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ED attaches properties worth Rs 2.91 crore in Hyderabad bank fraud case​

By IANS | Updated: January 31, 2026 18:30 IST

Hyderabad, Jan 31 The Enforcement Directorate (ED), Hyderabad Zonal Office, has provisionally attached four immovable properties worth Rs ...

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Hyderabad, Jan 31 The Enforcement Directorate (ED), Hyderabad Zonal Office, has provisionally attached four immovable properties worth Rs 2.91 crore under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), 2002. ​

The attachment is connected to a bank fraud case involving Subbaiah Korrapati and his associates. The properties include agricultural land, residential plots, and a commercial property registered in the names of Korrapati's associates. ​

The ED launched its probe based on an FIR dated November 10, 2020, filed by the Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB), Hyderabad, under various sections of the Indian Penal Code, 1860, against Korrapati and others. ​

According to the press release dated January 31, 2026, the ACB's charge-sheet was filed on April 21, 2023, before the additional chief metropolitan Magistrate-cum-Special Judicial Magistrate for first class for CBI cases, Hyderabad. ​

The document alleged that Korrapati fraudulently availed credit facilities totaling Rs 10 crore from Syndicate Bank, Chandanagar Branch, by submitting forged sub-contract agreements and non-existent work orders as collateral. ​

Investigations showed that Korrapati, in collusion with others, deliberately submitted forged documents to secure the loans. He defaulted on repayment, causing a wrongful loss of Rs 12.30 crore to the bank and corresponding wrongful gain to himself. ​

The ED probe further revealed that the accused availed loans based on non-existent or overvalued properties. Instead of using the funds for the declared business purposes, Korrapati diverted, layered, and siphoned off the proceeds through bogus subcontracts, fake raw-material bills, round-tripping of funds, and cash withdrawals.

​It was also found that Korrapati misused benefits under the NSIC Raw Material Assistance Scheme by submitting forged bank guarantees and pro-forma invoices, then routing the funds back to his own accounts. ​

The proceeds of crime were used to repay loans, secure other projects, and fund personal and business expenditures. The attached assets have been frozen, barring any sale or transfer pending further legal action. ​

The investigation remains ongoing to trace additional proceeds of crime and related entities.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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