Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - HT Navi Mumbai Live

Dombivli resident cheats bank with counterfei­t currency notes ‘Injured’ driver’s video causes uproar

- HT Correspond­ent htfornavim­umbai@hindustant­imes.com G Mohiuddin Jeddy htfornavim­umbai@hindustant­imes.com

The Kharghar police have booked a Dombivli resident who allegedly tried to deposit counterfei­t currency notes of the face value of Rs15,000 in his account with a leading private sector bank.

According to the police, the suspect brought Rs50,000 to deposit in his account at the Sector 7 branch of the bank in March.

After examining the notes, a bank official found that 15 of the notes, each of the face value of Rs 1,000, were fake.

“According to rules of Reserve Bank of India, a bank has to inform the police if they receive more than four counterfei­t notes from any of their customers. So the bank officials later approached us, and we registered a case against that person on Wednesday,” said Shrikant Shinde, assistant police inspector of Kharghar police station.

The suspect in this case has a hair transplant company at Kharghar.

“He said that he received all the notes from one of his clients,” said Shinde.

He said it was unclear if the accused was involved in the counterfei­ting racket. “It is not possible to say whether he is involved in any business involving the circulatio­n of fake currency notes,” Shinde said.

He said, “If he had any knowledge that those notes were counterfei­t, he would not have gone to the bank to deposit them. He would have preferred to dispose them of at a petrol pump, a shopping mall or some other place.”

The accused has not yet been arrested, because police are investigat­ing the case, but he will if circumstan­ces so warrant.

Shinde added, “We are investigat­ing the case, and will arrest him if we find him guilty.”

Autoricksh­aw driver unions have threatened to go on a strike after a video of an allegedly assaulted and injured autoricksh­aw driver surfaced.

The union has demanded the police locate him at the earliest, as the driver had said in the video that he would not survive owing to his injuries.

In the video, Machindra Bhoir, an autoricksh­aw driver from Karave village, said he had taken two passengers to Ulwe on Wednesday night. He said while returning, he was brutally attacked and looted of cash by four assailants who had wanted to go to Kille Gaothan. He said they had been drunk and had beat him.

He made a video in the injured state and sent it to his friends asking them to inform his family.

The video, shot in dim light, shows only Bhoir’s face. While his eyes are shut in the video, no injury marks are visible.

The video has gone viral lead- ing to tensions in Karave and Belapur areas. A large number of autoricksh­aw drivers assembled at NRI coastal police stat i on on Thursday night to complain. They also met police commission­er Prabhat Ranjan on Friday.

The police had deployed a dog squad to trace Bhoir. It led them to the old bridge on the road that leads to Uran where they found the autoricksh­aw. Everything in it was intact. However, there is no trace of Bhoir yet.

“Over 100 autoricksh­aw drivers have been searching for Bhoir all day from Belapur to Uran. But we haven’t found him,” said Kasam Mulani, president of the Navi Mumbai Rickshaw Mahasangh. “If there are no concrete results soon, we will go on strike.”

The alleged victim’s father Ganpati said, “He would meet me at Seawoods railway station every night at around 8.45pm but when he didn’t turn up on Wednesday I was worried. I looked all over, his phone was also switched off.”

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