, expanding, and enduring.







