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Banking sector hit again: second scam of Rs 3,695 cr Rotomac

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Days after the Nirav Modi-PNB scam, the banking sector took another big hit with Rotomac pen promoter Vikram Kothari allegedly swindling Rs 3,695 crore from banks, prompting central probe agencies to register cases, question him and carry out searches at his Kanpur premises today. The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and the Enforcement Directorate(ED) are already probing two complaints from the Punjab National Bank (PNB) against billionaire diamantaire Nirav Modi and a jewellery company alleging fraudulent transactions worth about Rs 11,400 crore. The banks involved in Rotomac's case, in which the CBI as well as the ED have registered separate cases, with the defaulted loan amount in brackets were Bank of Baroda (Rs 456.53 crore), Bank of India (Rs 754.77 crore), Bank of Maharashtra (Rs 49.82 crore), Allahabad Bank (Rs 330.68 crore), Oriental Bank of Commerce (Rs 97.47 crore), Indian Overseas Bank (Rs 771.07 crore) and Union Bank of India (Rs 458.95 crore), the CBI said. It alleged the accused had cheated a consortium of seven banks by siphoning off bank loans to the tune of Rs 2,919 crore without interest and bank charges and total outstanding amount along with liabilities were pegged at Rs 3,695 crore. The news rattled the stock market as Union Bank shares fell by 8.50 per cent followed by Bank of Baroda which saw a dip of 5.48 per cent in its shares. Bank of India shares fell by 4.07 per cent followed by Allahabad Bank (3.45 per cent), Oriental Bank of Commerce (1.80 per cent), Bank of Maharashtra (1.25 per cent) and Indian Overseas Bank (0.60 per cent). The CBI case, which was registered after receiving a complaint from Bank of Baroda, names Kanpur-based Rotomac Global Pvt Limited, its director Vikram Kothari, his wife Sadhana Kothari, and son Rahul Kothari and unknwon bank officials. They have been booked under various sections of Indian Penal Code (IPC) related to cheating and forgery as well as Prevention of Corruption Act. Immediately after registering the case, the CBI carried out searches at three locations in Kanpur which included Kothari's residence and office premises. A CBI spokesperson said the agency is questioning Kothari, his wife and son. In a simultaneous action, the ED, a probe unit that functions under finance ministry, also registered a case of alleged money laundering against Rotomac pens' promoters which had the same set of accused as that of the CBI. In the scam involving Nirav Modi that surfaced barely a fortnight ago and rocked the banking sector, the crackdown on the diamantaire and his uncle Mehul Choksi continued today with the ED seizing Rs 22 crore worth jewellery, I-T department attaching seven properties, and the CBI grilling four senior executives of his company. Central Vigilance Commissioner K V Chowdary also swung into action, meeting officials of Punjab National Bank and Finance Ministry in connection with the Rs 11,400 crore fraud case. ED Chief Karnal Singh flew down to Mumbai to review the probe related to the PNB fraud. With the seizure of Rs 22 crore worth jewellery, the total value of gems and jewellery seized has gone up to Rs 5,671 crore. The probe agency also conducted searches at 38 other locations in various cities, including Mumbai, Pune, Aurangabad, Thane, Kolkata, Delhi, Jammu, Lucknow, Bengaluru and Surat. As part of the multi-agency probe, the Income Tax department today attached seven properties of the Gitanjali group and its promoter Mehul Choksi, uncle of Modi, in Mumbai. The CBI today questioned Vipul Ambani, President (Finance) of Modi's Fire Star Diamonds, Ravi Gupta, its Chief Financial Office besides Saurabh Sharma and Subhash Parab. Ambani is understood to be a relative of the late industrialist, Dhirubhai Ambani. A CBI spokesperson said PNB's Brady road branch was briefly sealed early this morning to prevent any "possible tampering" and desealed later in the day. The probe agency has also started interrogating 13 other PNB , including general manager-level officers, they said. CBI officials said the agency is still questioning arrested bank officials Gokulnath Shetty, who has retired, and Manoj Kharat, single window operator of the bank, and Hemant Bhat, signatory of Nirav Modi's company, to ascertain the exact magnitude of the alleged scam. The searches have seen PNB shares fall drastically from Rs 197 to Rs 113 in the last few days.

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First Published: Feb 19 2018 | 11:01 PM IST

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