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The extent of the unravelling fraud at India's state-run Punjab National Bank (PNB) could rise beyond the nearly $2 billion mark so far outlined by the lender, according to a source involved in the probe and court documents reviewed by Reuters.
In what has been dubbed as the biggest fraud in India's banking history, PNB and police have accused two jewellery groups – one controlled by diamond tycoon Nirav Modi and the other by his uncle Mehul Choksi – of colluding with bank employees to get credit from overseas banks using fraudulent guarantees.
Both Choksi and Modi have denied the allegations and lawyers for the two key accused PNB employees in the case have also said they are innocent.
According to court filings, the exposure to three companies controlled by Modi has been estimated at Rs 64.98 billion ($999 million), while firms controlled by Choksi have been accused of defrauding the bank of Rs 61.38 billion.
The CBI told the court that its investigation had found that the fraudulent issuance of letters of undertaking (LoUs), or guarantees, through a Mumbai branch of the bank had been going on since 2010.
In papers filed on Monday, 5 March, the CBI also said PNB did not have all the documents related to the LoUs, since those were returned to the borrower.
"Most of these documents are not yet recovered. The size of the fraud has now gone (up)...and the same is likely to go even higher," the CBI said in the court filing.
PNB did not respond to requests on Tuesday, 6 March, seeking comment on the risk of its exposure rising further.
The bank initially reported to authorities on 29 January that the jewellery groups had defrauded it of 2.8 billion rupees, or about $44 million. On 14 February it said the fraud sum had reached $1.77 billion after a detailed investigation.
It raised the amount further to nearly $2 billion last week, saying it had discovered some $200 million more in fraudulent letters of credit, another form of credit guarantee, issued to Choksi's Gitanjali group.
(The article has been published in an arrangement with Reuters)
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