Srinagar: The Jammu and Kashmir CID on Saturday conducted searches against several suspects in cases of dubious and irregular financial transactions, officials said on Saturday.
The police said teams of intelligence officers carried out searches at various places and a total of 22 premises spread over Srinagar, Budgam, Anantnag, Jammu and Delhi, including private offices and residences, were searched.
"Armed with search warrants issued by competent judicial authority and overseen by executive magistrates as witnesses, teams of CID investigators looked for additional evidence pertaining to several dubious and irregular financial transactions. Many of these involve suspected collusion between bank officials, private persons and public servants," the police said.
According to sources, Counter Intelligence Kashmir team accompanied by a wing of Jammu and Kashmir Police, along with CRPF raided several places in Bijbehara town on Saturday morning.
In Anantnag, the team raided the residences of Mohammad Sultan Tili, Sajjad Ahmed Zargar, Mohammad Ishaq and several other locals in Zarpara and New Colony of Bijbehara.
The police added that suspected irregularities amounting to a variety of offences under different provisions of the law include the concealment of suspicious and dubious transactions from identification and scrutiny by closing anti-money laundering (AML) alerts, wrongly closing alerts that were to be mandatorily furnished by the banks under the regulatory directions notified by the RBI with faulty and false closure remarks as 'STR' (suspicious transaction reports) or 'already reported in STR' or other related comments, whereas STR MIS did not contain these alerts.
"Dishonest exporters in collusion with bank officials obtained money in advance but did not submit invoices and documents to prove that the advance so obtained from the bank has been utilised lawfully. Bank officials too failed to raise alerts wherein funds flowed from many different accounts into one account even when these transactions involved the acceptance of huge deposits and withdrawals in cash in violation of banking rules and regulations," the police said.