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How loan money from India reaches China
Recent arrests in harassment cases has helped the police understand the racket better, including how the big sharks pull strings from Nepal and how the recovered money is converted into crypto and sent to China
www.mid-day.com
Four recent arrests in the instant loan racket have unearthed the functioning of the companies running the mobile apps and found a suspected trail of the money extorted from the victims. According to the Navghar police in Bhayandar East, the callers operating in Mumbai and Thane are small fish and the sharks in control of the fraud are in Nepal. The money obtained through threats and blackmails is converted into crypto currencies and routed to China, suspects the Economic Offences Wing which is investigating the scam for the past two months.
Cracking whip on instant loan sharks, Odisha police on Thursday arrested Mumbai-based Ram Narayan Pathade, the director of Mahagram Payments Pvt Ltd which ran two lending apps. Earlier, the Economic Offences Wing (EOW) arrested two people, and the preliminary probe showed that the money extorted from the customers were converted into crypto currencies and routed to China.
The trio operated two loan apps--Koko and Jojo, which are not registered as non-banking financial companies (NBFC) under the Reserve Bank of India Act.
Police have blocked 1,058 virtual accounts created by Mahagram Payments for illegal transactions.
"Mahagram is not registered with the RBI as an NBFC, and it had engaged the Gurgaon-based firm, IWT India, to forcibly recollect money with high rate of interest from the customers. Initial investigation suggests the two apps were not created in India, and that the illegally acquired money was used in hawala transactions and invested in crypto currencies," said JN Pankaj, Deputy Inspector General of Police, EOW.
The two apps, Koko and Jojo, used the bank accounts of Pathade's company to carry out its illegal loan business. Mahagram had opened 1,058 virtual accounts, which have been blocked by us," he added. "We found suspicious transactions between the bank accounts of Pathade's company and Koko."
During the investigation, the EOW found that the apps directly credited a small loan amount ranging anywhere between Rs 3,000 and Rs 10,000 to a customer's bank account. More than 1.5 lakh people had downloaded the two lending apps.
"Though we are in the early phase of the investigation, we strongly suspect the money loaned and recovered travels out of the country through hawala as well as crypto currencies. We are in the process of getting evidence for the same. Pathade's arrest will help us find out the ugly face of these loan apps," DIG Pankaj said.
‘Printed QR codes'
Following Pathade's arrest, a mid-day team visited his company's office in Dahisar East, but learnt that it had moved to Goregaon about two days back. A Mahagram employee told mid-day that the company did not deal with any loan application, but it was into the business of printing QR codes.
"Our company makes QR codes for other companies, and it is not into any loan application business. We don't have any knowledge about the arrest of our MD at the Delhi airport," the employee said.
The office was located at 319, Sarita A, Prabhat Industrial Estate in Dahisar East. According to the security guards of the industrial estate, Mahagram was vacated two days back. They said that only two-three employees were seen at the office. "The company only had one computer and a few files in the office," they added.
A security guard said, "Two-three days back, the office was vacated and the goods were shifted to somewhere in Goregaon. They seemed to be in a rush to move out."
100
No. of people each agent calls out of Thane call centres
1.5 lakh
No. of people who downloaded two apps
1,058
No. of virtual a/cs used for illegal transactions