Express & Star

Six suspects arrested in £1.2bn Indian bank fraud case

Billionaire jeweller Nirav Modi allegedly cheated the state-run bank by using fake bank ‘letters of understanding’ to get loans, investigators said.

Published
Officials of the Central Bureau of Investigation and bank staff stand inside during a raid at the Punjab National Bank (AP)

Six people have been arrested in an alleged £1.2 billion Indian bank fraud case.

Central Bureau of Investigation spokesman Abhished Dayal said five bank workers and an employee of main suspect Nirav Modi, a billionaire jeweller, were arrested for allegedly conspiring to cheat the Punjab National Bank.

Modi allegedly cheated the state-run bank by using fake “letters of understanding” to get loans. Most of the letters were sent to overseas offices of Indian banks, which made the actual loans, according to Sunil Mehta, Punjab National Bank’s managing director.

The Press Trust of India news agency reported that Modi sent a letter to the bank this week saying he owes less than half the amount claimed by the bank in connection with the alleged fraud.

He runs an international jewellery empire that reaches from India to New York, with a string of high-end brands. He and his family fled India weeks before the bank registered a criminal case with the CBI on January 31.

The CBI and other Indian investigative agencies searched dozens of offices and residences used by Modi and his business partners. The bank named Modi, his brother Nishal Modi, wife Ami Modi and uncle Mehul Chinubhai Choksi as suspects in its complaint.

In his letter to the bank, Modi said he owes about 50 billion rupees (£553 million), according to PTI. He said the £1.2 billion cited by the bank had resulted in a media frenzy that pressured authorities to quickly search and seize assets from his Firestar International and Firestar Diamond International companies.

“This thereby jeopardised our ability to discharge the dues of the group to the banks,” Modi said.

Mr Dayal, the CBI spokesman, said the agency has not yet received Modi’s letter.

With the Indian media reporting that Modi and his family are hiding in New York or Dubai, the external affairs ministry said it has suspended the passports of Modi and his uncle Choksi for four weeks.

It said that if they fail to explain within seven days why their passports should not be cancelled, their travel documents will be revoked.

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.