Key Points

Fraudsters illegally withdrew Rs 16.38 crore from Agartala Municipal Corporation's bank account using cloned cheques. The criminals operated from Hyderabad and forged a former AMC officer's signature to execute the scam. Tripura police are investigating the case and have collected CCTV footage from UCO Bank's main branch. This marks the second such incident in recent years, with the bank having returned stolen funds in a previous similar case.

Key Points: Agartala Municipal Corporation Loses Rs 16.38 Crore in Cloned Cheque Fraud

  • Fraudsters used six cloned cheques to withdraw Rs 16.38 crore
  • Operation traced to Hyderabad-based criminals forging signatures
  • Original cheques still in AMC custody confirming fraud
  • UCO Bank has agreed to return the entire amount to AMC
2 min read

Fraudsters withdraw Rs 16.38 crore from Agartala Municipal Corporation's bank account, probe underway

Tripura Police probe Rs 16.38 crore cloned cheque fraud from Agartala Municipal Corporation's UCO Bank account. Fraudsters forged signatures from Hyderabad.

"Our investigating officer found that original cheques are still in the custody of the AMC officers concerned - Police Official"

Agartala, Sep 5

Tripura Police have started an investigation against "unidentified fraudsters" for illegally withdrawing an amount of Rs 16.38 crore from the bank account of the Agartala Municipal Corporation (AMC) by using cloned cheques, officials said on Friday.

A police official said that the UCO Bank's Zonal Manager, Sanjib Roy, has lodged a case at West Agartala police station after it was noticed that Rs 16.38 crore was withdrawn from the AMC account through six cloned (counterfeit) cheques between August and September.

The official said that, as per the initial investigation, the unidentified fraudsters, operating from Hyderabad, forged the signature of a former AMC officer to withdraw the money from the bank while the original cheques were lying with the civic body.

"Our investigating officer found that original cheques are still in the custody of the AMC officers concerned," the official said, adding that they have also collected the CCTV footage from UCO Bank's main branch at Kaman Chowmuhani in the heart of the city and are studying it to determine who had visited the bank to submit the forged cheques.

"Once we identified the persons who had submitted the cloned cheques at the UCO Bank, then it would help us to trace out those involved in the case," he said.

An AMC official said they have already requested UCO Bank to return the entire Rs 16.38 crore to the civic body’s account, and the bank has agreed.

A similar case had occurred a few years ago, and in that instance, too, the bank returned the money, the AMC official said.

Tripura Director General of Police Anurag had said last week that the state police had identified online money fraud worth Rs 46.96 crore since 2021 in Tripura, out of which the authorities were able to hold Rs 5.2 crore and had already returned Rs 34 lakh to the victims. About the remaining amount, the police are arranging a special drive to return the rest of the money after a few verifications and checks in the next three months, he had told the media.

The DGP said that the police have also recovered details of 20,387 bank accounts involved in these cybercrime attacks in Tripura.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Hyderabad-based fraudsters again? Seems like there's a pattern here. Our banking systems need stronger verification processes, especially for large transactions. Thank God the bank is returning the money, but this shouldn't happen in the first place.
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Sarah B
As someone working in finance, this is deeply concerning. Cloned cheques in 2023? Banks should have moved to more secure digital verification systems by now. The fact that this happened before and is repeating shows systemic failures.
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Arjun K
At least the bank is returning the money, but imagine if this was an individual's account? Would they be so quick to refund? There's a clear disparity in how banks treat institutional vs individual customers.
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Vikram M
The police statistics are alarming - ₹47 crore fraud in Tripura alone since 2021! We need better cyber crime prevention and faster recovery mechanisms. Hope they catch these fraudsters soon. 🙏
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Michael C
While I appreciate that the bank is refunding, there should be consequences for such security failures. Banks need to invest in better fraud detection systems. This is taxpayer money we're talking about!

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