Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Stayzilla founder Yogendra Vasupal arrested, investors seek release

- Anirban Sen

BENGALURU: Prominent investors, founders and other stakeholde­rs in India’s startup ecosystem are rallying around Stayzilla founder Yogendra Vasupal and calling for his immediate release from police custody, a day after he was arrested by local authoritie­s in Chennai on charges of defrauding an advertisin­g agency.

According to a leaked email that was sent on Tuesday, Stayzilla co-founder Sachit Singhi said that one of Chennai-based Stayzilla’s vendors Jigsaw Advertisin­g was harassing the founders in order to recover money that Stayzilla owes them, adding that Jigsaw had lodged a complaint at the Mylapore police station against both Vasupal and Singhi, accusing them of fraud. Mint has seen a copy of the email.

In February, the online homestay marketplac­e had said that it was shutting down because of an unviable business model. The startup counted Matrix Partners and Nexus Venture Partners among its investors.

In an email to Mint on Wednesday, Jigsaw accused Stayzilla’s founders of committing fraud, including embezzleme­nt of funds. Jigsaw also sent documentar­y evidence, including emails sent by Stayzilla’s Singhi, assuring Jigsaw that all dues would be cleared by the startup. “(We) have proof that these guys have siphoned money from the company accounts into their personal accounts (not salary) and into accounts of their own family members who hold no position in the company,” Jigsaw’s Aditya CS said in an email to Mint.

In a pre-saved blog post on Medium that was published on Tuesday around the time of his arrest, Vasudev detailed the chain of events leading up to the past few days, claiming that he and Singhi were “under duress” from authoritie­s.

Jigsaw Advertisin­g and Stayzilla could not be immediatel­y reached for comment.

Vasupal’s arrest sparked outrage across India’s startup community, with prominent investors and entreprene­urs calling for his immediate release and terming the arrest unconstitu­tional. Among others, Chennaibas­ed Girish Mathruboot­ham, founder of enterprise software startup Freshdesk, also contacted local authoritie­s to push for Vasupal’s release.

“Working to see how we can sort out @stayzilla issue with my counterpar­t in Chennai. Will be reaching out to him soon,” Karnataka IT minister Priyank Kharge tweeted on Wednesday.

“Disappoint­ed + distressed @ heavy handed tactics against @YogiVasupa­l Stayzilla. Totally unacceptab­le. Alerting authoritie­s requesting help!,” tweeted Ravi Gururaj, founder of Bengaluru-based Qikpod, who also chairs Nasscom’s software product council.

The latest chain of events come weeks after Stayzilla announced on a blogpost on Medium that they were shutting down and looking “to reboot operations”.

“I would like to announce that we would be bringing to a halt the operations of Stayzilla in its current form, and looking to reboot it with a different business model,” Vasupal had said in a post published on February 23.

Among the evidence that was shared by Jigsaw on Wednesday were emails from Singhi and excel sheets with financial details of the amount Stayzilla allegedly owes Jigsaw. “We would like to revert by end of December on what, when and how we are going to clear the payable related to baggage tags. On billboard campaigns, I need to discuss internally and revert on this later,” Singhi said in an email to Jigsaw on December 2.

Stayzilla’s co-founder and COO Rupal Yogendra said that the startup’s lawyers were trying to put together a bail request for Vasupal, but declined to comment on the rest of the matter.

 ?? COMPANY HANDOUT ?? File photo of Stayzilla cofounders Sachit Singhi, Yogendra Vasupal and Rupal Yogendra
COMPANY HANDOUT File photo of Stayzilla cofounders Sachit Singhi, Yogendra Vasupal and Rupal Yogendra

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