The
search was conducted on March 6 under the provisions of Prevention of Money
Laundering Act (PMLA), 2002, says a release.
The ED initiated probe on the basis of Multiple
FIRs registered under various sections of Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988,
related to various issues in the TASMAC. These FIRs fall into the categories of
TASMAC shops collecting excess amount than the actual MRP; distillery companies
offering kickbacks to the officials of TASMAC for supply orders; senior
officials of TASMAC indulging in bribery from the retail TASMAC shops and for
transfer and posting of TASMAC staff.
During the search
action in the offices of TASMAC, incriminating data related to transfer
postings, transport tender, bar licence tender, indent orders favouring few
distillery companies, excess charge of ₹10-30 per bottle by the TASMAC outlets
involving the officials of TASMAC were recovered, the release added. The ED found evidence of manipulation in TASMAC’s
transport tender allocations. A glaring issue was the mismatch between the KYC
details of the applicant and the Demand Draft (DD), suggesting that the final
successful bidder did not even obtain the requisite DD before the application
deadline. Additionally, tenders were awarded despite having only a single
applicant in the final bid. TASMAC paid over ₹100 crore annually to
transporters, the release said.
Further, in the
allocation of bar license tenders by TASMAC, evidence related to the
manipulation of tender conditions were found. One such glaring issue is that
the applicants without any GST/PAN numbers and without any proper KYC
documentation, were allotted the final tenders. Evidences also revealed direct communication
between distillery companies and higher TASMAC officials, exposing efforts to
secure increased indent orders and undue favours.
The findings establish the occurrence of various
offences under the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 and generate Proceeds of
Crime as defined under the provisions of PMLA, 2002, the release said. Searches revealed large-scale financial
fraud involving distillery companies — SNJ, Kals, Accord, SAIFL, and Shiva
Distillery, along with bottling entities such as Devi Bottles, Crystal Bottles,
and GLR Holding, exposing a well-orchestrated scheme of unaccounted cash
generation and illicit payments.
Investigations also revealed that distilleries
systematically inflated expenses and fabricated bogus purchases, particularly
through bottle making companies, to siphon off over ₹1,000 Crore in unaccounted
cash. These funds were then used for kickbacks to secure increased supply
orders from TASMAC. Bottling companies
played a critical role in this fraudulent scheme by inflating sales figures,
allowing distilleries to route excess payments, which were later withdrawn in
cash and returned after deducting commissions.
This collusion between
distilleries and bottling companies was done through manipulation of financial
records, concealed cash flows, and systematic evasion. The findings confirm a
network where unaccounted cash was deliberately generated through inflated and
bogus expenses and subsequently utilised for purposes leading to huge profits.
Further, the role of employees/associates related
to TASMAC, distillery and bottle making companies along with other key
associates in the illicit affairs related to TASMAC are being examined/probed. Further
investigation is under progress, the release said.