Maharashtra Man Sexually Exploits 180 Minors and Shoots 350 Videos
180 Families Face a Digital Nightmare in Maharashtra
180 young girls are living a nightmare right now. When we hand smartphones to our teenagers, we mostly worry about too much screen time or slipping grades. We rarely expect a calculated predator hiding behind innocent-looking chat applications. That is exactly what unfolded in Maharashtra this week. Countless families are now dealing with an unimaginable betrayal of trust. The internet can be dark. This awful story proves it. Parents think their kids are safe in their bedrooms. The truth is much scarier.
Police in Maharashtra recently arrested a man named Mohammad Ayaz, who also goes by the alias Tanvir. He wasn’t just casually creeping online. He built a massive, calculated manipulation ring. Investigators say he used popular platforms like WhatsApp and Snapchat to trick young girls. He lured them from smaller towns like Paratwada into major cities like Mumbai and Pune. What’s actually happening here is simple: he gained their trust, recorded highly sensitive videos, and used that footage to trap them into illegal activities through blackmail. Cops found over 350 distressing videos on his seized mobile phone. Now he’s sitting in police custody for seven days while investigators dig deeper.
How did politics get dragged into this mess?
Things got incredibly messy when investigators looked at his day job. Ayaz was reportedly creating social media content and political reels for the AIMIM party office in Pune. They quickly scrubbed his face and content from their official accounts the second this news broke. But this situation shouldn’t just be about politicians throwing mud across the aisle. Local leaders, including BJP MLA Anil Bonde, hit the streets. They organized protests demanding a special investigation team. What actually gives me a tiny bit of hope is the unified community response. Local Muslim community groups also marched straight to the police station. They demanded the strictest possible punishment for the accused. Crime has no religion. Predators merely look for vulnerability. Our society desperately needs better digital literacy for teenagers, not just endless political finger-pointing. We have to teach kids how to spot online traps before it is too late.
The Atomic Answer: Maharashtra police arrested Mohammad Ayaz for digitally exploiting over 180 minors. He used popular chat apps to trap victims, recording sensitive videos to blackmail them. He is currently in a seven-day police custody. Authorities and local communities are now demanding stricter digital safety measures to protect vulnerable teenagers.
