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Enforcement Directorate files charges in Satyam case

Seeks prosecution of Raju brothers, 45 others and 166 alleged front companies for laundering ill-made money

BS Reporters Hyderabad
Last Updated : Jan 11 2018 | 8:40 AM IST
On Monday, the Enforcement Directorate (ED) formally sought prosecution at a court here in the Rs 7,200-crore Satyam Computer Services Ltd (SCSL) fraud of company founder B Ramalinga Raju and 47 others, including his kin. And, to proceed likewise against 166 companies under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA).

Prosecution of Raju and others is already on after the Central Bureau of Investigation’s probe into the entire affair.

The complaint filed before the XXI additional chief metropolitan magistrate stated Raju and other accused "derived proceeds of crime from sale or pledge of inflated shares of M/s SCSL. The accused also received bonus shares, shares under employee stock option schemes and dividends on the inflated shares of M/s SCSL and gained wrongfully".

The ED stated its investigation had revealed the "accused resorted to inter-connected transactions so as to ensure that crime proceeds were distanced from its initial beneficiaries and laundered the said proceeds under the cover of corporate veil, with an ulterior motive to project the properties so acquired as untainted ones".

According to the ED, Raju, "his relatives and associate members floated 327 front companies which were used to layer the proceeds of crime". It had also been found that the "accused have purchased movable and immovable properties in their names, in the name of front companies and in the name of their close relatives, associates who were also directors in the front companies".

The ED stated it had attached 350 immovable properties and five "moveable properties" valued at Rs 1,075 crore. It had also taken possession of most of the attached properties.

Last October, the ED stated it had attached Rs 822 crore of fixed that Satyam kept with four banks, in the ongoing case against the company promoter and others. The ED officials had served the attachment orders on Andhra Bank, Bank of Baroda, IDBI Bank and ING Vysya Bank pertaining to the FDs.

The agency said its investigation into the Satyam case was still on in India and abroad for "further identification of the proceeds of crime".

The Satyam story began to come out on December 16, 2008, when the information technology company made an aborted attempt to buy Maytas Infra and Maytas Properties, floated by the kin of the Satyam founder, for $1.6 billion. The company's reputation reached its nadir when Raju confessed to a years-old accounting fraud on January 7, 2009. Two days later, he was arrested, with his younger brother and managing director of Satyam. A day after, the government stepped in to save the company. The Company Law Board disbanded the Satyam board and on January 11 reconstituted it with three government-appointed members, Deepak Parekh, Kiran Karnik and C Achuthan.

Subsequently, the board appointed Deloitte and KPMG for a restatement of accounts. On January 16, the Satyam board was expanded with the government appointing three more directors, TN Manoharan, Tarun Das and S Balakrishna. On February 5, the new board appointed A S Murthy as chief executive and Homi Khushkoran  and Partho Datta as special advisers.

In April, 2009, Tech Mahindra took over Satyam. Subsequently, it renamed  the scam-hit company as Mahindra Satyam. Earlier this year, Satyam was merged with Tech Mahindra.

On February 16, 2009,  the government ordered a CBI probe into the case. The ED had also conducted an investigation. CBI has filed three chargesheets, of 650 pages, with over 3,000 supporting documents comprising 100,000 pages. In all, it named 697 witnesses.

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First Published: Oct 29 2013 | 12:47 AM IST

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