International Business

CBI charges Raju, others in fresh Rs 430-cr scam

The CBI has charged Satyam founder B Ramalinga Raju, his brother B Rama Raju and eight others with creating fictitious customers and siphoning off Rs 430 crores from the IT firm. - Satyam fraud spurs govt to tighten corporate governance norms - India urges SEC not to fine on Satyam - Sharp dip in H-1B visas being used by Indian companies - Satyam's ex-brass appears before court - Mahindra Satyam: Settling liabilities - Sensex rises on RBI-speak, telecom stocks According to the supplementary chargesheet filed last month by the CBI, which probed the accounting scam in the company, the accused created fake customers and generated invoices against them in order to inflate revenues of Satyam Computer Services Limited (SCSL) to the tune of Rs 430 crore, incurring expenditure to the tune of Rs 65.88 crore. "Adequate evidence has come on record to prove that the accused Rama Raju, SCSL employees G Ramakrishna, D Venkatpathy Raju and Srisailam have dishonestly and fraudulently conspired together to create seven fake customers in 2006 and got forged and fabricated invoices raised in the name of those customers to the tune of Rs 430 crore in order to inflate the revenues of SCSL to that extent," the chargesheet said. In order to inflate the account books, the accused created fake email IDs and sent mails on behalf of the seven customers to various associates of SCSL and urged them to continue the development of the products. After an analysis of the emails, it was found out that the Internet Protocol addresses used for sending the mails were from within Hyderabad, clearly revealing the mails had not emanated from the seven foreign customers, the chargesheet said.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Sugar prices in U'khand touch all-time high
Prices of sugar in Uttarakhand have reached an all-time high of Rs 42-44 per kg in the retail market, thanks largely to sugarcane shortfall.
Popular Articles

Gold Rush boosts retailers' sales 30%
The Great Indian Gold Rush, a month-long event organised by the World Gold Council (WGC), has received an overwhelming response despite the sky-high prices of the precious metal.

Telangana effect: Pharma firms worried
Hyderabad is likely to lose its status as the pharmaceutical capital of the country if the current political turmoil in Andhra Pradesh continues and the state is bifurcated, according to the head of the Bulk Drug Manufacturers Association (BDMA).