What Sentenced the Ex-Post Office Employee to 5 Years in Jail?

Synopsis
Key Takeaways
- Vishal Kumar Ahirwar was sentenced for misappropriating funds.
- The amount involved exceeded Rs 70 lakh.
- He was in charge of the Khimlasa Sub Post Office from 2020 to 2022.
- The case was registered on November 17, 2022.
- Fraudulent activities were conducted over a span of nearly two years.
New Delhi, Sep 26 (NationPress) A CBI court in Madhya Pradesh's Jabalpur has found a former Sub Post Master of Khimlasa Sub Post Office, Sagar district, guilty and sentenced him to five years of rigorous imprisonment for illegally diverting over Rs 70 lakh from the accounts of depositors, as reported by the agency on Friday.
On Thursday, the court handed down a sentence to the accused, Vishal Kumar Ahirwar, who held the position of Sub Post Master from 2020 to 2022, imposing a fine of Rs 32,000 along with the prison term.
The CBI initiated a case against Ahirwar on November 17, 2022, based on claims that he exploited his official role to misappropriate funds by altering withdrawal protocols.
Between June 23, 2020, and March 19, 2022, Ahirwar is accused of creating fake withdrawal slips and tampering with entries in account passbooks.
The CBI stated, "The actions of Vishal Kumar Ahirwar resulted in a wrongful loss of Rs 70.97 lakh to the government and a corresponding gain to himself."
Following the investigation, the CBI filed a charge sheet against him in front of the Special Judge for CBI cases, Jabalpur, on November 23, 2023.
During the trial, the prosecution presented compelling evidence demonstrating how Ahirwar methodically executed fraudulent withdrawals over nearly two years.
The court subsequently convicted and sentenced him as per the trial's findings.
In a separate case, the Special Judge at the CBI Court in Ghaziabad convicted Manoj Srivastava, Branch Manager at Union Bank of India, SSI Branch Noida, to four years in prison with a fine of Rs 30,000 in relation to a Rs 40 lakh bank fraud case.
The CBI had registered the case against Srivastava and others on December 14, 2010, due to allegations of bank fraud.
These cases underscore the agency’s commitment to combating corruption and fraud in financial institutions that affect public resources.