The Minister further said that the next logical step would be ensuring refund of investors' hard-earned money, while a better collaborative strategy has been put in place among various departments to remove the regulatory lacunae exploited earlier by fraudsters.
"I would be fully satisfied if we were able to recover all the money people lost. This is the long and short of it," Pilot told PTI in an interview.
"Sometimes, the judicial process is rather slow for various reasons. But still, people have been charge-sheeted, people are in jail and people are being prosecuted and I don't think anybody is now allowed to go scot-free."
There have been a number of cases, including some high- profile matters like Saradha scam in West Bengal, where lakhs of investors were found to be robbed off their hard-earned money through illegal investment schemes, some of which were in the name of chit funds without being registered so.
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On various steps taken since Saradha scame came to light in April this year, the Minister said, "There is much more greater awareness among law enforcement agencies and they know that they need to be very very vigilant that people don't launch illegal schemes under the garb of collective investment schemes or some other cover-ups.
"Be it central government, state governments, RBI, Sebi or MCA, we all now have much better strategies to work together because we know now that how people have misused the loopholes.
While SFIO is already probing many companies for illegal schemes launched in West Bengal, Odisha, Tripura and Assam, some state governments have asked the Centre to launch a CBI enquiry, Pilot said.
"I have myself written to chief ministers, telling them that they should enact a law keeping in line with today's reality," he said.