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Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Goldsmith cheats India’s Largest PSU Bank, Fake Gold submitted in SBI

One more gold loan fraud has been reported in banks. This time the fraud has been reported from Panchkula, Haryana.

A man took a gold loan of approximately ₹13.25 lakh by pledging fake gold jewellery to India’s largest public sector bank – State Bank of India (SBI).

Throughout the tenure of loan, no discrepancy was observed. The matter came to light when the loan turned NPA. The bank held an auction to sell the gold and recover money but this turned out to be a big shock to the bank employees. On Auction, the gold was found to be fake and ultimately the bank manager has filed a case against the goldsmith and the accused loan borrower.

Police FIR and Loan Details

Kushan Kumar Saurabh, manager of the State Bank of India (SBI) in Pinjore, Panchkula, has filed a complaint with the police, stating that Sandeep, son of Balbir, a resident of Patel Nagar, Hisar, took a gold loan from the bank.

The accused first visited the bank on October 10, 2024, with gold bangles. Panel goldsmiths Anmol Bansal and Harish Bansal were called to inspect the gold items. The panel goldsmiths confirmed the items as genuine. Based on this confirmation from the goldsmith, the bank sanctioned a gold loan of ₹4,30,000.

What’s more shocking is that the loan was taken thrice by the borrower but nobody could identify the issues with the gold.

The accused visited Bank again on November 16, 2024 to take another gold loan. The bank again called in panel-authorized goldsmiths Anmol Bansal and Harish Bansal. After inspection, they declared the gold genuine. The bank again sanctioned Sandeep a loan of ₹448,000. Similarly, the bank issued a third loan on December 13, 2024.

Loan Turned NPA

Soon the accused borrower stopped depositing money in his loan account and the loan account ultimately turned NPA. The bank auctioned the gold and the bank auctioneer, Laxmi Jewellers, inspected the gold. The jewellers found that the gold was merely gold-plated, leaving everyone shocked.

This incident has raised a very serious question on the functioning and structure of Banks. How can a goldsmith cheat India’s largest public sector bank? This incident states that banks need to place a more strict check on gold loans.

Police can’t freeze Bank Accounts without Court Permission: Delhi High Court

Can Banks freeze your account instantly if they receive a complaint from the police? Right now, in India, this practice is common. Banks freeze accounts instantly on receiving a complaint from the police, but legally, it’s not valid.

The Delhi High Court has ruled that police cannot attach or freeze bank accounts without the approval of the competent court. The court said that freezing of bank accounts is a measure directed at securing alleged proceedings of crime. Such a step cannot be taken under Section 106 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS).

The case pertains to Malabar Gold and Diamond Limited. Petitioners are engaged in the business of buying and selling gold ornaments, gold items, gold bars, coins, and precious stones. In July 2024, a company by the name of Dallas E-com Infotech Private Limited approached the petitioners for the purchase of gold items, including gold bars and coins.

It was stated that prior to entering into any transactions, the petitioners undertook due diligence and complied with all applicable Know Your Customer (KYC) norms. It was also stated that the petitioners obtained and verified adequate banking and identification details of the Customer, and the transactions were carried out through regular banking channels.

Between August 2024 and March 2025, multiple transactions were carried out with the Customer, aggregating to approximately Rs. 14,20,74,954.99/-. Subsequently, certain complaints appear to have been registered against the Customer by third parties. It was, however, stated that no complaint, FIR, or proceeding was registered against the petitioners.

According to the petitioners, despite this, and without any verification or finding regarding the petitioners’ involvement or complicity, Police proceeded to communicate directions to Banks, resulting in the freezing of the petitioners’ bank accounts. The State Bank of India (SBI) freezed the account on directions of Police. The company’s accounts were frozen on the basis of police communications linked to alleged cyber fraud by a third-party customer. The petitioners finally approached the court.

The court said – “Attachment or freezing of bank accounts, being measures directed at securing alleged proceeds of crime, can be undertaken only under Section 107 of the BNSS and strictly upon orders of a competent Magistrate, after following the prescribed procedural safeguards,”.

The Court stated that any blanket or disproportionate freezing of bank accounts, particularly where the account holder is neither an accused nor even a suspect in the offence under investigation, is manifestly arbitrary. 

After considering the case, the High Court said that there was no justification for freezing the company’s accounts and ordered their defreezing.

Friday, January 16, 2026

State-run banks write off Rs 6.15 lakh cr of loans in 5.5 years

Public sector banks have written off loans worth Rs 6.15 lakh crore in the last five and a half years, Parliament was informed on Monday.

In a written reply in Lok Sabha, minister of state for finance Pankaj Chaudhary said, “According to Reserve Bank of India (RBI) data, PSBs have written-off an aggregate loan amount of Rs 6,15,647 crore, during the last five financial years and the current financial year till September 30, 2025 (provisional data).”

For the first six months of the current financial year, the loan write-off of PSBs stood at Rs 42,035 crore.

During this April-September period, the PSBs recovered Rs 37,253 crore of bad loans.

For the previous full=fiscal, state-run banks had written off loans worth Rs 1.14 lakh crore. This was lower than Rs 1.18 lakh crore in the year-ago period. 

The process followed RBI guidelines of provisioning of non-performing assets (NPAs) and those of the policy of the board of the banks, even as such write-offs did not result in waiver of liabilities of borrowers to repay.

Recovery in written-off loans is an ongoing process and banks continue pursuing their recovery actions initiated against borrowers under the various recovery mechanism available to them, such as filing of a suit in civil courts or in debt recovery tribunals (DRT), action under the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest (SARFAESI) Act 2002, filing of cases in the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 etc.

As provisioning for bad loans has already been done and the write-off process does not entail any actual cash outflow, the bank’s liquidity position remains intact, Chaudhary informed the Lok Sabha.

Moreover, banks evaluate/consider the impact of write-offs as part of their regular exercise to clean up their balance-sheet, avail tax benefit, optimise capital base, enhance lending capacity and boost investor sentiments, the minister informed.

Replying to another question, Chaudhary said, banks and financial Institutions have traditionally been the primary source of export finance in India.

The total export credit disbursed by Public Sector Banks, SIDBI and Exim Bank in the last five years (FY 20-21 to FY 24-25) stood at Rs 21.71 lakh crore, he said.

In another reply, Chaudhary said, 5,83,291 fraud cases were registered in the last four and a half years till September 2025 amounting to Rs 3,588.22 crore.

Of this, he said, Rs 238.83 crore have been recovered.

With increasing digital payment transactions in the country, incidence of cyber frauds including digital payment frauds have also gone up in the last few years, he said

RBI for disclosure of NPA, inspection info; banks oppose

Four major banks are opposing disclosure of the list of their defaulters and non-performing assets (NPAs) and the matter is with the Central Information Commission (CIC).

Bank of Baroda, RBL Bank, Yes Bank and State Bank of India have approached the CIC objecting to the disclosure of information such as the list of defaulters and NPA, penalties and inspection reports, even as the RBI termed the records "liable to be disclosed" under the RTI Act, news agency PTI reported.

RTI applicants Dheeraj Mishra, Vathiraj, Girish Mittal and Radha Raman Tiwari had filed separate applications with the RBI, seeking information, such as the top 100 NPAs, willful defaulters of Yes Bank, the inspection report of the SBI and RBL, and documents relating to a Rs 4.34 crore monetary penalty imposed following statutory inspection findings from the Bank of Baroda, respectively, among others.

These banks appealed before the CIC, after the bankers' bank found that the information sought by RTI Applicants could be disclosed under the provisions of the Right to Information Act, PTI reported.

Information Commissioner Khushwant Singh Sethi referred the matter to a larger bench of the CIC to adjudicate on the issues raised by the banks.

In a series of interim orders, Sethi noted that similar matters were earlier heard by a double bench. Consequently, all cases have been referred to the Chief Information Commissioner for consideration by a larger bench, with disclosure stayed till final decisions are issued.

The outcome of these proceedings is expected to have a far-reaching impact on banking transparency, depositor rights and regulatory accountability, particularly at a time when public scrutiny of NPAs, penalties and supervisory lapses remains intense, PTI reported.

The RBI had sought the views of the banks before disclosure under the Third Party consent provision under Section 11 of the transparency law, under which a public authority seeks the view of the party whose details are being sought by the applicant.

The banks approached the CIC, the country's highest appellate body in RTI matters, with their appeals challenging the RBI's view, which said the information was "liable to be disclosed" under the provisions of the RTI Act, citing the Supreme Court judgment in the Jayantilal N. Mistry case, which is binding on it.

The banks claimed that disclosing regulatory information would harm their commercial interests.

In one such case, Bank of Baroda (BoB) challenged the RBI's decision to disclose documents relating to a Rs 4.34 crore monetary penalty imposed following statutory inspection findings, PTI reported.

RTI applicant Radha Raman Tiwari had sought copies of "cases of non-compliance, as recorded in Statutory Inspection for Supervisory Evaluation (ISE 2021)," along with show-cause notices and records evidencing recovery of the penalty.

While BoB objected to disclosure, claiming the information was "confidential and sensitive," the RBI rejected the argument outright.

The RBI Central Public Information Officer (CPIO) recorded that the bank's contention that disclosure "may have an adverse impact on the bank's business, marketability of the bank's product and may hamper the competitive position of the bank, is not tenable."

The RBI further noted that information exempt under Sections 8(1)(d), (e) and (j) of the RTI Act had already been identified and severed, and therefore "the objections of the BoB are not sustainable".

BoB has since moved the Supreme Court, arguing that the landmark Jayantilal N Mistry judgment, which mandates disclosure of RBI inspection reports, may be reconsidered.

Taking note of this, the CIC observed that the issue "needs deliberation by a larger bench" and temporarily stayed disclosure until final adjudication.

A similar dispute arose involving RBL Bank, which objected to the disclosure of its inspection reports for 2013-14 and 2016-17 sought by RTI applicant Vathiraj.

The RBI, however, relied heavily on Supreme Court precedent, saying that "there is no fiduciary relationship with the RBI and other banks" and that inspection reports fall squarely under the RTI Act.

Quoting the Supreme Court's contempt proceedings in a case, the RBI highlighted that the order had said, "the Respondents are duty-bound to furnish all information relating to inspection reports; Any further violation shall be viewed seriously by this Court".

RBL Bank contended that earlier CIC observations suggested waiting for the outcome of pending writ petitions.

The Commission, however, noted that no stay had been granted by the Supreme Court and that the governing law remains unchanged. As in other cases, the matter has now been referred to a larger bench and disclosure has been deferred.

Yes Bank has also approached the CIC, objecting to the disclosure of data relating to the top 100 NPAs, willful defaulters, and inspection reports of public sector banks sought by Dheeraj Mishra, PTI reported.

The RBI rejected Yes Bank's confidentiality argument, saying unequivocally that "RTI Act, 2005, overrides all earlier laws in order to achieve its objective".

The RBI further observed that the Supreme Court had explicitly upheld disclosure of defaulters' lists, noting that "there is no ambiguity in the judgment' inspection reports and other material' have to be furnished".

Despite this, Yes Bank argued that the Jayantilal Mistry ruling is in doubt. The CIC noted that similar matters had already been decided and again referred the issue to a larger bench, while restraining disclosure for now.

In another case, the State Bank of India (SBI) opposed the disclosure of show-cause notices and RBI's enforcement actions from April 2015 onwards demanded by Girish Mittal in his RTI application.

The RBI held that such documents were "liable to be disclosed" after severing exempt portions under Section 10 of the RTI Act.

The SBI argued that the Supreme Court had not examined exemptions under Section 8(1)(j). The RBI countered this by pointing out that the apex court had clearly ruled that it is "not in a fiduciary relationship with any bank" and must uphold public interest.

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FIR filed against 6 Officers of Canara Bank in Jabalpur Madhya Pradesh

A big news has been reported from Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh. Action has been taken by EOW in a case involving housing and commercial loans obtained using fake registries. The EOW has filed an FIR against nine people, including six Canara Bank officials.

It was reported that the loans were obtained using forged documents. In Jabalpur, the EOW has filed a case against nine people, including six Canara Bank officials. According to information received, Arif, Ghalib, and Sumit, residents of Adhartal, took a loan from Canara Bank.

The loan of ₹57 lakh was obtained on the basis of forged documents. The involvement of officials from Canara Bank’s RAH (Retail Asset Hub) branch has also been exposed in this case.

Director General, EOW, Upendra Jain said the complaint was filed by the bank’s assistant general manager, Ambika Sharan Singh. According to the complaint, Sumit Singh and Galib Hussain obtained four loans amounting to Rs 57 lakh by submitting fake and fabricated documents.

The accused had applied for loans to open shops and also availed housing loans, however, the proposed projects were never undertaken. The duo allegedly failed to pay any installment and did not return the loan amount.

The police have registered FIR against Sumit Singh, Galib Hussai, Arif Ansari, the then branch manager Deepak Goswami, division manager Gyan Ranjan Tirki, senior manager Sandeep Tiwari, marketing manager Amit Sharma, bank officer Pratidhawani Mishra and bank officer Augustin Khanguveer.

The Retail Asset Hub is a special branch of Canara Bank that handles loan processing. For home loans, the bank also takes a legal report from an advocate approved by the bank.

It is worrying that the advocate could not identify the fake property registration. The bank officers who approved the loan also failed to detect that the property documents were forged.

his incident raises serious questions about the loan approval process in banks. Even though banks have many checks in place, such frauds still happen. This creates doubt about how effective these policies really are.

Whether this happened due to poor checking, heavy workload, or intentional involvement will be known only after the investigation is completed.

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Can Employers Withhold Gratuity if Employee caused Financial Loss?

In a significant ruling that could impact how companies deal with disciplinary cases after retirement, the Calcutta High Court has held that employers can withhold or recover gratuity if an employee causes financial loss due to negligence or misconduct.

A Division Bench of Justice Lanusungkum Jamir and Justice Rai Chattopadhyay ruled that the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972 does not automatically override an organisation’s disciplinary rules. If service rules allow recovery of losses from gratuity, those rules will prevail.

The case involved a former Chairman and Managing Director of MSTC Limited, who was appointed to the company’s Board by the President of India. A disciplinary inquiry was started against him just before his retirement. Because the case was still pending, MSTC withheld his gratuity.

After the inquiry was completed, the disciplinary authority ordered recovery of ₹10 lakh from his gratuity, stating that the loss was caused to the company due to his negligence. His request for review was later rejected.

The former CMD then approached the statutory authority under the Gratuity Act, seeking release of his gratuity. While the Controlling Authority rejected his claim, the Appellate Authority ordered MSTC to pay the gratuity along with interest. This decision was later upheld by a Single Judge of the Calcutta High Court.

Challenging these orders, MSTC Limited moved an intra-court appeal. The company argued that the Gratuity Act was wrongly applied to a senior managerial employee and that its Conduct, Discipline and Appeal (CDA) Rules clearly allowed withholding of gratuity and recovery of financial losses caused by misconduct.

MSTC relied on a Supreme Court judgment in Mahanadi Coalfields Ltd. v. Rabindranath Choubey, which held that service rules allowing disciplinary action and recovery from gratuity are not restricted by the Gratuity Act.

The employee, however, argued that his right to gratuity had accrued on retirement and that the disciplinary action was based on old allegations. He also claimed that the forfeiture was unfair, biased, and disproportionate, especially since other officers involved in the same decision were later paid their gratuity.

After examining the matter, the Division Bench observed that MSTC’s rules applied in two situations: cases covered under the Gratuity Act and cases involving any negligence or misconduct causing financial loss to the company. The court held that these rules give the employer an independent right to recover proven losses from gratuity.

The court also noted that the disciplinary order, which quantified the loss and ordered recovery, had already become final. Therefore, the employee’s claim for gratuity was not maintainable.

Setting aside the orders of the Appellate Authority and the Single Judge, the Calcutta High Court upheld the decision of the Controlling Authority that had denied the gratuity claim. The appeal filed by MSTC Limited was accordingly allowed.

This judgment clearly reinforces that disciplinary rules can prevail over the Gratuity Act when financial loss to the employer is proved.

Friday, January 9, 2026

PNB vs BOB Business Figures as of Dec 2025 Quarter

Punjab National Bank (PNB) and Bank of Baroda have released their business figures for the December 2025 Quarter. Let’s have a look at the business figures of both the banks.

PNB vs BOB Business Figures (Amount in ₹ crore)

ParticularsBank of BarodaPNB
Global Business28,90,66128,92,630
Global Deposits15,46,74916,60,385
Domestic Deposits13,07,18915,97,487
Global Advances13,43,91212,32,245
Domestic Advances10,95,52811,67,801

Bank of Baroda Financial Performance (as on 31 December 2025) (Amount in ₹ crore)

Particulars31 Dec 2024 (Unaudited)31 Mar 2025 (Audited)31 Dec 2025 (Provisional)YoY Growth
Global Business25,75,94327,02,49628,90,66112.22%
Global Deposits14,02,90914,72,03515,46,74910.25%
Domestic Deposits11,76,32112,42,16913,07,18911.13%
Global Advances11,73,03412,30,46113,43,91214.57%
Domestic Advances9,64,86910,21,11210,95,52813.54%
Domestic Retail Advances2,43,3602,56,6332,85,46417.30%

PNB Financial Performance (Amount in ₹ crore)

Particulars31 Dec 2024 (Reviewed)30 Sep 2025 (Reviewed)31 Dec 2025 (Provisional)QoQ GrowthYoY Growth
Global Business26,39,99127,86,67328,92,6303.80%9.57%
Domestic Business25,34,96626,81,86727,65,2883.11%9.09%
Global Deposits15,29,69916,17,08016,60,3852.68%8.54%
Domestic Deposits14,74,76015,63,98215,97,4872.14%8.32%
Global Advances11,10,29211,69,59212,32,2455.36%10.98%
Domestic Advances10,60,20511,17,88511,67,8014.47%10.15%
Global CD Ratio (%)72.5872.3374.21

Monday, January 5, 2026

CBI Court Sentences Central Bank of India Officials to Jail in Rs 24.54 Lakh Loan Fraud Case

The CBI Court in Pune has sentenced two former officials of the Central Bank of India to three years of rigorous imprisonment in a bank fraud case. The judgment was delivered on 3 January 2026, according to a press release issued by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) on 4 January 2026.

The convicted officials are Nandkishore Khairnar, the then Manager of Central Bank of India, Pimpri Branch, Pune, and Ravi Bhushan Prasad, the then Assistant Manager of the same branch. Both have been sentenced to three years of rigorous imprisonment and fined ₹75,000 each.

In the same case, Smt. Priyanka Prashant Vispute, who was a co-borrower, has been sentenced to two years of rigorous imprisonment along with a fine of ₹25,000.

The CBI had registered this case on 17 February 2016. The accused included Rakesh Jaiswal, the then Assistant General Manager (AGM) of Central Bank of India, along with several borrowers — Dhiraj Ghanshamdas Chachlani, Karan Rohit Gulati, Rajesh Shishupal Pangal, Prashant Laxman Vispute, Priyanka Prashant Vispute, Pramod Gopalrao Patil, Gopal Daulatrao Patil, Shrinath Sudhakar Chabukswar, and Sudhakar Tukaram Chabukswar.

After investigation, the CBI filed six charge sheets related to different conspiracies.

In Special Case No. 21/2018, the charge was that Rakesh Jaiswal (then AGM), Nandkishore Khairnar (then Manager), Ravi Bhushan Prasad (then Assistant Manager), and borrowers Prashant Laxman Vispute and Priyanka Prashant Vispute entered into a criminal conspiracy. They allegedly sanctioned a housing loan of ₹18.75 lakh using forged documents.

Due to this fraudulent act, the Central Bank of India, Pimpri Branch, suffered a financial loss of ₹24.54 lakh, as per the CBI.

During the trial, Rakesh Jaiswal (AGM) and Prashant Laxman Vispute (borrower) passed away, following which the charges against them were dropped.

Goldsmith cheats India’s Largest PSU Bank, Fake Gold submitted in SBI

One more gold loan fraud has been reported in banks. This time the fraud has been reported from Panchkula, Haryana. A man took a gold loan o...

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