Case Study · Digital Forensics & Expert Witness

Email Spoofing Forensics, Section 65B Certification, and Expert Witness Testimony in a ₹18Cr Commercial Fraud Dispute

Service · Digital Forensics & Expert WitnessFirm · SIRI Law LLPContact · +91 7981912046
₹18Cr
Fraud Amount
S.65B
Certificate Obtained
Expert
Witness Testimony
High Court
Evidence Admitted
Email Chain
Spoofing Proven
Civil + Criminal
Parallel Proceedings

HomeCase StudiesDigital Forensics → Email Spoofing Forensics, Section 65B Certification, and Expert Witness Testimony in a ₹18Cr Commercial Fraud Dispute

Engagement Background

The Situation When We Were Engaged

A Hyderabad commodities trading company discovered that ₹18 crore in payments had been redirected to a fraudulent bank account over a six-month period. The company’s former business partner was suspected of operating a business email compromise scheme — intercepting genuine email communications and substituting fraudulent payment instructions with lookalike email addresses.

The opposing party denied involvement and claimed all emails were genuine — asserting the payment instructions were authentic and the company had simply made errors in its payment process. The entire dispute turned on the authenticity of the email communications: were the payment instruction emails genuine communications from the business partner, or were they spoofed and intercepted?

SIRI Law LLP was engaged to conduct forensic analysis of the email chain, obtain Section 65B certificates for all digital evidence, and provide expert witness testimony before the High Court on the technical findings. The forensic analysis would determine whether the emails were genuine or spoofed — and the outcome of the ₹18 crore dispute depended on it.

Client Profile

Entity TypeTrading Company — Commodities
Dispute TypeCommercial Fraud — Email Compromise
CourtHigh Court + Cybercrime Cell
Evidence TypeEmail chain, wire transfer records
Opposing PartyFormer business partner
Forensic ScopeEmail server logs, header analysis, device forensics

Assessment Scope

Forensic Email Analysis, Section 65B Certification, and Expert Witness

Email Header Forensics

Forensic analysis of full email headers — SMTP relay path, SPF/DKIM/DMARC authentication results, originating IP geolocation, send timestamps, and message-ID chain analysis across 340 emails spanning 6 months.

Section 65B Certification

Indian Evidence Act Section 65B certificates prepared by a qualified person for all digital evidence: email exports, server logs, device forensic images, and wire transfer confirmation records. Certificate chain maintained for admissibility.

Expert Witness Testimony

Expert witness report prepared in court-compliant format. Cross-examination preparation. Testimony before the High Court on email authentication, spoofing mechanics, and the technical basis for the forensic findings. Opposing technical evidence rebutted.

Key Findings

What We Found

Each finding documented with evidence. Root cause and remediation guidance provided for every item.

CRITICALEmail Domain Spoofing — Lookalike Domain Registered 7 Months Before Fraud

Forensic analysis revealed that a lookalike domain — differing from the genuine partner domain by a single character — had been registered 7 months before the first fraudulent payment instruction. WHOIS records, DNS history, and registration metadata traced the lookalike domain to infrastructure consistent with the opposing party’s known IP allocation. All 14 fraudulent payment instruction emails originated from this lookalike domain.

CRITICALSPF/DKIM/DMARC Failure — Authenticated Emails vs Fraudulent Emails

Genuine emails from the business partner’s domain passed SPF, DKIM, and DMARC authentication. All 14 fraudulent payment instruction emails failed SPF authentication — originating from IP addresses not authorised to send on behalf of the claimed sender domain. This technical distinction — invisible to a non-forensic reader of the email — proved the emails were not sent from the genuine partner’s mail infrastructure.

HIGHDevice Forensics — Lookalike Domain Accessed from Opposing Party’s Device

Mobile device forensic analysis (pursuant to court order) of a device associated with the opposing party revealed browser history accessing the lookalike domain’s mail interface, and DNS queries consistent with managing the lookalike domain’s mail server configuration. This evidence directly connected the opposing party to the operation of the fraudulent email infrastructure.

HIGHWire Transfer Confirmation Emails — Suppressed from Opposing Party’s Email Archive

The opposing party produced an email archive in discovery that was forensically incomplete — 14 wire transfer confirmation emails that should appear in a genuine business email archive were absent. Metadata analysis of the archive export revealed selective deletion prior to export. The pattern of deletions aligned precisely with the fraudulent payment confirmation dates.

Engagement Timeline

Phase-by-Phase Execution

Phase 1
1

Evidence Preservation and Section 65B Chain

Immediate forensic imaging of client’s email server (on-premises) and email client devices. Section 65B certificate chain established at point of imaging — chain of custody documentation, hash verification, and qualified person certification. 340 emails spanning 6 months preserved and authenticated.

Phase 2
2

Email Header and Authentication Analysis

Full header analysis across all 340 emails. SPF/DKIM/DMARC authentication results extracted and tabulated. SMTP relay path mapping. Originating IP geolocation — fraudulent emails traced to a VPS provider in Eastern Europe consistent with the lookalike domain’s mail server. Timeline reconstruction of genuine vs fraudulent email sequences.

Phase 3
3

Domain Registration and Infrastructure Forensics

Lookalike domain registration history, WHOIS records, DNS history, and hosting infrastructure documented. Historical DNS records showing mail server configuration timeline. Correlation between lookalike domain mail server IP and other infrastructure associated with the opposing party.

Phase 4
4

Expert Witness Report and High Court Testimony

Expert witness report prepared: technical findings, methodology, standards applied (RFC 5321, RFC 7208, RFC 6376), and conclusions stated in court-accessible language. Cross-examination preparation with lead counsel. Testimony given before High Court — opposing technical expert’s evidence rebutted on three specific technical grounds. Evidence admitted and findings accepted by court.

Legal & Regulatory Risk Analysis

Why This Mattered Legally

Section 65B — Admissibility of Digital Evidence

Without a compliant Section 65B certificate from a qualified person, electronic evidence is inadmissible in Indian courts under the Indian Evidence Act. The entire forensic case depended on proper Section 65B certification — an error in the certification process would have rendered the email evidence inadmissible and collapsed the case.

Expert Witness — Qualification and Independence

Indian courts require expert witnesses to be independent and qualified. SIRI Law LLP’s forensic experts hold CFCE, EnCE, and CEH certifications and have prior court testimony experience. The expert report was prepared to meet the Supreme Court’s standards for expert evidence — methodology, independence, and conclusions clearly stated.

IT Act Section 66C — Identity Theft via Electronic Means

The lookalike domain scheme — impersonating the business partner’s email identity to redirect payments — constitutes identity theft via electronic means under IT Act Section 66C. The forensic evidence supported a parallel criminal complaint to the cybercrime cell, creating criminal proceedings alongside the civil High Court dispute.

IPC Section 420 — Cheating and Dishonesty

The fraudulent payment instructions — causing the company to transfer ₹18 crore to a fraudulent account — constitute cheating under IPC Section 420. The forensic evidence establishing the email spoofing mechanism and the connection to the opposing party provided the evidentiary foundation for the criminal complaint alongside the civil proceedings.

Outcomes & Remediation

What Changed After Our Assessment

Digital Evidence Admitted — Section 65B Certification Upheld

All forensic evidence admitted by the High Court without objection to the Section 65B certificates. Opposing party’s challenge to the certification process dismissed. Forensic methodology accepted by court as sound.

Expert Witness Testimony Accepted — Spoofing Mechanism Established

Expert witness testimony accepted by court. The technical mechanism of email domain spoofing, SPF/DKIM/DMARC failure, and the lookalike domain operation established as proved facts. Opposing technical evidence rebutted successfully.

Interim Injunction — Asset Freezing Order Obtained

Based on forensic evidence, the court granted an interim injunction freezing the opposing party’s bank accounts and property pending final hearing. Asset preservation prevented dissipation of recoverable assets.

Criminal Complaint — Cybercrime Cell Investigation Initiated

Parallel criminal complaint filed with cybercrime cell supported by forensic evidence package. Section 65B certificates filed with the complaint. FIR registered under IT Act Section 66C and IPC Section 420. Investigation ongoing.

Compliance Frameworks

Standards Applied in This Engagement

Indian Evidence Act — S.65BIT Act 2000 — S.66, 66CIPC — S.420, 468RFC 5321 (SMTP)RFC 7208 (SPF)RFC 6376 (DKIM)

Why Choose SIRI Law LLP

Unique Advantage

Section 65B certification by qualified persons — admissibility guaranteed

Court-experienced expert witnesses — prior High Court testimony

Civil + criminal parallel proceedings — legal and forensic team in one

Email forensics + legal argument combined — we write the report and argue the case

Director GRC & Legal — Adv. Chetan Seripally

Need Digital Forensics or Expert Witness Support?

Contact SIRI Law LLP for a confidential scoping call with our legal and technical experts.

Disclaimer: This case study describes an engagement handled by SIRI Law LLP. All client details are generic to protect confidentiality. Outcomes are fact-specific and do not guarantee similar results. For legal advice specific to your situation, please consult a qualified advocate.
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