CBI traces source of arms procurement
Following Friday’s haul of arms and ammunition and even explosives from a house at Sandeshkhali by a joint search by the CBI and NSG, the procurement of the recovered arms are now under the scanner of the CBI.
A Delhi court on Friday sent Rotomac Pen’s owner Vikram Kothari and his son Rahul to one-day transit remand, officials said.
The father-son duo will be produced before the concerned court in Lucknow on Saturday.
Vikram and his son were produced before the Patiala House Court after being arrested by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) on Thursday.
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They have been charged with cheating a consortium of banks of Rs.3,695 crore (including interest) by siphoning off loans sanctioned to his company for procurement of wheat and other goods for export.
The Income Tax Department also issued a showcause notice to Kothari asking why prosecution be not initiated against the group.
The agency arrested the two after day-long questioning at the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) headquarters in south Delhi’s Lodi Road area.
It was the Kotharis’ questioning for the fourth consecutive day since the CBI filed the case against him and his family, and raided their residential and office premises in Uttar Pradesh’s Kanpur.
The agency filed the FIR on Sunday night after getting a complaint against Kothari, his wife Sadhana and son Rahul, from the Bank of Baroda. Kothari is the Chairman and Managing Director of Rotomac while his wife and son are Directors.
Kothari had obtained Rs 2,919 crore from Bank of India (Rs 754.77 crore), Bank of Baroda (Rs 456.63 crore), Indian Overseas Bank (Rs 771.07 crore), Union Bank of India (Rs 458.95 crore), Allahabad Bank (Rs 330.68 crore), Bank of Maharashtra (Rs 49.82 crore) and Oriental Bank of Commerce (Rs 97.47 crore), the FIR said.
Kothari, his wife, son, firm Rotomac, some unidentified bank officials and private persons were booked on charges of criminal conspiracy, cheating and forgery under the Indian Penal Code and Prevention of Corruption Act.
The Bank of Baroda complaint said that the banks had extended credit to the Kanpur-based firm and its related companies from 2008 onwards.
The CBI had earlier confiscated several belongings of Kothari and his family, including laptops and mobile phones.
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