Odisha Vigilance arrests Deputy Director of Mines in ₹2 lakh bribery trap
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Odisha Vigilance on Wednesday, 8 July arrested Satyajit Rout, Deputy Director (Geology)-cum-Deputy Director of Mines, Office of the Deputy Director of Mines, Jeypore, in Koraput district, after he was allegedly caught red-handed accepting a ₹2 lakh bribe from a leaseholder seeking lease extension and preferential treatment in sand spot auctions. The arrest followed a meticulously laid trap by Vigilance sleuths the previous night, with the entire bribe amount recovered on the spot in the presence of witnesses.
How the Trap Was Laid
According to Odisha Vigilance, the leaseholder had already deposited the requisite amount towards the spot auction but found Rout allegedly stalling the process without valid reason. Rout reportedly demanded ₹2 lakh in exchange for processing the lease extension and facilitating future benefits in sand spot auctions. Left with no recourse, the leaseholder approached Vigilance authorities and lodged a complaint.
Acting swiftly on the complaint, Vigilance officials mounted a trap on Tuesday night and apprehended Rout at the moment of allegedly receiving the bribe. The full ₹2 lakh was seized from his possession before witnesses, forming the primary evidence in the case.
Searches Unearth Additional Cash
Following the arrest, Vigilance teams launched simultaneous searches at multiple properties linked to Rout — his residential house in Lingaraj Nagar, Jeypore; two houses at Bidyadharpur and Mahanga in Cuttack district; and his office chamber in Koraput. The searches yielded ₹2.90 lakh in cash from his Jeypore residence and a further ₹2 lakh from the Bidyadharpur property, bringing the total cash seizure to ₹6.90 lakh.
Parallel Probe Into Forest Ranger's Disproportionate Assets
In a separate but concurrent operation on Wednesday, Vigilance officials launched searches at multiple locations linked to Rabindra Kumar Nayak, Forest Ranger, Kendrapada Forest Range, on allegations of possessing assets disproportionate to his known sources of income. The searches, still ongoing at the time of reporting, had already uncovered two buildings — including a palatial four-storeyed structure — six high-value plots in the prime Baranga area of Cuttack district, cash of ₹2.14 lakh, deposits worth ₹43 lakh, and a four-wheeler, among other assets.
Pattern of Vigilance Action in Odisha
The twin operations reflect an intensifying anti-corruption drive by Odisha Vigilance targeting mid-level government officials across natural-resource and forest departments — sectors historically vulnerable to rent-seeking due to their discretionary licensing powers. Sand mining, in particular, has been a recurring flashpoint for graft in Odisha, with multiple officials booked in recent years over lease-related irregularities. Notably, the simultaneous multi-location searches in both cases signal coordinated intelligence gathering ahead of the traps, rather than reactive action.
Both cases are under active investigation, with further asset disclosures expected as searches continue.