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LTC scam: CBI registers cases

June 13, 2014 11:07 am | Updated October 18, 2016 02:38 pm IST - New Delhi

A view of the CBI headquarters in New Delhi. The CBI on Friday registered cases against six current and former Rajya Sabha MPs in the Leave and Travel Concession (LTC) scam, an official said. File photo

The CBI has registered cases against six sitting and former members of Rajya Sabha in connection with the LTC scam in which travel reimbursement was allegedly claimed by them through purportedly forged bills.

CBI sources said that three sitting MPs -- D Bandopadhyay of Trinamool Congress, Brajesh Pathak of BSP and Lalhming Liana of Mizo National Front -- have been named along with some travel agents in the cases filed.

None of three MPs responded to phone calls seeking their reaction while SMSes sent to them, too, remained unanswered.

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But TMC leader Derek O’Brien said in a tweet that, “This is a racket run by corrupt travel agencies... my colleague innocent. But we will cooperate to bust travel agency scam.”

Former Rajya Sabha members JPN Singh (BJP), Mahmood A Madani (Rashtriya Lok Dal) and Renu Pradhan (Biju Janata Dal), too, have been named as accused.

CBI sources said that searches are being carried out at 10 places in Delhi and Odisha at the premises of politicians and some travel agents who have been named in the case.

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Sources said that the agency has found some more instances of alleged criminality during scrutiny of documents recovered during the first case registered in this connection on November 1 last year.

In the first FIR in the Leave Travel Concession scam, CBI booked JD(U) Rajya Sabha MP Anil Kumar Sahani for allegedly siphoning off around Rs 9.5 lakh by presenting fake air tickets and boarding passes.

Besides the MP, an Air India customer service agent, Rubaina Akhtar, and a Lajpat Nagar-based travel operator, Air Cruise Travels Private Ltd, were also named in the FIR in the scam which saw LTC claims being forged citing travel on the state-run Air India.

During its analysis of documents, CBI had found prima facie irregularities in the LTC claims with an intention to maximise personal benefit by scuttling the laid-down norms in collusion with travel agents.

The scam came to light after the vigilance department of Air India (AI) was alerted about the arrest of a man at Kolkata airport last year in March with 600 blank boarding passes of the airline in his possession.

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