Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

₹19,194cr this yr: Bank fraud loss already more than 2017 mark

- Rajesh Ahuja and Roshan Kishore

DIAMOND TRADERS NIRAV MODI AND MEHUL CHOKSI ARE ALLEGED TO HAVE DEFRAUDED PNB TO THE TUNE OF ₹12,922 CRORE (THUS FAR)

NEWDELHI: The Central Bureau of Investigat­ion on Thursday registered a bank fraud case against Hyderabad-based Totem Infrastruc­ture Ltd and its promoters, taking to 12 the number of major cases of suspected bank swindles it has registered this year.

Totem is accused of defrauding a consortium of eight banks led by Union Bank of India to the tune of ₹1,394 crore. That takes the total amount involved in bank fraud cases this year to ₹19,194 crore. The company couldn’t immediatel­y be reached for comment on Thursday evening.

The amount has already exceeded the ₹11,777 crores involved in the 31 bank fraud cases registered by the investigat­ing agency’s Banking Security and Fraud Cell in all of 2017 — an indication of both the rash of bank fraud cases emerging as banks follow up on overdue loans and the huge amount involved in the Punjab National Bank fraud case.

Diamond traders Nirav Modi and Mehul Choksi are alleged to have defrauded PNB to the tune of ₹12,922 crore (thus far).

According to the Reserve Bank of India’s master directions issued on 1 July , 2016, banks can directly make a complaint to the CBI’S specialize­d banking fraud unit, if the fraud involves more than ₹25 crore and up to ₹50 crore.

Complaints of frauds involving more that ₹50 crore are lodged by the joint director (policy) of CBI but these cases too usually end up with the banking fraud unit. Cases involving frauds of between ₹3 crore and up to ₹25 crore are probed by the Anti Corruption Branch and Economic Offences Unit of the agency.

“The BS&FC was formed in 1992 during the Harshad Mehta (stock market) scam, when the government felt the need to have a specialize­d unit in CBI to probe banking frauds,” said NR Wasan, who retired as chief of the Bureau of Police Research and Developmen­t and worked with CBI for more than a decade.

In 2017, the BS&FC unit in Bengaluru registered the maximum of 11 cases while those in Delhi and Mumbai accounted for eight cases each. The Kolkata BS&FC unit registered four cases last year.

The fraud figures are based on the initial reporting by the banks to the CBI.

CBI probes only those cases where the fraud amount is above ₹3 crore. The state police deals with the rest, although banks have to lodge a complaint with the state police as well as the Serious Fraud Investigat­ion Office of the ministry of corporate affairs on frauds involving amounts higher than ₹1 crore (but less than ₹3 crore).

To be sure, the total amount of money involved in bad debts given out by banks is much bigger than the value in these cases. According to a database maintained by credit informatio­n company CIBIL, the total amount outstandin­g with wilful defaulters on 30 September 2017 was ₹1.11 lakh crore. This amount only includes cases where the value of loan outstandin­g is more than ₹25 lakh.

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