Bengaluru:The Coronavirus induced lockdown over the past two months proved to be harrowing for a majority of the victims of the Rs 4,000 crore I-Monetary Advisory (IMA) Ponzi scam, with some of them saying they had to depend on others for their day-to-day needs.
After losing all the money in the IMA group entities in 2019, the biggest challenge for the duped investors was survival during the Coronavirus related lockdown.
Mohammed Mansoor Khan who operated the ponzi scheme in Bengaluru, lured people, promising huge returns.
"Besides a large number of Muslims, many Hindus and Christians too invested in the firm," sources said.
A CBI probe has shown that IMA group entities headed by Mansoor Khan had raised illegal and unauthorised deposits in an alleged dishonest and fraudulent manner from innocent investors to the tune of over Rs 4,000 crore.
"To win the trust of people, Khan gave huge returns initially, which the investors had never expected.
Soon, his firm became very popular and people started investing huge money," said an officer in the Special Investigation Team formed by the then H D Kumaraswamy-led coalition government, which had initially probed the case.
Almost 85 per cent of the investors were from Karnataka while others belonged to different parts of the country including Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Maharashtra and Delhi.
Tears rolled down his cheeks as Salim Basha, a resident of Hubballi, recalled how he coped with the situation during the lockdown.
"I had saved Rs 3 lakh for the marriage of my niece, which I invested in the IMA. I had no inkling that I would be cheated," Basha said.
He said he was not in a position to do the job of even a security guard due to age-related ailments while his only son who worked in a small company did not get the salary during the lockdown.
"For the first time in my life I had to depend on others for food," Basha narrated his agony.
The lockdown compounded their woes," he added.
Rajesh Naik and his brother Kishore Naik, who live in Bengaluru, had saved about Rs 50 lakh from their hard-earned income.
Instead of investing in banks, mutual funds or post offices, they opted to deposit it with the IMA on the advice
of their friend.
"....now we don't have a penny. During the lockdown, we could not pay our house rent despite being threatened by the house owner..," the Naik brothers said.