DVAC seizes ₹22.33 lakh, arrests 7 officials in Tamil Nadu anti-corruption drive

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DVAC seizes ₹22.33 lakh, arrests 7 officials in Tamil Nadu anti-corruption drive

Synopsis

In a single week, Tamil Nadu's DVAC swept through 11 government offices and multiple border checkposts, netting ₹22.33 lakh in unaccounted cash and snaring seven officials — from a constable taking ₹1,000 for a licence return to a junior assistant pocketing ₹15,000 for a building plan approval. The operation lays bare the scale of petty corruption embedded in everyday public services.

Key Takeaways

The DVAC conducted a week-long crackdown across Tamil Nadu from 4 July to 10 July .
Total unaccounted cash recovered: ₹22.33 lakh — ₹12.46 lakh from office inspections, ₹9.87 lakh from border checkposts.
Surprise inspections covered 11 government offices across 7 districts .
Seven officials arrested in trap cases, with bribe amounts ranging from ₹1,000 to ₹15,000 .
A Special Court in Villupuram separately convicted former Tahsildar Adhibagavan and former driver Kandasamy , sentencing both to 3 years' imprisonment .

The Directorate of Vigilance and Anti-Corruption (DVAC) conducted a week-long crackdown across Tamil Nadu between 4 July and 10 July, recovering ₹22.33 lakh in unaccounted cash and arresting seven government officials on bribery charges. The enforcement drive spanned multiple districts and targeted both government offices and state border checkposts.

Scale of the Operation

According to DVAC Director A. Arun, surprise inspections were carried out at 11 government offices across Krishnagiri, Tiruvallur, Theni, Kanniyakumari, Dindigul, Thanjavur, and Ranipet districts, yielding ₹12.46 lakh in unaccounted cash. An additional ₹9.87 lakh was seized during vehicle checks at state border checkposts, bringing the total recovery to ₹22.33 lakh.

Officials Caught in Bribery Traps

The DVAC registered seven trap cases during the drive. On 7 July, Junior Assistant Balamurugan was arrested in Villupuram district for allegedly accepting ₹15,000 to approve a building plan. On the same day, Village Administrative Officer Abdul Rahman was held in Tiruppur district for allegedly receiving ₹5,000 to process a patta transfer application.

On 9 July, Police Constable Alaguraja of Velachery Police Station in Chennai was caught allegedly accepting ₹1,000 to return a confiscated two-wheeler licence. A Sub-Inspector attached to Thirupuvanam Police Station in Sivaganga district was arrested the same day for allegedly receiving ₹3,000 to facilitate a marriage-related matter. Village Assistant Ganesan, also from Sivaganga, was arrested on 9 July for allegedly accepting ₹3,000 to process a patta name transfer.

On 10 July, Taluk office assistant Aaron was arrested in Kallakurichi district while allegedly accepting ₹2,500 for a patta name transfer. Land Surveyor Shankar was arrested in Tenkasi district after allegedly demanding and accepting ₹10,000 for a similar service.

Court Convicts Former Officials in Separate Case

In a related development, the Special Court for Prevention of Corruption Act cases in Villupuram convicted former Tahsildar Adhibagavan and former driver Kandasamy in a bribery case. The court sentenced both to three years' imprisonment and imposed a fine of ₹1,000 each, according to the DVAC.

Context and Significance

The bribery amounts in the individual trap cases range from as low as ₹1,000 to ₹15,000 — pointing to petty corruption at the grassroots level of public service delivery, particularly in land record and police functions. This comes amid sustained pressure on Tamil Nadu's administrative machinery to improve transparency in citizen services. The DVAC's simultaneous use of surprise office inspections and border checkpost surveillance signals a broader enforcement posture beyond reactive trap cases alone.

Point of View

Building plan approvals, licence returns. These are services that ordinary citizens interact with daily, and the bribe amounts (as low as ₹1,000) suggest systemic extraction rather than isolated opportunism. The simultaneous use of border checkpost surveillance alongside office raids indicates the DVAC is expanding its operational scope, but sustained deterrence will require faster prosecution timelines — the Villupuram conviction, while welcome, involved former officials, not current ones caught in this drive.
NationPress
12 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

What did the DVAC seize during the Tamil Nadu anti-corruption drive?
The DVAC recovered a total of ₹22.33 lakh in unaccounted cash — ₹12.46 lakh from surprise inspections at 11 government offices and ₹9.87 lakh from vehicle checks at state border checkposts. The drive ran from 4 July to 10 July across multiple Tamil Nadu districts.
How many officials were arrested and for what offences?
Seven government officials were arrested in trap cases for allegedly accepting bribes ranging from ₹1,000 to ₹15,000 for services such as building plan approvals, patta transfers, and licence returns. Those arrested include a police constable, a sub-inspector, village assistants, a taluk office assistant, and a land surveyor.
Which districts were covered in the DVAC crackdown?
The crackdown covered Krishnagiri, Tiruvallur, Theni, Kanniyakumari, Dindigul, Thanjavur, Ranipet, Villupuram, Tiruppur, Chennai, Sivaganga, Kallakurichi, and Tenkasi districts, according to DVAC Director A. Arun.
What was the court verdict in the separate Villupuram bribery case?
The Special Court for Prevention of Corruption Act cases in Villupuram convicted former Tahsildar Adhibagavan and former driver Kandasamy in a bribery case, sentencing both to three years' imprisonment and a fine of ₹1,000 each.
Why does petty corruption in patta and licence services matter?
Patta transfers, building plan approvals, and licence returns are among the most common government services accessed by ordinary citizens. Bribe demands — even as low as ₹1,000 — create a regressive tax on those least able to pay and erode public trust in local administration.
Nation Press
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