Mumbai: The scrutiny of the credit sanctions in the ICICI-Videocon loan case by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has highlighted these sanctions to Videocon Group between June 2009 and April 2012, when Chanda Kochhar was the bank's Managing Director and CEO, were an "imprudent decision" and a clear case of "conflict of interest on her part", as per the Enforcement Directorate charge sheet.
The 308 page charge sheet, filed by the financial probe agency in Special PMLA court here last month and witnessed by IANS, held that RBI official Malli Sudhakar, in a scrutiny report dated August 3, 2018 and in his statement to the agency on October 16 this year, revealed that there was "conflict of interest" on the part of Kochhar.
Sudhakar had cited "absence of transparency in excluding the charge of securities and releasing existing security of Videocon Group taken by as collateral by ICICI Bank and imprudent decision in sanctioning of proposal to Videocon Group by ICICI Bank, of which Chanda Kochhar was Chairperson of recommending committee and member of sanctioning committee, when she was MD and CEO of the bank".
The ED contended that the RBI official, in his statement, reiterated that it was an "imprudent decision" by the ICICI Bank to increase its exposure to Videocon Group by sanctioning fresh rupee term loan (RTL) of Rs 750 crore.
Sudhakar further cited the release of security or non-creation of charge by ICICI Bank on the assets of the group.
"The primary security cover available with ICICI Bank in regard to Videocon Group declined from the existing 2.67 times to 1.67 times," he said.
He also claimed that there was a "conflict of interest" on part of ICICI Bank, as advocates and solicitors for the RTL agreement between the bank and the Videocon under debt consolidation were Amarchand and Mangaldas and Suresh A. Shroff and Company.
He claimed that the same firm was also appointed as the legal firm by the board of the bank to investigate into the alleged quid pro quo arrangement between Chanda and Videocon group reflecting conflict of interest.
The ED claimed that even Justice B.N. Srikrishna (retd), who was appointed as Head of Enquiry by the bank to conduct an independent enquiry into allegations against the then CEO and MD in his report noticed that "violations were caused by Chanda Kochhhar due to her non-disclosure regarding dealing of non-arm length transactions carried out by her and her family with Credentials Finance Ltd (CFL), Videocon Group and others".
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