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Showing posts with label CBI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CBI. Show all posts

Wednesday, 27 September 2017

08:21

Mallya diverted most of Rs.6k crores loan to shell cos (September 25, 2017)

Mallya diverted most of Rs.6k crores loan to shell cos (September 25, 2017)
In another potential setback for Vijay Mallya, the CBI and Enforcement Directorate are preparing to charge sheet the controversial tycoon for allegedly diverting a large chunk of funds from the Rs.6,027-crore loan he took for his now-defunct Kingfisher Airlines from a consortium of banks led by State Bank of India. The money was allegedly diverted to shell companies in seven countries, including the US, UK, France and Ireland, official sources said. CBI and ED sources claimed the evidence would strengthen their case for Mallya's extradition from the UK.
An official refused to divulge the exact amount laundered by Mallya from the Rs.6,027 crore loan money but said “it’s huge”. Mallya, who could not be contacted for his response, has previously denied charges of wrongdoing. “We received information that Mallya, using his company and associates, laundered a major chunk of this Rs.6,027 crore loan to several countries. Now, we have established links with shell companies and bank accounts in at least seven countries. Letters rogatory have already been sent to the US, the UK, France and Ireland and we will get complete details soon,” the official said.
Sources in the CBI and ED, however, maintain that Mallya went about the fraud in a “systematic” way. “Vijay Mallya would repay some part of the loan, which allowed him to gain confidence of the banks, which gave him further loans. In all, he took Rs 6,027 crore in loans from a consortium of 17 banks," said the official. SBI had the maximum exposure of Rs.1,600 crore.
Officials said the fresh charge sheets having details of ‘systematic money laundering’ through shell companies in various countries should beef up the case against Mallya. A plea for Mallya’s extradition from the UK, where he fled on March 2 last year, is being heard on the basis of a Rs.900 crore IDBI Bank loan fraud/money laundering case in the court of senior district judge (chief magistrate) Emma Arbuthnot at 81, Marylebone Road, London.
The CBI and ED plan to share the fresh charge sheets with the UK prosecutors before December, when the final extradition hearing will begin, said sources Other banks which gave loans to Kingfisher along with SBI include Punjab National Bank with an exposure of Rs.800 crore, Bank of India (Rs.650 crore), Bank of Baroda (Rs.550 crore), Central Bank of India (Rs 410 crore), UCO Bank (Rs.320 crore), Corporation Bank (Rs.310 crore), State Bank of Mysore (Rs.150 crore), Indian Overseas Bank (Rs.140 crore). Till now, Mallya was charged only in the Rs.900 crore IDBI loan case.
It was established in the IDBI case that Mallya laundered around Rs.417 crore out of Rs.900 crore loan by forming a complex web of companies and nominating directors in those companies who were either his personal staff, retired company official or third persons. A portion of the IDBI loan was reportedly laundered by Mallya to Cayman Islands, Mauritius, the UK and Switzerland, said sources. As first reported by TOI, Britain’s Serious Fraud Office (SFO) has launched a “money laundering” investigation against Mallya. The ED has identified property worth over Rs.11,000 crore belonging to Mallya and property Rs.9,000 crore has already been attached under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act.
Source:SBI

Wednesday, 1 March 2017

04:54

BANK MANAGER TWO YEARS IMPRISONMENT FOR FINANCIAL IRREGULARITIES

BANK MANAGER TWO YEARS IMPRISONMENT FOR FINANCIAL IRREGULARITIES

CHENNAI: The manager of Adyar branch of Punjab National Bank was sentenced to two years of rigorous imprisonment for financial irregularities totalling Rs 3.34 crore. The verdict was delivered by the additional special judge for CBI cases, K Venkatasami, on Tuesday. Four others were convicted and sentenced to varying terms of imprisonment.

The Anti Corruption Branch of CBI, Chennai, investigated a case against the senior manager of the bank, Capt P S Ramanarayan, then senior regional manager, zonal office, H B Subramanian and manager of the branch K Y Subramanian for their role in conspiring with proprietors of various private firms to cheat the bank.

Investigations revealed that the bank officials fraudulently and dishonestly sanctioned various facilities – term loan, credit facilities, bill discounting etc., to the private firms based on forged and fake documents submitted by them as collateral security thus causing a loss of Rs 3.34 crore to the bank and corresponding pecuniary advantage to them.

During trial, Capt Ramanarayan died  and charges against him abated. H B Subramanian was acquitted. K Y Subramanian, branch manager and two others – D Kalaiselvam and N Devaraj--were sentenced to undergo two years rigorous imprisonment.   Two others, S Vijayakumar and Ravi were  convicted and sentenced to three years rigorous imprisonment. A total fine of Rs 14 lakh was imposed on them.

Sunday, 3 July 2016

18:43

Indian Bank CMD in bank fraud case

 Indian Bank CMD in bank fraud case

3 years RI for former Indian Bank CMD in bank fraud case

CHENNAI: Former chairman and managing director of Indian Bank M Gopalakrishnan was sentenced to three years rigorous imprisonment in a bank fraud case.

A Kantha Kumar, Principal Special Judge for CBI Cases, convicted Gopalakrishnan, five officials of Indian Bank and four others including M Varadarajulu of MVR Group for cheating Indian Bank in the sanction of letter of credit facility to the tune of ` 2.5 crore each in favour of Anderson Industries International Ltd and Sathyam Chemicals Pvt Ltd, both sister concerns of MVR Group of companies of M Varadarajulu.

The letter of credit was issued for taking delivery of the cashew nuts  which were already imported in the name of Maxwell Exim Private Ltd and MVR Industries respectively. The letters were sanctioned by Gopalakrishnan, who was then chairman and managing director on September 30, 1995, without the receipt of regular proposals of the respective branches of Indian Bank at Nandanam and Saidapet and only on the basis of request letters. He sanctioned it without  any reports on the pre-sanction assessments, credit-worthiness, security aspects and source of repayment, CBI stated. Indian Bank suffered a loss of `4.97 crore.
CBI then filed a charge-sheet against Gopalakrishnan and a host of the then bank officials.
Out of them, Usha Devi, Directors of  Anderson Industries  International Ltd, is absconding and case against her is still pending. During the trial, one Jayaraman expired and charges against him abated. Sathyam Chemicals director K Sai Jagannathan was sentenced to undergo three years of Rigorous Imprisonment.
Kumarasamy, AR. Arunachalam, Sambasivam, M V Varadarajulu and Krishna Kumar were given two years of rigorous imprisonment and Balakrishnan, Srinivasa Raghabvan and Vasantha Rahjan were sentenced to undergo one year of rigorous imprisonment. A fine of `1.35 lakh has also been imposed on them.

Wednesday, 15 June 2016

08:02

Chargesheet filed by CBI in 1000 crore Syndicate bank fraud

Chargesheet filed by CBI in 1000 crore Syndicate bank fraud

CBI filed the chargesheet on the basis of a complaint received from Syndicate bank against its General Manager and others at the bank's branch in Delhi and Jaipur.

Central Bureau of Investigation has filed a chargesheet against the chief manager of Syndicate Bank at Udaipur in Rajasthan Santosh Kumar Gupta, his wife Usha Gupta and CA Bharat Kumar Bamb,under several sections of cheating and forgery.

This case was registered on 7 March 2016 on the basis of complaint received from Syndicate Bank U/s 120-B r/w 409, 420, 467, 468, 471 of IPC and Sec. 13(2) r/w 13(1)(c) & (d) of Prevention of Corruption Act against its general manager and others at New Delhi and Jaipur Syndicate Bank branch. This complaint was filed for causing an alleged loss of Rs 1000 crore (approx.) to Syndicate Bank.

WHAT IS THE FRAUD ABOUT?
As per allegations, accused persons in connivance with the bank officials committed the said fraud by resorting to discounting of fake cheques, fake bills against fake LC's and arranging overdraft limit against non-existent LIC Policies at two Jaipur Branches - Malviya Nagar and MI Road and one Udaipur Branch of Syndicate Bank. Searches were conducted on March 8, 2016 at 10 locations including Jaipur, Udaipur and New Delhi which led to recovery of incriminating documents. On March 18 2016, CBI arrested a chartered accountant of Udaipur and a businessman/real estate developer of Jaipur, in the on-going investigation of the case.

CASH RECOVERED 
During further searches, cash approximately worth Rs 66 lakh, certain electronic hard drives etc. and incriminating documents were recovered from the CA's house. Around Rs 20.98 lakh was also recovered on April 26 this year from another CA employee.

PREVIOUS ARRESTS
During the investigation, CBI arrested the chief manager of Syndicate Bank, Udaipur Branch and a private person on June 6 this year. The said private person had allegedly conspired with the chartered accountant and others by providing forged and false cheques which were used to siphon off the bank funds. The then chief manager of Udaipur Branch allegedly discounted the forged cheques presented by accused persons and exceeded his sanctioned powers while discounting the forged cheques.

It was also found that the wife of the then chief manager was allegedly involved in the conspiracy as she had received approximately Rs 5.7 crores out of the defrauded bank funds as beneficiary and co-conspirator with her husband and others. It was also found during investigation that LIC policies pledged against loans were allegedly fake. LIC policies were allegedly issued in the name of different persons for different terms and sum assured and, therefore, were found to be forged and false. After thorough investigation, CBI has filed the first chargesheet. Investigation is on to unearth the role of other accused persons in the said case.

Source:India Today


Wednesday, 23 December 2015

18:20

Bank of Baroda fraud: How the masterminds pocketed Rs 100 cr via illegal remittance

Bank of Baroda fraud: How the masterminds pocketed Rs 100 cr via illegal remittance

The masterminds of illegal remittances racket operating through Bank of Baroda were allegedly charging Rs 1.35 for every dollar sent abroad from people who wanted to use their services.

The CBI investigation into over Rs 6,000 crore transfer (about $100 crore) to Hong Kong and Dubai through BoB Ashok Vihar Branch has indicated that the master operators were charging this premium by offering their channel to send the money outwards, the agency's chargesheet alleged.

The CBI has filed its chargesheet which reveal that nearly $100 crore were transferred from India to Hong Kong and Dubai using proper banking channel by evading the scrutiny of banking software which red flags every transaction above $one lakh.

Sources said the agency has mentioned in its chargesheet that masterminds of the racket were allegedly distributing the fee of Rs 1.35 per dollar among themselves with even the lowest rung of the gang (which were alleged account holders) made Rs 25-40 lakh in one year period from July 2014-July 2015.

"The lower rung of the gang was given 20-25 paisa per dollar transferred and during the one-year period they have made about Rs 25-40 lakh by transferring funds through banking channels," an official said.

The sources said similarly the parties in Hong Kong and Dubai to whom the money was allegedly being transferred made over Rs 35-60 lakh in commission from the well-oiled machinery which was being run.

CBI had registered a case against 59 current account holders and unknown bank officials and private persons on a complaint from Bank of Baroda.

Source:BankingUpdates

Thursday, 17 December 2015

07:58

CBI court orders 10 years rigorous imprisonment for bank official who swindled his own bank

CBI court orders 10 years rigorous imprisonment for bank official who swindled his own bank

A former Assistant General Manager (AGM) of the Syndicate Bank was convicted by a special court for CBI cases on Wednesday in connection with a case of misuse of bank funds for personal benefit. The former AGM of the Syndicate Bank’s Yeshwanthapura branch in North Bengaluru J Kannan and his brother J Muralidharan were convicted in the case registered in 2012 by the CBI’s anti-corruption bureau.

CBI special judge B K Naik sentenced Kannan to 10 years of rigorous imprisonment and slapped a fine of Rs 60 lakh while his brother was sentenced to three years rigorous imprisonment and fined Rs 5 lakh.

Kannan was convicted on charges of criminal conspiracy, cheating, forgery, criminal breach of trust, falsification of accounts, submitting forged documents as genuine and criminal misconduct while Muralidharan was convicted for criminal conspiracy and cheating.

The Anti-Corruption Bureau of the CBI had registered a case against the duo in 2012 and a charge sheet was filed in the year 2014. J Kannan was accused of cheating the bank to the tune of Rs.12.22 crore by siphoning bank for his personal benefit.

The CBI investigation found that Kannan was debiting large amounts of money through drawee bills while noting the same under the head of advances in the bank’s general ledger but was actually crediting the money to his SB account in the Syndicate Bank, Yeshwanthpur Branch.

After this preliminary transfer Kannan would siphon the amounts to an account he held at the Axis Bank, Thallakulam Branch in Tamil Nadu, the CBI found. He also transferred the stolen money to the bank account of his brother J Muralidharan.

The former Syndicate Bank AGM also forged drawee bills, credit vouchers, debit vouchers and used them as genuine documents to cheat his bank in a total of 24 fraudulent transactions where he did not maintain any credit and debit vouchers the special court found.

Source:BankingUpdates.

Monday, 23 November 2015

08:53

Mallya ready to smoke the peace pipe with banks

Mallya ready to smoke the peace pipe with banks

In a major relief for Indian banks, Vijay Mallya, chairman of the beleaguered UB group, wants to settle his dues with banks and plans to initiate formal negotiations in the next few weeks. Mallya's willingness to settle the dues comes after the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) stepped up efforts to investigate a Rs 950-crore loan given by IDBI Bank to the now-collapsed Kingfisher Airlines. The airline, which shut shop in 2012, owed Indian banks Rs 7,000 crore as of January this year.

A source close to the UB group said Mallya was willing to settle with the public-sector banks by selling part of his stake in various companies and assets based in India and abroad.
As reported on November 10, the UB group is likely to sell Rs 2,200 crore worth of its residual four per cent stake in United Spirits Ltd (USL), to part-repay the loans. Mallya also owns a 32.62 per cent stake, worth Rs 8,500 crore, in United Breweries. Of this, Rs 4,411 crore worth of his United Breweries stake is unpledged. Dutch beer giant Heineken owns a 42.3 per cent stake in United Breweries, India's biggest beer company, after it bought a 3.21 per cent stake, worth Rs 872 crore, from USL in July this year. Mallya will have to take banks into confidence before selling his stake, as part of his holding in his companies is pledged.

In October, the Central Bureau of Investigation had raided the UB group's office and Mallya's residence in Goa and Bengaluru, after the agency filed a first information report against Mallya, A Raghunathan (the then chief financial officer of the UB group), and unknown IDBI Bank officials. During the raids to probe IDBI Bank's loan, CBI had found that Mallya had defaulted to other banks as well.

A senior State Bank of India official said the bank had not received any formal proposal from Mallya as on Friday. When contacted, a spokesperson for the UB group declined to comment.

For Indian banks, any settlement will be welcome, given that they are running from pillar to post to get their money back and have moved various courts against Mallya. On Saturday, lenders decided to auction some of Kingfisher's assets, such as old cars and fork-lifts, with a reserve price of a measly Rs 65 lakh.
Soon after the airline shut down, Mallya in 2012 sold his stake in USL to the UK's Diageo for close to $2.1 billion. But the proceeds of the deal were not used to repay the banks, which were left holding the can.

The relations between Diageo and Mallya later soured over the Rs 2,100 crore dues from various UB firms to USL. In April this year, the new USL board even asked Mallya to resign as the chairman, but a defiant Mallya refused to do so. A source said USL's annual general meeting on November 24 will be crucial to see if and how the relations between Diageo and Mallya have deteriorated.

The source said Diageo and Mallya were also working on a peace plan, under which the latter will quit USL without any public fight, and the former will take full control of the company. Diageo is also in talks to buy out Mallya's four per cent stake in USL.

Source:BankingUpdates.

Thursday, 19 November 2015

07:55

Intel agencies, RBI plan to integrate ICEGATE into banking system

Intel agencies, RBI plan to integrate ICEGATE into banking system

India’s intelligence agencies and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) are considering a proposal to integrate Indian Customs Electronic Commerce and Electronic Data Interchange Gateway (ICEGATE) and the banking system to prevent illegal forex remittances and money laundering.

ICEGATE is the customs electronic repository of bills of entry, shipping bills and other import-export documents.

The move comes after the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and the Enforcement Directorate have booked a series of cases involving illegal forex remittance by banks, the latest being the Rs 6,000 crore outward foreign remittance scam involving Bank of Baroda and a clutch of other banks.

According to officials privy to the development, the integration of ICEGATE and the banking system will help banks check the genuineness of bills produced by importers and exporters before remitting money.

“So far in most of the remittance frauds we have found that exporters claim duty drawback on fake import bills. Since ICEGATE has details of each and every import and export invoice, if it is integrated with the banking system, the banks can check the genuineness of the bills produced by the importers and exporters at the bank for outward remittances,” said an official who is aware of the developments.

Experts feel that integration of ICEGATE and the banking system is a positive development and will aid in addressing the risks involving export/import transactions.

“One should ensure that all relevant information from ICEGATE is made available to banks and bank personnel are trained to incorporate and use this information in their risk monitoring processes,” said Dhruv Phophalia, managing director, of consultancy firm Alvarez & Marsal. He heads the firm’s global forensic and dispute services practice in India.

Phophalia also said that to prevent remittance fraud and trade based money laundering, banks need to focus on developing data intelligence monitoring mechanisms and conducting adequate due diligence on significant counter parties to whom funds are being transferred.

The CBI and ED are currently investigating 59 current accounts, which were opened in Bank of Baroda’s Ashok Vihar branch in New Delhi between May 13, 2014, and June 20, 2015. These accounts were used for outward foreign remittance transactions aggregating to $576 million (Rs 3,672.30 crore) for the purpose as ‘Advance remittance for imports’ to overseas parties numbering about 418, mainly based in Hong Kong. Around 10 per cent (Rs 343 crore) of the amount involved had been deposited in these accounts by way of cash and balance 90 per cent amount through RTGS and NEFT from 51 different banks.

Apart from this, the ED in Mumbai is probing three separate cases of illegal foreign remittance of over $4.6 billion (Rs30,000 crore) involving UCO Bank , HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, IndusInd Bank, ING Vysya, YES Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank and Bank of India. In case of UCO Bank the ED is probing into suspected misuse of up to $3.2 billion in export advances paid out by the bank.

Source:BankingUpdates

Saturday, 31 October 2015

09:28

RBI questions banks for lending Rs 5253 cr after CBI uncovers fraud

RBI questions banks for lending Rs 5253 cr after CBI uncovers fraud

Four days after the CBI registered cases against a Kolkata- based company, it has emerged the RBI redflagged loans given to the firm seven months ago, virtually indicting banks for not acting in one of India’s largest banking frauds.

In a confidential letter to the department of financial services (DFS), the Reserve Bank of India raised uncomfortable questions about the role of banks that had lent a colossal Rs 5,253 crore to REI Agro Limited case. The Basmati rice trading firm availed the credit from a consortium of 21 banks.

RBI’s letter came after already asking the lending banks in July 2014 to investigate REI Agro Limited’s operations and report back any fraudulent activities. When the banks didn’t respond, the central bank asked UCO Bank — the largest lender — to hold an emergency meeting of the lending banks, and asked them “to report the fraud and start recovery proceedings immediately”.

The Central Bureau of Investigation lodged a case of criminal conspiracy, cheating and forgery against the firm on Monday.

“Instead of exploring the possibility of treating the case as a fraud and filing a criminal complaint if necessary, the banks were moving in the direction of restructuring the loan,” read the RBI letter to the DFS, the government arm that oversees banks and banking operations.

But the banks didn’t take action for a long time.

The RBI letter also asked the DFS to alert the CBI, Enforcement Directorate and the Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO) to take necessary steps.
The RBI spokesperson refused to comment while calls to the DFS secretary elicited no response. REI Agro could also not be contacted.

“Our bank has reported REI Agro account as default and fraud... recovery action has also been taken,” said SR Bansal, Corporation Bank chief.
But an Axis Bank spokesperson said the bank does not comment on “individual clients and their transactions”. Bank of Baroda executive director BB Joshi did not respond.

A senior official at one of the public banks said the consortium was trying to revive the loan amount to keep it active and not classify it as a non-performing asset, which does not fetch returns.

HT had earlier reported on RBI governor Raghuram Rajan’s letter to the PMO, listing out India’s top 10 bank frauds — led by a Rs 4,276 crore loan by diamond trading firm Winsome — asking the officials to act urgently on the large value banking frauds and “the need to take concerted action in these cases”.

Source :BankingUpdates.

Wednesday, 28 October 2015

08:34

CBI books 'Raindrop' basmati rice producer in massive bank fraud

CBI books 'Raindrop' basmati rice producer in massive bank fraud

In probably one of the biggest bank frauds in recent times, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) on Tuesday filed a case against a private rice producing company, which was once listed on the London and Singapore stock exchanges other than the BSE and co-sponsored IPL's Delhi Daredevil team in 2013.

CBI alleges that the company — REI Agro Limited, which sells basmati rice under brand name 'Raindrops' — defaulted on loans of Rs 3,814.30 crore from a consortium of 15 public sector banks led by UCO bank. Credit facilities in such huge amounts was availed by REI, 2013 onwards but the money was never returned to the banks, says CBI.

The CBI claims that the preliminary probe suggests that there was major diversion of funds from bank loans to other ventures of the company.

After registering a case of cheating, criminal conspiracy and forgery, the CBI raided the premises of REI in Delhi, Kolkata and Haryana's Rewari distict and recovered large number of documents related to the businesses of the company, 10 hard disks and rubber stamps of Andhra Bank and a Dubai-based company.

The CBI has named the firm and its directors — Sanjay Jhunjhunwala, Sandip Jhunjhunwala, N K Gupta and Krishna Daya Ghosh — in its FIR, registered on Monday.
The company could not be reached for comments.

CBI sources said that the company had allegedly created a web of shell companies to facilitate fraudulent transactions related to rice trading, and defrauded banks in India and abroad.Officials added that REI also aggressively publicised its brand on the Mumbai local trains six years back, spending huge money on marketing.

The company was reportedly formed in 1994 and for some period remained listed on London Stock Exchange and Singapore Stock Exchange. It also ran 400 super stores across India with the brand name of 6Ten.

In fact, CBI sources said that in Singapore, financial service provider Credit Suisse has sued the company for $80 million.

The company, on its website, boasts of it being the world's largest basmati rice processing and marketing company.

Source:BankingUpdates.

Friday, 16 October 2015

08:09

Forex scam traced to HDFC Bank Accounts

Forex scam traced to HDFC Bank Accounts

Investigative agencies have traced the Rs.6,000-crore money laundering scam involving Bank of Baroda (BoB) to 11 accounts of HDFC Bank, where the fraud might have actually commenced. More arrests of those involved in the case, besides six made by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and the Enforcement Directorate (ED), are expected in the coming days. The investigative agencies have found that the transactions through the 11 HDFC Bank accounts started way back in January, 2014, while those from BoB began sometime in August that year.

The amounts were transferred from HDFC Bank to BoB for making advanced remittances for imports that never took place. Meanwhile, ED is also investigating whether HDFC Bank accounts were used to make foreign transfers. "This is just one chain involving 26 accounts of HDFC Bank and Bank of Baroda. There are three or four more such chains, but the game is the same of over-claiming duty drawback and evading customs duty. More searches will take place in the coming days," said a finance ministry official
.
ED is expected to investigate the employees of HDFC bank's Netaji Subhash Place branch in New Delhi and has already arrested its employee Kamal Kalra, who worked at the bank's forex department and facilitated illegal transactions. Real-time gross settlement (RTGS) transfers were, however, made through many other banks as well. "Banks would per se not be involved in case of RTGS, but it has brought to light how weak the Know Your Customer (KYC) norms are," said the finance ministry official.

The department of financial services is expected to instruct banks to tighten the implementation of KYC norms. Bank of Baroda has contended that only 6.7 per cent (Rs 343 crore) of the Rs 6,000 crore was deposited in cash in the bank, while the remaining Rs 4,808 crore came through other banking channels. "The question is not how money has come, but is sending money abroad illegally, from where import has not taken place and advance remittances were done," the official added.

The 11 bank accounts of HDFC bank in question were of Sanjay Aggarwal and Chandan Bhatia, who acted as middlemen for such transactions having shell companies in Hong Kong and Dubai. While five of the 11 accounts were of Bhatia, six belonged to Aggarwal, sources said. The two have already been arrested along with Kalra.

ED investigations under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act claimed that the HDFC Bank employee was allegedly helping Bhatia and Aggarwal in remitting the amount through Bank of Baroda against a commission of 30-50 paise per dollar remitted abroad. The agency is also probing a case for forex contraventions under the Foreign Exchange Management Act.

Both CBI and ED pursued the case after an internal investigation by BoB showed Rs 6,172 crore was sent from India to Hong Kong for import of cashew nuts, pulses and rice, but nothing was imported and the money was deposited in 59 bank accounts of several companies.

Bhatia was a middleman and also an exporter who had shell companies in India that used to remit money to the companies based in Hong Kong. He also formed companies in Hong Kong. He has so far revealed that he had sent foreign remittances to the tune of Rs 420 crore.

Aggarwal was working in tandem with importers and had formed many firms in India from where he used to send foreign remittance in advance from BoB in lieu of the imports that never happened. He had formed companies in Hong Kong and Dubai to transfer the difference in import value to save customs duty in the bank account of the importers. During this period, he had sent foreign remittances to the tune of Rs 430 crore.

source:Bankingupdates

Tuesday, 13 October 2015

12:43

Bank of Baroda Forex scam: CBI conducts raids, questions suspects

Bank of Baroda Forex scam: CBI conducts raids, questions suspects

New Delhi: CBI teams Sunday swooped down at 50 locations in Delhi in connection with its probe into alleged spurious transactions of Rs 6,000 crore to Hong Kong from a Bank of Baroda branch in the garb of purported payments of "non-existent" imports.

CBI sources said agency has found that Ashok Vihar branch of the bank was a relatively new one which has got the permission to entertain forex transactions only in 2013.

They said that Rs 6,000 crore were transferred through nearly 8,000 transactions done between July, 2014 and July, 2015.

Giving details of the case, CBI spokesperson Devpreet Singh said here today it was alleged that the amount remitted in each transaction would be kept at less than USD one lakh.
"All the remittances were made to Hong Kong. The amount was remitted as advance for import and in most of the cases, the beneficiary was the same," the spokesperson said.

Most of the foreign exchange-related transactions were carried out in newly opened current accounts wherein heavy cash receipts were observed but the branch did not generate Exceptional Transaction Report (ETR) and did not monitor the high value transactions, she said.

The sources said these remittances were sent by splitting them into amounts below one lakh USD to avoid automatic detection by software used by banks to alert them about such transactions.

They said in taxation language the technique is known as smurfing and holders were able to skip the scrutiny of such transactions.

The sources said most of the 59 accused have been identified by the agency which today carried out searches at 50 locations in a massive operation involving about 200 officers.

"It was revealed that most of the addresses given by the companies / firms were either false or the companies / firms did not exist at the said addresses. Most of the accused persons allegedly involved in perpetration of the said crime have been identified and their interrogation is underway," she said.

CBI is tight-lipped about accused and beneficiary in the case claiming that probe which is in a delicate state is not jeopardised.

CBI has registered a case under section 120-B (criminal conspiracy) read with 420 (cheating) of IPC and Section 13(2) read with13(1)(d) of Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 against 59 current account holders and unknown bank officials and private persons on a complaint from Bank of Baroda.

The FIR alleged that "59 current account holders and unknown bank officials conspired to send overseas remittances, mostly to Hong Kong, of Foreign Exchange worth approximately Rs 6,000 crores in illegal and irregular manner in violation of established banking norms under the garb of payments towards suspected non-existent imports."

The Enforcement Directorate has also registered a case and carried out searches in this connection. Yesterday, Congress had demanded an inquiry in to the matter.

"It was strange that the money was sent to buy cashew, pulses and rice from Hong Kong," Congress spokesperson RPN Singh had said.

The bank which had carried out an internal probe, after audit red flagged nearly 8000 transactions done from Ashok Vihar branch of the Bank, found that there was failure on their part to report these suspicious transactions, they said.

They said the account holders who were allegedly sending these payments to Hong Kong had claimed that these were advances for imports of cashew, rice etc whereas no such imports ever took place. 

PTI 
First Published: Sunday, October 11, 2015 - 14:18

Source :IndianBankKumar.blogspot.in