New Scam in Town: A Journalist Recounts 28-Hour-Long ‘Digital Custody’

In what was a close shave with one of the many online scams going around, the author recounts how criminals posing as police officials held him in digital custody over Skype on the pretext of helping him avoid arrest.

I fell for a yarn, spun with intentions to defraud me, because it appeared so plausible in today’s India.

It started with an unknown number calling on my mobile before the night fog had cleared within my mind. That was the start of a nightmarish ordeal lasting almost twenty eight hours.

I barely comprehended fragments of the pre-recorded message read out by a male voice. All that registered was that I should dial ‘9’ to ensure that incoming calls continued being received on my phone. The message over, it began playing all over again. 

Before I could decide whether to respond or not, the call was automatically transferred and a live male began talking.

“Why have you called the telecom authority?” he asked in English. I asked if he meant the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI). 

Yes, he said, adding that he was from the ‘notification unit’. I explained that I had not called, and that it was the other way around. 

Unexpectedly, this person addressed me with my name and explained that a FIR had been registered against me as a phone number in my name sent numerous illegal messages and “harassing texts” to others.

“But, I do not use any other number,” I explained. Some more exchanges and this person disclosed the number 98……… was bought from a Mumbai market in April 2024 and read out an address and FIR number. 

“But, I haven’t been to Mumbai for almost two years.” 

“Then your identity must have been stolen. Have you given your Aadhar Card to anyone?”

“Only when I stayed in hotels and asked for address proof.”

“Someone must have got it and used it to secure this number. Anyway, since it is in your name, the FIR is against you.”

Even before the implication of his statement was fathomed, he said, “You have to report to the cyber crime cell of Mumbai in Colaba within the next two hours.”

“But, I live in Delhi NCR and cannot appear in such a short time.”

“In that case you have the option of this call being transferred to the cyber crime cell and an officer will speak to you. Do you agree?”

When I replied in the affirmative, the call was ‘transferred’ and a female voice began speaking with me, also in English. She identified herself as Neha Sharma.

She spoke sympathetically, saying that it was unfortunate that my identity was used to secure the SIM Card. 

“You should use masked Aadhar cards,” she advised. “But now that this has happened, we will have to go through the procedure to establish your innocence,” she added. 

The hint of affability triggered a faint manifestation of Stockholm syndrome and without me realising, common sense started deserting me. This of course was buttressed by the fact that with Aadhar becoming the ‘standard’ document to establish identity, its misuse was eminently possible.

I believed, what in hindsight, was clearly a tall story, was also due to the experience of having Delhi police search our residence last year. Nothing that was I was put through over the next 28 hours appeared odd or improbable, a clear manifestation of the idiomatic experience, once bitten twice shy. 

Moving on, at this point the woman claiming to represent the Mumbai Crime Branch asked me to join her on Skype. When I said that I stopped using it, she told me to download it on my phone.

It would be more convenient on the desktop computer, I said and she promptly agreed. Shortly, we were conversing over Skype – I used audio-video and she only audio. The logo of Greater Mumbai Police, prominently displayed in the centre of the box with the tag of ‘cybercrimemumbai9900’, was sufficient to convince me that I was indeed online with an officer from that cell, although she did not show her face. 

The same questions and charges were repeated, after which she informed me that a senior colleague would enter the ‘interrogation room’. This time it was a male voice and he introduced himself as Rahul Gupta from the Central Bureau of Investigations. 

I could not help being reminded of indiscriminate misuse of several investigative agencies, including the CBI, when fellow journalists and civil society members were raided and interned in jail for years. 

I chuckled at my fate and took solace in the fact that the police were not yet at my doorstep, but merely on the computer!

The demarcated box on the screen had his name, a ‘badge number’ that he read out and the CBI ‘logo’ in the background. He introduced Nisha Patel, as a ‘colleague’, and she too read out her badge number. 

“Actually, there is a more serious matter than the use of the phone in your name for illegal messages and harassing texts,” the so-called Rahul Gupta said.

After a brief lull he asked if I knew anyone called Naresh Goyal.

“I do not have anyone as a friend or in my professional circle with that name,” I said.

“You do not know Naresh Goyal?” he queried in a slightly castigatory tone.

“The founder of Jet Airways?” I asked.

“Do you have an account in Canara Bank?”

This question stumped me. I did once have an account in a South Delhi branch of the bank. It was opened way back in the early 1980s. I remembered operating the account, I said till 2001. But I had no recollection if I closed this account or not, maybe I did not ever shut it after withdrawing all the monies I disclosed.

Later when I enquired at the branch, it turned out that there was no account in my name.

But at that time, I was shaken when the man said that “your account has been used over the past few years to launder money to the tune of two to three crore rupees in the Naresh Goyal scam. And, you are actually a suspect in a money laundering case.”

The words dropped heavily. Although not an expert on this draconian law that has been amended to become severer in recent years, I was aware of the implication of being charged under this law.

The ‘CBI officer’ further said that he was charged to investigate the case and interrogate me as a ‘suspect’ and for that I was being taken in ‘digital custody.’ 

He added that as part of the protocol for such custody, I would be tracked by numerous cameras and microphones and that a web of AI had been created around our apartment and housing society. He further mentioned that the local police had been informed and promptly shared over Skype a document, ‘Consent to Terms of Digital Custody’.

I was further asked to read out aloud a 70-point ‘rules and regulations for a suspect under surveillance’. This document too was shared similarly.

My mind told me that what I was undergoing was nothing short of an Orwellian, dystopian nightmare, only that it was real! 

The self-called CBI ‘officer’ added to my rising apprehension over what lay in store for me by mentioning that under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), I would be arrested for 45 days during which there would be no access to either legal aid or family and friends.

As I mulled over this, he mentioned that I could avoid arrest by undergoing ‘priority investigation’ but for this the permission of the Supreme Court was required. 

To secure this, ‘CBI’ would move my application in audio-video format and submit it to the Judge. For this, a text in my name and addressed to the Court was shared which I read out into the camera.

By this time I had also taken pictures of medicines that I take daily for ‘clearance’ from the ‘medical board’ and I had them only after ‘permission’ was granted. By the time the ‘application’ was recorded for the Supreme Court, in hindsight, I had become their virtual ‘slave’ and followed every instruction.

The ‘officer’ repeatedly stated that his job was ‘not to prove’ my guilt but ‘innocence’ and this could be done only if I followed directions to the letter. By then, I was permitted to go to the toilet and have breakfast (both with due ‘permission’).

I was asked to wait while the application was submitted to the court and it was afternoon when the man reappeared, but this time he spoke in a worried voice. He told me that their lawyers said my application, in its present form, without details of my financial status, would be ‘thrown out’ by the apex court judge. 

To ‘prepare’ my papers to seek ‘priority investigation’ he questioned related to my economic profile – bank account details, total earnings, details of income tax returns, whether or not I had fixed deposits, if I had a public provident fund account, whether I invested in shares, details of Mutual Funds.

When he figured that all my savings were in mutual funds (MF), he came up with a fresh ‘problem’.

“The government can access your account but we have no control over MFs, so you will have to redeem these and move to your account.”

Over the next hour this ‘officer’ got me to speak on the phone (over speaker) to the person who manages my funds and direct him to redeem ‘all’ my MFs. I added that I would explain the reason for this strange request at a later date. Subsequently, as per norms, I authorised the redemptions.

Hereafter, this ‘officer’ and the woman from ‘cyber crime’ Mumbai began ‘interrogating’ me – 700 questions I was told would be put, for which they ‘had’ all the answers but wished to verify my ‘honesty.

I presumed wrongly that once over, I would be ‘released’. Well past 9 pm I was informed that the ‘interrogation’ would be suspended for the day and I could have my dinner but I would have to sleep in front of the camera. For this, I was directed to rearrange my camera so I could be seen while being alone in the room of ‘digital custody’.

Throughout the entire ordeal, I barely spoke to my family, save when I went to fetch water. This was one of the rules I was to follow – not intimating others of my ‘interrogation’. I told them, what I believed was my state – that I was in ‘digital custody’ of CBI and Cyber Crime Cell and was not to inform anyone of this.

Next morning, I was told over Skype to get up and prepare for the next round of ‘interrogation’. The ‘CBI’ man promptly asked whether the MF funds had been redeemed to my account or not.

That was when the first alarm sounded inside my head – how come the CBI officer did not know that MF redemptions take at least 48 to 72 hours, at times even more.

The next alarm sounded when this man informed me that I would remain under ‘digital custody’ till all funds were transferred to my bank account. But, still believing in the accusatory story of my Canara Bank account being ‘used’ for money laundering, I began coming to terms with the ‘certainty’ that the government would ‘freeze’ my account once every rupee of my savings was redeemed into it.

Despite not doubting what I now know was a web of untruth, I sought ‘permission’ to fetch water and out on that ruse, asked my family members to contact a few friends.

Several minutes later, they stood at the door of our study (not in camera range) and gesticulated vigorously for me to come out. I provided another excuse and walked out.

The family whispered in voices laden with anxiety and fear. “[Redacted] said, ‘get him out, this is nothing but a scam’.”

One of us switched off the Wi-Fi as our friend advised. Further details from their conversations poured out thereafter. All had said that prima facie it appeared a major scam, that there was nothing called ‘digital custody’.

The first task was to check if my bank account was still secure and we had lost no money. Once this was secured, more advice poured in – changing passwords and ‘secret question’ were among those.

The harrowing experience is over but its memory remains. Later we learnt that an elderly lady in the capital city had not been so lucky and lost 83 lakh rupees a fortnight ago. It was the same modus operandi, except that the jargon used in her case was ‘digital arrest’. Additionally, the accusation in my case was not just of sending objectionable messages, but money laundering too.

I fell for this con job for a few reasons that must be comprehended. 

One, the experience in last year with the police and that our gadgets and other research papers are still with the them. Two, over the years, the state has become more Orwellian and any form of penalisation is possible.

Three, no standard operating procedure has been framed and publicised for methods and tactics that investigative agencies and other law enforcing institutions are entitled to use during investigations, especially for white collar and non-violent crimes.

I believed in this extraordinary tale that is full of loopholes because of the sense that anyone can be hauled up. Being an honest citizen and engaging in one’s chosen profession within the boundaries of law is not sufficient to escape harassment at the hand of the officialdom.

And finally, there is no redressal mechanism either. The government publicises a ‘helpline’ number – 1930. It merely asked me to file the complaint on the website – www.cybercrime.gov.in. Even after the complaint is filed, the onus remains with the complainant to pursue the department. 

Law enforcers are not playing a proactive role in coming to the aid of citizens targeted by online fraudsters and investigating cyber crimes. 

Not everyone has friends like us who can immediately ‘evacuate’ persons in the clutches of online criminals. With the rising graph of cyber crimes and online fraud, it is time that law and order machineries step up their responsibilities.

Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay is an author and journalist based in Delhi-NCR. He has written several books including Narendra Modi: The Man, The Times’. His X handle is @NilanjanUdwin.

Tamil Film Actress Gautami Resigns From BJP Alleging Senior Members Enabled Fraud

The actress accused senior members of the BJP of enabling one C. Alagappan in “dodging justice”. She had filed a police complaint against him last month for allegedly misappropriating properties.

New Delhi: Tamil cinema actress Gautami Tadimalla resigned from the BJP on Monday (October 23) saying that party members enabled a man who had defrauded her.

“…Today I stand at an unimaginable crisis point in my life and find that not only do I not have any support from the party and leaders [sic], but it has also come to my knowledge that several amongst them have been actively helping and supporting the very person who has betrayed my trust and cheated me of my life earnings,” Tadimalla wrote in her resignation letter.

Naming this person as C. Alagappan, Tadimalla said he took advantage of her vulnerability as a grieving daughter and the single mother of an infant child around 20 years ago to defraud her with respect to the sale of her land.

“I am at the point where my daughter and I should have been settled, safe and secure, and yet I found to my horror that Mr C. Alagappan has swindled me of my money, property and documents,” she also said in her letter.

Last month, Tadimalla lodged a police complaint against Alagappan and his wife alleging that they misappropriated funds and properties worth Rs 25 crore, the Times of India reported.

“As my health deteriorated due to cancer in 2004, I gave my power of attorney to Alagappan to process the properties for sale,” Tadimalla said according to TOI.

She also accused Alagappan of threatening her and her daughter after she tried to get her properties back from him.

In her resignation letter, Tadimalla alleged that “several senior members of the BJP have been enabling Mr Alagappan in dodging justice and absconding since the last 40 days even after the FIRs have been filed”.

She said that although the judicial process has been “inexplicably dragging on”, she hoped that justice would prevail.

The actress also claimed that the BJP had promised her a ticket from Tamil Nadu’s Rajapalayam constituency for the 2021 assembly election but rescinded their offer at the last minute.

Wirecard: How Germany’s Fraudulent Fintech Star Was Exposed

More than two years after the collapse of the digital payments firm Wirecard, ex-CEO Markus Brown and two managers go on trial in Munich.

Wirecard CEO Markus Braun was “The Godfather” of an elaborate scheme to defraud investors in the fintech star Wirecard, a former German lawmaker told DW ahead of the opening of a trial into the scandal on Thursday.

Fabio De Masi, a former lawmaker for Germany’s socialist Left Party who sat on a parliamentary inquiry into the Wirecard affair, said “Mr. Braun was not a victim but The Godfather of the criminal operation.”

De Masi recalled parliament’s 675-page report on Wirecard, published last year, that established that Braun was involved in signing off on funds to third-party firms despite warnings that he was giving away “the last liquidity of Wirecard.”

What was Wirecard?

Wirecard was once the poster child for Germany’s financial technology sector. The firm began life in 1999 as an online payment processor for porn and gambling websites and grew a stable stream of revenue that helped it survive the dot-com bust. The company built up a wider base of retail clients thanks to the global boom in online shopping and, later, mobile payments.

Under CEO Markus Braun, a former KMPG consultant who joined in 2002, the company grew at breakneck speed, swallowing up smaller payment firms and expanding into banking. It even launched a joint venture with China’s e-commerce giant Alipay to allow Chinese tourists to pay for goods and services while abroad.

Wirecard was listed on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange in 2005 and 13 years later, it knocked traditional lender Commerzbank out of the blue-chip DAX index. At its peak, the company was valued at more than €24 billion ($25 billion), outweighing even Deutsche Bank.

What brought down Wirecard?

In 2016, US financial investigative research firm Zatarra issued a negative report on Wirecard, alleging fraudulent activity at the firm.  It accused senior executives of committing money laundering and defrauding Visa and Mastercard.

Three years later, Financial Times journalist Dan McCrum picked up on the scandal, alleging accounting irregularities at Wirecard’s Asian units in a series of articles.

By June 2020, the company admitted to auditor EY that €1.9 billion in cash meant to be held in two Philippine accounts likely didn’t exist. Wirecard’s share price plummeted by 99% and it became the first DAX company to file for insolvency, owing creditors nearly €4 billion.

The logo of Wirecard AG is pictured at its headquarters in Aschheim, near Munich, Germany, July 1, 2020. Photo: Reuters/Andreas Gebert

An FT investigation found that third-party acquirers (TPAs) —  businesses that processed payments for Wirecard where it lacked its own license to operate —  accounted for around half of Wirecard’s reported revenues and a large chunk of its profits. But an address for one such firm led to a family home in the Philippines. Another was a Manila bus company.

Wirecard’s auditor EY, who signed off on the firm’s accounts for a decade, also faced sharp criticism and is now being sued by Wirecard shareholders. EY has said it acted professionally.

The government of then Chancellor Angela Merkel briefly considered bailing out the company and her then Finance Minister, now Chancellor, Olaf Scholz was censured for bungling oversight of the company. Scholz told a parliamentary inquiry that most of the fraud happened before his tenure.

The scandal also revealed that Germany’s market regulator BaFin had not only failed to spot the fraud —  despite the suspicions raised by investigative journalists and financial market analysts — it had instead filed criminal complaints against two FT journalists, claiming market manipulation, which were later dropped.

De Masi told DW that the official reaction to the negative media reports was “scandalous,” as the public prosecutor initiated a short-selling ban on Wirecard shares “based on a wild conspiracy theory that Bloomberg conspired to blackmail Wirecard.”

The embarrassment forced the resignation of BaFin’s chief and the head of Germany’s accounting watchdog and even spawned a Netflix documentary, recounted by McCrum.

“Many didn’t want to believe that fraudsters were at work at Wirecard,” Volker Bruehl, a professor at the Center for Financial Studies in Frankfurt, told Agence France-Presse.

What is the court case about?

Braun and two other high-ranking Wirecard managers go on trial in Munich on Thursday, accused of inflating earnings through fictitious transactions involving a complex web of subsidiaries and partner companies.

Oliver Bellenhaus, the former head of Wirecard’s Dubai subsidiary, and Stephan von Erffa, another former executive, are also accused.

Prosecutors will argue that the trio presented inaccurate financial results for 2015-2018 by including revenues from TPA companies in Dubai, the Philippines and Singapore that “did not actually exist.”

The three men could face up to 15 years in jail if convicted of several charges, including fraud and market manipulation.

Braun, who has been in custody since the summer of 2020, denies wrongdoing and accuses others of running a shadow operation without his knowledge.

The prosecution has said Wirecard’s management invented vast sums of phantom revenue to hoodwink investors and creditors.

Wirecard’s former boss Markus Braun testifies before a German parliamentary committee in Berlin, Germany, November 19, 2020. Photo: Reuters/Fabrizio Bensch/Pool

Prosecutors have written a 474-page indictment, following hundreds of interrogations, dozens of property searches, and after having sifted through 42 terabytes of data.

Authorities in more than two dozen countries took part, from Switzerland to Singapore, Austria, the Philippines, Britain and Russia.

A verdict is not expected until 2024 at the earliest.

“In my view, Wirecard was a major money laundering entity with close ties to organized crime and secret services. The third-party companies (TPAs) were not just shell companies with fake transactions, they outsourced legal risks from Wirecard by recycling dirty money,” De Masi told DW.

One of the accused remains on the run

The Wirecard affair will not be complete without the testimony of former Chief Operating Officer Jan Marsalek, who Braun has painted as the mastermind behind the fraud.

Marsalek vanished when the scandal unfolded by faking an elaborate escape to China via the Philippines, while in reality he was bound for Moscow via Belarus on a private jet.

He remains on Europol’s wanted list and is thought to be living under a new identity in Moscow , protected by the Kremlin, having been helped to disappear by a former Austrian intelligence officer and a far-right politician.

With his connections to Russian intelligence agencies and his one-time bid to assemble a Libyan militia, the party-loving Marsalek remains shrouded in mystery.

This article was originally published on DW.

ED Visits Shiv Sena Leader Adsul’s Mumbai Premises To Serve Summons

The 74-year-old Adsul, however, complained of a health issue and was taken to hospital by his family.

Mumbai: The Enforcement Directorate (ED) on Monday visited the premises of Shiv Sena leader and former MP Anandrao Adsul in Mumbai to serve him summons for questioning in a money laundering case, official sources said.

The 74-year-old Adsul, however, complained of a health issue and was taken to hospital by his family, the sources added.

The ED case against Adsul pertains to an alleged Rs 980 crore worth financial irregularities in the City Cooperative Bank. The money laundering case is based on a first information report (FIR) of the Mumbai Police economic offences wing (EOW) into the alleged irregularities in disbursement of loan funds and other financial transactions in the bank.

Adsul, a former chairman of the bank, was the one who got this complaint registered with the police.

Adsul had represented the Amravati seat in Lok Sabha. He lost to Navneet Kaur Rana, an independent MP, from the same seat in the 2019 general elections.

Adsul later challenged the veracity of the caste certificate of the sitting MP and the Bombay high court gave a verdict cancelling the caste certificate of Rana. The Supreme Court has, however, stayed the Bombay high court verdict.

The ED had earlier carried out raids in this case and had been wanting to question Adsul and some others, they said.

(PTI)

How the English Language Skills of Young Women Allow Punjabi Youths to Bypass Emigration Rules

In a contract marriage, a woman qualified to study abroad marries a man who wishes to emigrate on the understanding that he will fund her university expenses and she will send for him via a spouse visa.

Chandigarh: In 2018, when Balwinder Singh, a farmer from Dhanaula village in Punjab’s Barnala district realised that the five acres of land he owned were not enough to give his son Lovepreet a secure future, he considered sending the young man to settle in Canada.

This was not a startling thought. In the last few decades, people from Punjab have been making their way in large numbers to countries like Canada, the USA and Australia, creating a huge Punjabi diaspora abroad.

But Lovepreet had only passed his higher secondary exams and did not have the English language skills and other requisite qualifications to apply for a student visa to Canada. 

So the family worked out an alternative arrangement. In the nearby village of Khudi Kalan, they found a girl to marry Lovepreet. Beant Kaur was a distant relative and had all the necessary qualifications – including a high score in the International English Language Testing System (IELTS), an international standardised test of English language proficiency for non-native English speakers – needed to easily get a student visa for Canada. The student visa would lead to a work permit for the young woman and then a spouse visa would allow Lovepreet to move to Canada as well. After that, Beant and Lovepreet could separate or divorce if they wanted to.

The arrangement began well. Lovepreet’s family provided close to Rs. 25 lakh to send Beant abroad and Beant left for Ontario on August 19, 2018, to study computer science. A year later, she returned to Barnala to marry Lovepreet on August 7. Ten days later, she departed for Ontario again, promising Lovepreet that she would soon send for him. 

But within weeks of her return to Canada, Beant started avoiding Lovepreet’s messages. As time passed, Lovepreet began to realise that she had no intention of keeping her side of the bargain. Then, early on the morning of June 23, 2021, Lovepreet died under mysterious circumstances, his body found in the family’s fields, leaving his parents wondering if the failure of the arrangement with Beant had led the young man to take his own life.

The marriage route

Many Punjabi men find it difficult to clear the IELTS exam, without which they have no chance of applying to international universities. So it has become a more or less routine practice, if they are determined to settle abroad, for them to enter into ‘contract marriages’ with young women who have all the necessary qualifications for admission to Western universities. This has not only created a law and order problem for Punjab but has also become another route to bypassing the legal provisions for emigration to foreign countries. 

Both Lovepreet’s and Beant’s families claim that the marriage of the two young people was not contractual. Lovepreet’s uncle, Paramjeet Singh, in a conversation over the phone with The Wire, also denied that the marriage was fake. But he acknowledged that the idea behind it was to ensure that Lovepreet got to settle abroad. 

“It was not wrong. Every parent wants their child to be well settled. With just five acres of land, Lovepreet had no future here. But the girl cheated Lovepreet after she settled abroad and this forced him to die by suicide,” alleged Paramjeet. 

Also read: Amarinder Singh’s Show of Strength With 55 MLAs, 8 MPs Amid Tussle With Sidhu

Paramjit became certain that Lovepreet had died by suicide when, a few days after the young man’s death, the family began scanning the messaging apps on Lovepreet’s phone. 

“There were long WhatsApp chats between Lovepreet and Beant which showed that Beant Kaur had had no intention to send a spouse visa for Lovepreet,” said Paramjeet. “This sent him into a depression and led him to end his life.” 

Lovepreet’s parents wanted a first information report (FIR) filed against Beant Kaur. “But when the police delayed the procedure, the family leaked the WhatsApp conversations between Lovepreet and Beant to the media. This later went viral on various social media platforms,” said Paramjeet. 

After that, Beant, who had told the media that she was innocent, began to be vilified on social media. Manisha Gulati, the Punjab State Women’s Commission chairperson, met Lovepreet’s family in Dhanaula and assured them of justice. The police were pressured to register an FIR against Beant and the young woman was booked on July 27 on a cheating charge. Lovepreet’s family also began pushing the police to add the charge of abetment of suicide to the FIR against Beant.

Manisha Gulati, Punjab State Women’s Commission Chairperson. Source: Facebook/ManishaGulatiOfficial

“We demand that the police charge the girl for abetment to suicide and start the process for her extradition from Canada to face a trial in India,” said Paramjeet. “We met the Barnala superintendent of police on Monday and he assured us that the police would act if Lovepreet’s viscera report showed the possibility of suicide.”

3 years, 186 complaints 

According to the non-resident Indians (NRI) wing of the Punjab Police, there have been as many as 186 complaints with regard to contract marriages in the state since 2019, each claiming that the woman cheated the man after she went abroad.  Based on these complaints, 30 FIRs have been registered so far. 

But many contract marriage complaints end in a compromise between the parties concerned, as happened with Jaswinder Dhaliwal, a young man from Barnala, who in 2020 married a woman with suitable IELTS qualifications with the aim to settle in Canada, but was instead cheated like Lovepreet before him. 

“My family spent nearly Rs. 25 lakh to send the girl to Canada. But a few months later, she began ignoring me and stopped taking my calls,” Jaswinder told The Wire. “When I spoke to the girl’s father, he showed no interest in the matter. Then the girl’s family filed a false complaint of harassment against us and in return, we filed a case of fraud against them. In the end, a compromise was reached and the girl’s family returned Rs. 9 lakh that they had received from my family.”

The compromise between the two families was reached this February and a divorce between Jaswinder and his wife is now pending in the family court.

Jaswinder had agreed to a contract marriage because he could see no other way to achieve his aim to settle abroad. “To qualify for admission in a Canadian university, you need a 6.5 band in the IELTS exam overall,” he explained. “But despite repeated attempts at the exam, many men fail to qualify in the range that Canadian authorities demand. Then their families begin to explore other ways to send their kids abroad, which often leads to different problems.” 

Desperate to leave

Contract marriage frauds arise because of a certain desperation among the young people of Punjab to settle elsewhere in the world.

According to Ranjit Singh Ghuman, professor of economics at the Centre for Research in Rural and Industrial Development, Chandigarh, this desperation to move abroad is due to the lack of job opportunities in the state. 

“Punjab could not be developed as an economic hub like other states of India. Therefore the youth in Punjab do not have the kind of job and business opportunities they aspire to,” said Ranjit Singh. “When they hear the success stories of super rich Punjabis settled abroad, they become naturally inclined towards finding ways, whether legal or illegal, to settle abroad.” 

The urge of Punjabis to migrate has its roots in colonial history, according to a 2013 study by Viresh Kumar Bhawra, the former director general of police in Punjab, titled Migration from India to the EU: Evidence from the Punjab. The study showed that a regular pattern of migration from Punjab began with the induction of Sikhs into the Indian Army after the British annexation of Punjab in 1849. 

Sikh soldiers were taken to distant places under the British Empire. The soldiers who returned brought back stories about foreign lands that led enterprising young men to travel to the British colonies to seek their fortunes, the study pointed out.

Over the years, as borders around the world tightened, many of the emigrations from Punjab have been illegal. There are several ways to illegally enter foreign countries. One is the well-known ‘donkey system’, in which migrants enter the country they are aiming for via multiple stops in other countries. This is a popular but dangerous method that has already killed many young Punjabis in the jungles of Mexico as they tried to cross the US border illegally. 

The IELTS contract marriage is now another way to bypass the legal emigration system. The couple is legally married before one spouse sets off to the target foreign country where, after some time, the other spouse is legally permitted to enter.

Also read: Education Was Always a Struggle in Bastar. The Pandemic Has Made it Near Impossible.

Although it is possible that IELTS coaching centres, travel agents or immigration firms are involved in fixing contract marriage deals, there is no evidence so far that this is a large-scale racket. Instead, marriage contracts are usually arranged via personal contacts and are also openly called for in matrimonial advertisements in Punjabi newspapers. 

For example, a recent matrimonial advertisement in a Punjabi language newspaper said, “A bride is needed with a 6 band IELTS score, father in government job (sic)”.

Another advertisement said, “Needed a girl willing to settle abroad. The expenses will be borne by the boy’s family (sic)”. 

Yet another matrimonial advertisement said, “IELTS girl is needed, the boy is Jatt, we will spend the money (sic)”. 

No solution

Jaswinder Dhaliwal, who now runs a small, informal support group for other men in the same situation as he had been, has become something of an expert on contract marriages. 

“Whenever we hear of a new case of contract marriage fraud, we help the boy in the police case and other legal procedures,” he told The Wire. “Before the news of Lovepreet’s case went viral, my group had 10-12 members. Now we have more than 60 members.”

The weddings of couples involved in contract marriages are generally low-key affairs, Jaswinder told The Wire. “Only a handful of people attend. After the wedding, the girl does not stay with the boy’s family,” he said. “Meanwhile, the boy’s family arranges to send the girl abroad. If everything goes well, the boy gets the spouse visa and the couple later file for a divorce.”

Not all failures of contract marriages can be attributed to deliberate fraud, said Jaswinder. “Perhaps some of the girls fall into serious relationships when they are abroad. Then their so-called marriages become an embarrassment to them. For example, Lovepreet’s wife had been in a relationship with someone else,” he said.

But even when cases of fraud are filed, Jaswinder added, the police and court procedures are lengthy and tedious. “Since the repatriation of the girl in question is almost impossible, our only legal remedy is to get her Indian passport revoked after declaring her proclaimed [a] offender during the trial,” he said.

It is difficult to stop a practice like contract marriages in a country where arranged marriages are the norm. The only suggestion offered by Amardeep Singh Rai, Punjab’s additional director general of police in charge of NRI affairs, is to spread awareness of the dangers of illegal immigration. The state issues advisories from time to time asking people not to indulge in the use of illegal means to settle abroad, Rai told The Wire

“The Punjab government has also created a foreign placement and foreign study centre where we provide online guidance to students on how they can migrate abroad and get the right studies and jobs. This is a government initiative to discourage the practice of illegal settlement in overseas countries,” added Rai.

Even Justin Trudeau, the prime minister of Canada, could not offer a better solution to this problem than to point out that aspiring immigrants to Canada must protect themselves from fraud.

Trudeau said this at a media briefing in Canada last month in response to a letter from Manisha Gulati, the Punjab State Women’s Commission chairperson, which had raised the issue of the exploitation of Punjabi youth in the name of Canadian citizenship and urged Trudeau to take rapid and stringent action to stop this exploitation and bring the culprits to justice. 

“There are legitimate immigration consultants who can help you with the processes but there are too many people who are making promises to vulnerable people that they simply cannot back up. Again, the government of Canada has taken a number of steps to crack down on fraudulent immigration consultants,” Trudeau had said at the briefing.

He had added, “That’s why I would encourage everyone to consult the official government of Canada website for information on how to protect themselves from fraud extortionists and criminals who will try and take your money and not deliver you the promise of coming to Canada.”

Effect on the state

Whether migration from Punjab to foreign countries is legal or illegal, migration results in major economic losses for the state, Ranjit Singh told The Wire.

“Punjab loses the benefit of its population and demographic dividend. Besides, a lot of money goes abroad to foreign universities in the shape of fees and other expenditure,” he said. 

Still, illegal emigration has a worse effect on Punjab than legal emigration, he added. “If the emigration is legal, there is a chance for the state to get foreign remittances from its overseas residents. But it takes years for illegal immigrants to get the legal status to stay and legally earn money. And if they are arrested and deported back to Punjab, it ends up creating a host of social and economic problems for the state,” he said. 

According to former sociology professor Manjit Singh, several studies have shown that students and legal emigrants spend between Rs. 20,000 – 30,000 crores every year to study or settle abroad. This money, he pointed out, could help strengthen the local economy. The fact that it goes overseas instead, he added, shows a failure on the part of the state to create an environment where young people are inspired to remain and help grow the economy.  

“In Punjab, there is a dearth of employment,” said Manjit Singh. “There is no quality education as well. Business opportunities are limited. Besides, parents are worried that their children will fall into drug addiction if they remain here. That is why many Punjabis want to settle abroad by any means possible. ”

He added: “If people get the right opportunities at their doorstep, this kind of mad rush to settle abroad will no longer exist.” 

Crores Stolen Through Internal Fraud at Mumbai Provident Fund Office: Report

Six employees reportedly made away with Rs 21 crore from one of the organisation’s pooled funds.

New Delhi: The Employees Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) has reportedly become the victim of fraud as a sum of Rs 21 crore has allegedly been stolen from a common Provident Fund (PF) pool by a group of employees from within the organisation. A report by the Indian Express, which gained access to an ongoing internal investigation, claims the mastermind behind the operation is 37-year-old Chandan Kumar Sinha, a clerk at the EPFO’s office in Kandivali, Mumbai. 

Sinha, along with five other EPFO employees, reportedly withdrew the funds as PF claims and deposited them in 817 bank accounts belonging mainly to migrant workers. While the six suspected employees have been suspended, the Indian Express report claims that 90% of the misappropriated funds have already been removed from these accounts.

The missing money was taken from a pooled fund, deposits to which are made every month by organisations registered with the EPFO, generally for investments in government securities. Akin to a bank robbery, as one senior official of the organisation put it, the money that was stolen did not belong to individuals but rather to the organisation itself.

The EPFO manages around Rs 18 lakh, directly or indirectly, and is one of the world’s largest social security organisations. Prompted by the scale of this misappropriation, it is taking steps to secure all withdrawals and has even broadened the scope of its internal audit to include PF claims approved by the Kandivali office from March, 2019 to April, 2021 – up to 12 lakh claims. Moreover, following the audit, the EPFO reportedly plans to hand over the case to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).

Work from home prompted lax security

A case of such large-scale fraud at a social security office raises many security concerns. Pandemic-related job cuts at the organisation had led to multiple responsibilities being assigned to employees relating to verifications and approvals to manage withdrawals. Additionally, senior officers who chose to work from home during the lockdown had shared their passwords with the suspects, not bothering to change them after any work was done. Couple this with the fact that only PF withdrawals exceeding the amount of Rs five lakh require additional authorisation from a second officer, and the loophole which the suspects exploited becomes clear.

Sinha and his associates allegedly made withdrawals of only Rs one-three lakh to avoid raising any flags within the system. Then, with the help of his colleague Abhijit Onekar, Sinha secured the bank and Aadhaar details of unemployed migrant labourers by paying them a “commission” of Rs 5,000. PF accounts were then opened in the names of these workers where they were listed as employees of Mumbai-based companies which had shuttered up to 15 years ago.

The Indian Express report listed the companies: B Vijay Kumar Jewellers Pvt Ltd, Landmark Jewellery Pvt Ltd, New Nirmal Industries, Sathee Wear Corporation and National Wires. All of these companies are thought to have shut shop in 2006.

As noted by an EPFO official, Sinha’s understanding of the loopholes of the organisation’s accounting process also aided him in pulling off the scam. For example, the EPFO does not follow ‘double-entry bookkeeping’ practices for companies which are no longer operational. Double-entry bookkeeping requires an entry in one account to always be accompanied by a corresponding entry in the other account involved. Since this practice was not in place, Sinha was able to make these deposits without arousing any suspicion. 

This scam may have gone on for longer had an alleged anonymous complaint from one of Sinha’s relatives not tipped off the organisation’s officials. Apparently Sinha was using his ill-gotten gains for extravagant purchases such as luxury cars and motorcycles which made his relative jealous. After the scam was unearthed in July 2021, Sinha reportedly checked into a local hospital and has absconded since.

The revelations of the case have prompted increased security measures within the EPFO, such as the need to change passwords which access the organisation’s systems every 15 days. Senior officers have also been told to double-check the systems and processes in their respective domains and to stop assigning multiple roles to their employees.

In terms of damage control, the organisation has reportedly been in touch with banks to freeze the 817 spurious accounts and attempts are being made to retrieve assets purchased by the accused members from the misappropriated money. Slightly over Rs 2 crore have been retrieved so far.

Brazil: Angry With Probe, Bolsonaro Threatens to Act Beyond Constitution

Critics say Bolsonaro, like former U.S. President Donald Trump, is sowing doubts in case he loses in 2022. He has already threatened not to accept the result if the system is not changed.

Rio De Janerio: Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro on Wednesday raged against a Supreme Court investigation into his conduct and threatened to respond outside the limits of the constitution, escalating the clash between the far-right leader and the judiciary.

Bolsonaro’s comments came after Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes approved an investigation into the president’s unfounded accusations that Brazil’s electronic voting system is vulnerable to fraud.

“This investigation is not within the bounds of the constitution, so the antidote to this is also not within the bounds of the constitution,” Bolsonaro said on social media, without specifying further the nature of the threat.

Bolsonaro, who is expected to seek a second term in 2022, has repeatedly said Brazil’s electronic voting system is vulnerable to fraud without providing evidence.

Critics say Bolsonaro, like former U.S. President Donald Trump, is sowing doubts in case he loses in 2022. He has already threatened not to accept the result if the system is not changed.

Bolsonaro is calling for adoption of printed receipts that can be counted if any election result is disputed, a paper trail that would change the current all-electronic voting system. A proposal to that effect is currently with Congress, with a committee set to vote on it on Thursday. Analysts believe it has little chance of becoming law.

The president has called for people to take to the streets, and last weekend thousands of his supporters held demonstrations in several cities backing his proposal.

(Reuters)

MP: IAS Officer Arrested for Allegedly Forging Court Order Acquitting Him in Assault Case

The officer, Santosh Verma, was promoted to the IAS from state cadre after producing the purported court order.

New Delhi: An IAS officer in Madhya Pradesh has been arrested for allegedly forging court orders which showed he was acquitted in a case of assault that was filed against him five years ago.

According to the Indian Express, the officer, Santosh Verma, was promoted to the IAS from the state cadre after producing the purported court order. He is currently additional commissioner in the Urban Administration and Development Department in Bhopal.

The alleged fraud came to light when the Indore Police opened an investigation on the complaint of judicial magistrate (first class) Vijendra Singh Rawat stating that some unidentified people had made fraudulent documents of his court.

A case was registered against Verma under IPC Sections 420 (forgery), 467 (forgery of valuable security), 471 (using forged documents as genuine) and 120B (criminal conspiracy), the report added.

According to the Times of India, this is the first time that an IAS officer in Madhya Pradesh has been arrested on such a charge.

Also read: MP: FIR against Congress MLA Who Inaugurated Bridge in Shivraj Singh Chouhan’s Constituency

In 2016, a woman had filed a complaint accusing Verma of assault, abuse and criminal intimidation. The complaint was lodged at Indore’s Lasudia police station.

According to news reports, Verma’s promotion to the IAS had been held up due to the cases against him. On October 6, 2019, Verma was asked to submit details of these pending cases. After two days, Verma produced a “settlement order” on the dispute with the woman and an “acquittal order”. Following this, on October 15, Verma was promoted to the IAS.

When the woman came to know of it, she wrote to the chief secretary saying there has been no court ruling regarding settlement and acquittal, TOI reported. The investigation was going on in the case when the judge filed a formal complaint on June 27.

Verma was posted to his current position in March 2021.

During the period when Verma committed the alleged fraud, Rawat was on leave.

‘India Sent Jet to Dominica With Mehul Choksi’s Deportation Documents’: Antiguan PM

A private jet at the Douglas-Charles airport led to speculation on Choksi’s deportation.

New Delhi: India sent a private jet to Dominica, carrying documents related to the deportation of fugitive businessman Mehul Choksi, wanted in a Rs 13,500 crore bank loan fraud case, Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda Gaston Browne told a radio show in his country.

There was, however, no immediate official confirmation from Indian authorities about it.

A Qatar Airways private jet landed at the Douglas-Charles airport in Dominica, Antigua News Room reported, leading to speculations about deportation of Choksi who was detained in the Caribbean island nation after his mysterious disappearance from neighbouring Antigua and Barbuda.

Browne told the radio show that the jet came from India carrying necessary documentation needed for deportation of the businessman, the media outlet reported.

Publicly available data of Qatar Executive flight A7CEE shows that it left the Delhi airport at 3:44 pm on May 28 and reached Dominica at 13:16 local time on the same day, via Madrid.

Also read: Mehul Choksi Arrested in Dominica, ‘Hand Him to India Directly,’ Says Antigua and Barbuda PM

The Dominica High Court has stayed the removal of Choksi from its soil and put a gag order on the developments till the matter is heard in an open court on June 2.

Choksi has alleged that he was abducted from Jolly Harbour in Antigua and Barbuda by policemen looking Antiguan and Indian, and taken to Dominica.

Purported pictures of 62-year-old Choksi that have surfaced in Dominica show him with a red swollen eye and bruises on his hands.

Choksi and his nephew Nirav Modi are wanted for allegedly siphoning Rs 13,500 crore of public money from the state-run Punjab National Bank (PNB) using letters of undertaking.

While Modi is in a London prison after being repeatedly denied bail and is contesting his extradition to India, Choksi took citizenship of Antigua and Barbuda in 2017 using the Citizenship by Investment programme before fleeing India in the first week of January 2018. The scam came to light subsequently.

Both are facing a CBI probe.

UK Court Extends Nirav Modi’s Remand Till January 7

The final hearings in the extradition case are scheduled over two days, on January 7 and 8 next year.

London: Fugitive diamond merchant Nirav Modi, wanted in India in connection with the US $ 2 billion (estimated) Punjab National Bank (PNB) scam case, was further remanded in custody until January 7, on Tuesday by a UK court hearing his extradition case.

The 49-year-old businessman, who has been behind bars at Wandsworth Prison in south-west London since his arrest last year, following India’s extradition request for him, appeared via videolink for a routine 28-day remand hearing on Tuesday before Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London.

The final hearings in the extradition case are scheduled over two days, on January 7 and 8 next year, when District Judge Samuel Goozee is scheduled to hear closing arguments from both sides before he hands down his judgment a few weeks later.

At the last full hearing in the case in November, Judge Goozee heard the arguments for and against the admissibility of certain witness statements provided by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and Enforcement Directorate (ED) and ruled that the evidence to establish a prima facie case of fraud and money laundering against the fugitive diamantaire is broadly admissible.

He concluded that he considered himself “bound” by the previous UK court rulings in the extradition case of former Kingfisher Airlines chief Vijay Mallya.

The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), arguing on behalf of the Indian authorities, had stressed that the evidence, including witness statements under Section 161 of the Indian Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC), meets the required threshold for the UK court to determine whether Modi has a case to answer before the Indian judicial system.

“The argument that this is a very specific case, distinguishable from Mallya is frankly nonsense,” said CPS barrister Helen Malcolm.

“That Mallya has a case to answer in India in his fraud and money laundering case has cleared various levels of the UK judicial system and is currently undergoing a “confidential” legal issue before UK Home Secretary Priti Patel can consider signing off on his extradition,” she added.

Modi’s barrister, Clare Montgomery, who was also the defence counsel in Mallya’s case, however, disputed that the Section 161 witness statements qualify as similar. “The government of India case is not as strong as it was in Mallya,” said Montgomery, as she also raised a specific issue over a witness who was said to speak no English in his testimony for the CBI but signed a statement in English for the ED.

Modi is the subject of two sets of criminal proceedings, with the CBI case relating to a large-scale fraud upon PNB through the fraudulent obtaining of “Letters of Understanding” (LoUs or loan agreements), and the ED case relating to the laundering of the proceeds of that fraud. He also faces two additional charges of “causing the disappearance of evidence” and intimidating witnesses or criminal intimidation to cause death added to the CBI case.

The jeweller has been in prison since he was arrested on March 19th, 2019, on an extradition warrant executed by Scotland Yard and his attempts at seeking bail have been repeatedly turned down. The charges against him centre around his firms Diamonds R Us, Solar Exports and Stellar Diamonds making fraudulent use of a credit facility offered by PNB or LoUs.

The CPS, on behalf of India, have told the court during the course of two separate set of hearings in May and September that a number of PNB staff conspired with Modi to ensure the LoUs were issued to his companies without ensuring they were subject to the required credit check, without recording the issuance of the LoUs and without charging the required commission upon the transactions.

Modi’s defence team has sought to counter allegations of fraud by deposing witnesses to establish the volatility of the gems and jewellery trade and that the LoUs were standard practice. His severe depression has also been raised as part of the arguments against extradition.

(PTI)