By DC Correspondent
Copyright deccanchronicle
Hyderabad:A 21-year-old died in a road accident at Almasguda in Meerpet and the pillion rider escaped with minor injuries, police said on Wednesday. The incident occurred around 1:30 am when two friends — Akshith Reddy Bhupathi Reddy, 21, a resident of Prashanthi Hills in Meerpet and Raja Ram, 21, of Almasguda, were travelling on a bike. As they reached near Almasguda Kaman, opposite Balaji Mithai shop, the rider lost control and crashed into a divider.Both fell off the bike due to the impact of the collision. While one rider fell on the road and the other was flung onto an oncoming scooter, leading to severe injuries. Locals rushed them to a nearby hospital for treatment. Doctors declared Akshith Reddy dead while Raja Ram is undergoing treatment. Police shifted the body for the postmortem examination and later handed it over to the family. Meerpet police registered a case and are investigating the circumstances leading to the crash. 35-yr-old gym manager dies by suicideHyderabad:A 35-year-old manager at a gym allegedly died by suicide at his residence in Kukatpally late on Tuesday night.Police said the deceased, D. Rajesh, who had been facing financial difficulties, went into his room after dinner and locked the door. When his wife Anusha later knocked, there was no response. She alerted her younger brother, Gopi Ramakrishna, and together they forced the door open, only to find Rajesh dead.With the help of neighbours, he was rushed to a private hospital, where doctors declared him brought dead. Based on a complaint lodged by Anusha, Kukatpally police registered a case and are investigating the circumstances leading to the death.Man loses money to fake trading appHyderabad:A 55-year-old man from Boduppal lost money in an investment fraud after being lured by a WhatsApp group promising high returns through online trading.According to a complaint lodged with Rachakonda cyber crime police, the victim, while exploring trading options online, came across a WhatsApp group titled Lakshmi Lines T225 with about 100 members. The group promoted quick-profit schemes, and one of its administrators, identified as Tanishka Sanyam, contacted him. She convinced the victim to register on a website — stocks.nuwama-pro.com — and later download an app called Nuvamax from the Google Play Store.Believing the app and its profits to be genuine, the victim registered with his mobile number and personal details. He was repeatedly persuaded to invest more, as the fake dashboard displayed inflated returns. But when he tried to withdraw his money, the platform blocked access, demanding additional payments towards processing fees and taxes. Despite following instructions and paying further sums, the victim never received his money.Realising he had been duped, the victim approached the cybercrime wing and filed a complaint.Bizman duped of more than `95,000 via APK fileHyderabad:A businessman S. Srinivas Reddy, 36, from Mansoorabad was duped of `95,237 in a cyber fraud that was camouflaged as routine water bill payment. A case was booked by the LB Nagar police and further probe has been launched. According to the complainant, he received a WhatsApp message on August 11, from an unknown number claiming that his Hyderabad Metropolitan Water Supply (HMWS) bill for August was pending.Since he had not cleared the bill and believed that the message to be genuine and contacted the sender.The fraudster, posing as service provider sent an APK file through WhatsApp and instructed the victim to install it to process the bill payment. Once installed, the application (APK file) gained complete access to his mobile phone and the accused manipulated him to enter his credit card details. Believing it to be a part of the payment process, the victim entered the information. Immediately after, several unauthorised transactions were executed from his credit card, amounting to `95,237. Upon realizing that he was duped, the complainant promptly approached the LB Nagar police and and filed a case.Police rescue 800 cows from smugglingHyderabad:Telangana police have rescued nearly 800 cows from smugglers and slaughtering in the past three months from across the state. The cattle have been sheltered at Dhyan Foundation Gaushala in Challur Village, Yadadri Bhuvanagiri district.“The cattle that come to our shelter are in terrible condition. They suffer very harsh treatment and rough handling. Cows are castrated, dehorned and hot iron branded without anaesthetics. During transport they are crammed into trucks, get their limbs broken, sustain injuries, infections and internal bleeding,” said Harish, a volunteer of Dhyan Foundation, Hyderabad.Young calves are slaughtered in front of their mothers, chillies and heavy metals are stuffed into their eyes and handed over to the smugglers, he added. This illegal business of cattle trafficking generates thousands of crores of illegal money and is used to fund for anti national activities.Such activities are illegal under the…