Ponzi scheme – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Sat, 16 May 2026 13:42:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Ponzi scheme – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Shivanand Neelannavar, promoter of alleged ponzi scheme, held https://artifex.news/article70987250-ecerand29/ Sat, 16 May 2026 13:42:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70987250-ecerand29/ Read More “Shivanand Neelannavar, promoter of alleged ponzi scheme, held” »

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The Belagavi police arrested Shivanand S. Neelannavar, the promoter of Shivam Associates, a financial firm that had been operating without regulatory approvals, on Friday (May 15).

Shivam Associates (ACCUMEN), the firm he founded, faces charges of collecting deposits from the general public by promising 36% returns, without approval from the Reserve Bank of India, Securities and Exchange Board of India, Department of Cooperation, or any other Central or State government agency. Preliminary investigations conducted by officers from the police, revenue and cooperation departments have revealed that over 35,000 persons had invested in the firm. A significant number of them are ex-servicemen. The firm was running a multi-level marketing scheme that had no approvals either. The quantum of funds involved is yet to be determined.

Belagavi Deputy Commissioner Mohammed Roshan told reporters in Belagavi on Saturday (May 16) that the alleged ponzi scheme scam is likely to be transferred to the CID as it has inter-State and inter-district ramifications, in addition to the fact that prima facie, the amount involved crossed ₹50 crore.

Belagavi Deputy Commissioner Mohammad Roshan and Police Commissioner Borase Bhushan Gulabrao speaking to reporters in Belagavi on Saturday (May 16).
| Photo Credit:
P.K. BADIGER

He said that investigators are scanning all the documents retrieved from the offices of the firm and the residences of Neelannavar to gather data related to its operations. In most cases, the deposits were received as hand loans. However, there is a High Court judgement which states that hand loans can be treated as deposits in such cases, the Deputy Commissioner said.

“Some time ago, a financial scam cell was set up in the Deputy Commissioner’s office to enforce The Banning of Unregulated Deposit Schemes Act, 2019 (BUDS Act) and the Karnataka Protection of Interest of Depositors in Financial Establishments Act, 2004 (KPID Act). The cell has been tracking the activities of Neelannavar for a few months now,” Mr. Roshan said, explaining that a formal investigation was launched by a team headed by Shravan Nayak, Assistant Commissioner and Sub-Divisional Magistrate. He submitted a 150-page report that clearly showed that the firm had no permission from any government agency to collect deposits, give or receive loans or indulge in any financial transactions with any member of the public.

“A detailed investigation led by Police Commissioner Borase Bhushan Gulabrao also showed that there were several cognisable wrongs done by the firm. Following this, officials of various departments conducted raids on the premises of the firm and the founder. They recovered digital and documentary data. These are being studied for further evidence of wrongdoing. Copies of all relevant documents have been shared with the State government,’’ Mr. Roshan said.

The Deputy Commissioner said a list of depositors has been obtained. It appears that several pensioners deposited their life’s savings into the firm while some land-losing farmers had invested the compensation they received after acquisition. In other cases, some persons were benefiting from inviting others to invest. He appealed to the victims of the scheme to file complaints and seek refunds from the district financial frauds cell. “The issue will now be taken up by a competent authority at the State level that will be appointed soon. It will ensure that all the depositors get refunds as per law,’’ Mr. Roshan said.

Mr. Gulabrao said that an FIR was registered against Neelannavar and his associates based on provisions of the BUDS Act and KPID Act. “Further investigation is on, but the accused is not cooperating with investigators. He is dodging all serious and specific questions by giving vague and unrelated responses. We will seek police custody of the accused as we need him for further investigations,’’ the Police Commissioner said.

“Neelannavar had been holding several public events, where he invited celebrities and artists to speak or perform. In one of the events held in Kadur village, he claimed to have collected over 15,000 guns and weapons. This was a red flag for us. This created suspicions on whether he was trying to build a gang for unlawful activities. Police officers began tracking all his activities from then on. Officers of the police, social media, and IT cell collected all his public statements,’’ he said.

Neelannavar hails from Unkal near Hubballi and later settled in Belagavi. A PU graduate, he has done petty jobs like driving and selling ice-cream. Around 2016, he took loans to invest in the stock market. “This seems to have given him an idea of investing other people’s money in the market. However, his approach did not have the sanction of the law,’’ the Police Commissioner said. He added that most of the transactions of Shivam Associates were done through banks using cheques and a website built for that purpose. Officials have initiated steps to freeze the bank accounts.

“Investigators have collected copies of ads issued by Shivam Associates through social media, pamphlets and other means where a payment of 36% was promised for a minimum investment of ₹1 lakh. We appeal to the public to conduct due diligence before investing their money. For example, when the State Bank of India pays around 6-7% interest for deposits, how can any agency afford to pay 36%? This means that the agency is using methods that do not have the sanction of the law. People should not respond to such impossible claims,’’ he said.

He said officers are tracking some other such companies running ponzi schemes, fake investment schemes, or deposit schemes, and will take action soon.

Published – May 16, 2026 07:12 pm IST



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Should you really await your second ‘marshmallow’? https://artifex.news/article70961409-ece/ Sun, 10 May 2026 03:40:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70961409-ece/ Read More “Should you really await your second ‘marshmallow’?” »

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Life is a labyrinth brimming with twists and turns. It is never linear; no single pattern; no one-size-fits-all map; but it unfolds like stars scattered across the sky. And so for our third child, we spoke about last week, who is waiting for its second marshmallow there is no single clear outcome.

Caught in the maze of uncertainties in life, the promise of the second marshmallow may unfold in many ways. Perhaps the marshmallow arrived, and the child savoured the candy, finding it much like the first. Perhaps the candy melted before it reached the child’s lips. Or perhaps it never arrived at all, and the person who promised the second one never returned, leaving the child waiting for Godot.

One wait but three different destinies. And at the outset, there is simply no knowing which path the child would eventually land upon. Without much ado, let us first understand who this mysterious third child is. The shocking part: the third child is in fact not a child at all, but the middle-class dreamer waiting for the right time, the right opportunity, the right job, the right salary, the right investment option, or the right what not. Likewise, in the real world of money, the wait has taken many forms, and not all of them have ended well. Let’s unwrap each destiny…

The eternal wait

Across the country, millions of ordinary people entrusted their hard-earned savings to Ponzi schemes or fraudulent chit fund companies that promised very high returns. They saved month after month; year after year. They were not greedy or reckless. They were simply the third child who believed every word of the so-called ‘promise’. They kept saving for children’s education, daughters’ marriage or a dignified old age.

Then one black morning, the office shutters came down. The phone went unanswered. The agent absconded. The company collapsed, and the night-fliers disappeared into the dark. In one blow, both marshmallows vanished. The second marshmallow, the promised returns, and the first one, the principal amount, as well were snatched from the toiling hands.

When it melts

This time, the marshmallow agent returned promptly, but melted on the way. The middle-class waiting child who has been faithfully paying premiums into the whole life endowment or money-back policies for two to three decades received something far smaller than expected. Inflation had quietly gobbled up the returns, and when the marshmallow finally arrived, it was never whole. Just a peanut.

The fruitful wait

Not every wait ends in tears. Those who patiently held Sovereign Gold Bonds, stayed invested in index funds or ETFs through market crashes, or quietly let their EPF/VPF compound decade after decade found the second marshmallow as expected.

What was never asked

Before waiting faithfully, the child never asked a few crucial questions. First, is my current environment stable enough for me to wait, or should I grab or ignore the opportunity? Second, for whom exactly am I waiting for, and are they reliable enough to keep the promise? This awareness will help one stay away from honeyed promises and night-fliers. Third, what exactly am I waiting for: a specific corpus amount, a target return, a salary increase, or debt clearance? Fourth, is this financial wait truly worth it? Simply ask yourself one honest question: will the time you spend waiting match the promised returns? Fifth, am I prepared for every outcome of the wait? If the marshmallow (the expected fruits of the wait) never comes, will it ruin my life, or can I muster the courage and rely on other backups? If it melts on the way, can I absorb the loss and accept its sour taste? And if at all it arrives whole, do I really know what to do with it?

Sixth, does the promise match the goal of your wait? A money-back policy does not match a retirement goal. A whole life endowment plan does not match a child’s education needs. An EPF/VPF does not match an emergency fund. Gold does not match the goal of wealth creation. The marshmallow may be sweet. But, was it the one you were actually waiting for? Ask. The Gaza child never asked these questions because hunger gave it no time. The Washington child never bothered to ask because abundance made the wait itself unnecessary. Alas! The third child never asked simply because nobody told it to. So, ask before you wait. Because, not every marshmallow is worth the wait, and not every wait is blessed with a marshmallow.

(The writer is an NISM & Crisil-certified Wealth Manager and certified in NISM’s Research Analyst module)



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Rs 37 Crore Cash Seized In Probe Agency ED Raids Against Mumbai-Based Ponzi Company Ritz Consultancy Services, Its Boss Amber Dalal https://artifex.news/rs-37-crore-cash-seized-in-probe-agency-ed-raids-against-mumbai-based-ponzi-company-ritz-consultancy-services-its-boss-amber-dalal-5957485rand29/ Mon, 24 Jun 2024 07:25:15 +0000 https://artifex.news/rs-37-crore-cash-seized-in-probe-agency-ed-raids-against-mumbai-based-ponzi-company-ritz-consultancy-services-its-boss-amber-dalal-5957485rand29/ Read More “Rs 37 Crore Cash Seized In Probe Agency ED Raids Against Mumbai-Based Ponzi Company Ritz Consultancy Services, Its Boss Amber Dalal” »

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New Delhi:

Bank and demat account deposits apart from cash worth about Rs 37 crore has been seized by the Enforcement Directorate (ED) as part of a money laundering probe against a Mumbai-based financial consultant and his company who are alleged to have duped investors of Rs 600 crore through a Ponzi scheme.

The federal agency said on Sunday that the action was undertaken after carrying out raids in the metropolitan city on June 21 against Amber Dalal and his company Ritz Consultancy Services.

The Enforcement Directorate case of money laundering stems from a Mumbai Police FIR that charged the Chartered Accountant and his company with taking money from investors through a “suspected Ponzi scheme that promised high returns.” Dalal “absconded” with this money after giving initial returns. It has been gathered that Dalal raised more than Rs 600 crore from 1,300 investors, the ED said in a statement.

He was arrested by the EOW, Mumbai Police and is presently under judicial custody, it said.

Dalal raised money from investors on the pretext that he invested the funds in nine commodities like gold, silver, crude oil, natural gas, zinc, lead, nickel, copper, aluminium and their trade, ensuring the capital is safe and promising an annual return of 18-22 per cent to his investors, the ED alleged.

Using the same modus operandi, he raised money from investors in UAE and USA as well, it said.

The search operations unveiled a network of stockbrokers, investment advisors who brought clients in lieu of commission. It is also found that payment received from new investment were being utilised to pay out the monthly returns to the old investors, it said.

Dalal “diverted” the funds received in Ritz’s account to personal accounts, which were further routed to family member’s accounts and used for creating assets, the ED said.

He “diverted” about Rs 51 crore to his personal accounts. These funds were used to acquire assets in India and abroad, it said.

The ED has identified eight such immovable properties in India and two abroad.

“Other than from banking channels, investments were made through cash as well, which was then infused in books as accommodation entries in connivance with Mumbai-based jewellers.

“Returns on such cash-based investments were given to investors in India and abroad (including UK, UAE) by hawala operators,” the ED said.

Cash, bank deposits, Demat account holdings to the tune of Rs 37 crore have been frozen and various incriminating documents, digital devices have been seized during the searches, it said.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)



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