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JUST OVER a month into
office, and the DN Sadananda Gowda-led BJP government in Karnataka finds
itself under a cloud of corruption and charges of fraud. Newly inducted
forest minister CP Yogeshwar has been charged with corporate fraud,
criminal conspiracy for siphoning off funds, forgery and cheating by the
Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO) of the Union Ministry of
Corporate Affairs, following a probe into the dealings of his company,
Megacity Developers and Builders Limited (MDBL). The SFIO took over the
case after the state Criminal Investigation Department (CID) in 2010 had
charged Yogeshwar with criminal forgery.
The SFIO, which began its investigation in
April 2010 into the Rs 71 crore scam involving the forest minister and
his brother CP Gangadeshwar, has indicted them on 16 counts for
siphoning off funds and cheating thousands of people who had paid money
for plots in his Vajragiri Township project. The SFIO submitted its
report on 30 July to the corporate affairs ministry and has sought the
prosecution of the minister. If found guilty, Yogeshwar can be sentenced
to life imprisonment.
Megacity was promoted by Yogeshwar in 1995.
Capitalising on the IT boom in Bengaluru, Yogeshwar promoted the Vajra
Township as a property along the proposed Bangalore- Mysore
Infrastructure Corridor (BMIC) Highway. In 1995, land in this planned
township was available at a throwaway price of Rs 40 per square feet.
According to the business model of the company,
investors were encouraged to own a plot by paying monthly instalments
over five years. The promoters spared no effort to ensure timely
payments. Amitabh Bachchan was flown in to inaugurate their corporate
office in Bengaluru. The firm ‘honoured’ veteran actor Pandari Bai and
Kannada singer C Ashwath by gifting them plots.
Yogeshwar’s political fortunes soared after the
1999 election. He was elected to the Karnataka Assembly on a Congress
ticket from the Bangalore Rural constituency. However, in March 2010,
based on a PIL filed in 2002 by people who had applied for plots in his
project, the state CID chargesheeted Yogeshwar with criminal forgery. In
its chargesheet, the CID had stated that permission was granted by the
state government for 1,094 plots on 117 acres of land. The rate was
fixed at Rs 40 per square feet. Yogeshwar had facilitated that money be
paid in monthly instalments of Rs 800 to Rs 6,400. During 1995-2001, the
company collected more than Rs 71 crore from over 9,000 people. The
investors included the middle class and some NRIs. Of the 9,000-odd
investors, over 3,000 paid the amount in full, whereas the remaining
6,000 paid anywhere between two to 40 instalments. But, along with his
brother Gangadeshwar and his brothers-in-law P Mahadevaiah and HR
Ramesh, he misused the funds.
“A sum of Rs 67 crore was collected from the
members and Rs 37.22 crore was withdrawn from a bank for buying the land
and constructing a temple and a house in Chakkere in Channapatna,” says
a CID official who probed the case. “MDBL officials also did not
provide account details from 2006-07 to the Registrar of Companies.’’
Upholding the CID probe, the SFIO after further
investigation, filed its report to the Union corporate affairs ministry
and charged them for criminal breach of trust, forgery for the purpose
of cheating, criminal conspiracy for willfully misleading representation
in brochures/pamphlets to deceive investor public — punishable under
Sections 415, 420, 120A, 405, 463, 468 of the Indian Penal Code.
During the investigation, the SFIO additionally
found that Yogeshwar had forged about 450 sale agreements to show that
Rs 37 crore was paid to farmers to purchase their land and illegally
used the company’s money. It found that in some cases, survey numbers
mentioned in the agreement did not exist. In some, agreements were made
in the name of people who were not even alive. In others, the agreement
had neither been signed by the particular landowner nor did he receive
payment from Yogeshwar. Also, only part payments were made.
According to the report, Yogeshwar had
illegally obtained three different Director Identification Numbers
(DINs) using his name, his father’s name and address in three different
ways in violation of the Companies Act as he was ‘ineligible’ to become a
director of a company because he had not submitted the company’s annual
returns during 2006-09. He was given one of these DINs when he was
chairman and director of the state-owned Karnataka Silk Industries
Corporation last year.
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Other charges include swindling Rs 3.6 crore
from his company, constructing a building for another firm (Fashion
Forum Pvt Ltd) and a house for himself near Channapatna by
misappropriating Rs 1.59 crore from the company’s funds, not filing
annual returns, balance sheet and profit and loss account, not holding
general body meetings, not accounting for parcels of land belonging to
the company, and not furnishing information during the investigation
despite summons.
WHEN CONTACTED, JK Teotia,
additional director, SFIO and Dhan Raj, director, investigations,
Ministry of Corporate Affairs, refused to comment. However, Yogeshwar
defends his actions. “The case has been going on for the past five-six
years, and is nothing but a political vendetta on the part of JD(S)
leader HD Kumaraswamy. The charges levelled against me are false
propaganda on the part of the JD(S),” he says.
Responding to Yogeshwar’s allegations,
Kumaraswamy’s press secretary Sadanand says, “There is no relation
between Kumaraswamy and the SFIO. It is a case that is being probed by a
reputed investigating agency, which also probed the Satyam scam. I
don’t think we can influence it.”
Yogeshwar’s indictment has come at a time when
several ministers, including former chief minister BS Yeddyurappa, are
facing corruption charges. A trial against Yeddyurappa is on in the
antigraft court in the state’s capital. The CBI is grilling mining baron
Janardhana Reddy, his brother Karunakara Reddy and aide Sriramulu in
the multi-crore mining scam.
In another case, former minister of information
technology and biotechnology Katta Subramanya Naidu has been arrested
and remanded in judicial custody along with his son Katta Jagadish Naidu
for the past two months.
“We have the information. Everything is all
right. It is a smear campaign on the part of the opposition,” says state
BJP leader KS Eshwarappa. Interestingly, the BJP had elevated
Yogeshwar, who crossed over from the Congress in 2009, to a ministerial
post hoping to use him to make inroads into the JD(S) bastion of
Ramanagaram district. He trounced the JD(S) candidate by a huge margin
in the Channapatna Assembly byelection. Asked if the party was mulling
removal of the minister till the charges against him are cleared,
Eshwarappa said, “We are not taking any action against him.”
The indictment of the forest minister comes at a
time when the party is geared up for the byelections in the Koppal
constituency.
Imran Khan is a Senior Correspondent with Tehelka.com.From T
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