CBI sources said the shell companies were allegedly being used by the suspects to divert loan funds meant for specified purposes, creating fake invoices, and 'round-tripping' of funds to evade taxes and generate black money.
Round-tripping is sending money to tax havens abroad in the guise of payments for fake imports through shell companies and bringing back that money, showing it as "foreign investment".
The murky activities have been exposed during the CBI probe into various loan fraud cases involving 28 public sector banks and a private bank, the sources said.
Besides this, the agency is probing about 200 bank fraud cases involving funds of at least Rs 30,000 crore, they said.
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The CBI is prosecuting these companies for corruption and scheduled offences associated with it.
The agency has not only "exposed" these shell companies but also gathered enough material which would "plug" the possibility of them being used for any further operation, they claimed.
The sources said it was likely that the shell companies had been used to abet financial crimes by other offenders too which will be probed by other agencies.
The companies are spread across the country as also the 'tax-haven' countries facilitating transfer of black money, which makes the investigation even more difficult, they said.
It used over 98 shell companies to allegedly divert bank loans for setting up digital studios in Noida, Mumbai, Kolkata and other locations, the CBI had said.
These companies were allegedly used to divert funds by showing fake equity infusion to the tune of Rs 802 crore.
The Kolkata-based shell companies named in the case were allegedly controlled by one Muralidhar Lahoti. Three chartered accountants have also been chargesheeted in the case.
The company is accused of increasing its paid-up capital to Rs 500 crore by round-tripping and routing bank funds to the extent of Rs 460 crore through six shell companies.
The CBI had registered two cases against Jignesh Shah and Anjani Sinha of National Stock Exchange Limited, also known as the "NSEL scam", in which funds to the tune of Rs 342 crore were allegedly swindled.
In a recent case, the agency had found that a dental college existed only on paper, while a bank was told that the construction was completed and loan funds were diverted for purposes other than for which these were issued.
In many cases, the CBI found that the companies had peons, drivers, sanitation workers, personal staff, cooks etc as the directors of the shell companies created by those who divert funds using them, the sources said.
Recently, the Centre had expressed concern over the working of shell companies in the country. Revenue Secretary Hasmukh Adhia had said out of 15 lakh companies registered in the country, 9 lakh were not filing any returns and some among them may be acting as shell companies.
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