Updated On: 14 April, 2024 03:57 AM IST | Mumbai | Vinod Kumar Menon
From the Jeep Scandal in 1948 to the Oshiwara Ponzi Scheme this year, financial crimes have come a long way, but so have financial forensics. mid-day takes a closer look at the fine science that helps nail white collar criminals

With white-collar crimes increasing in incidence as well as scope, financial forensics is proving to be a boon for law enforcement agencies when it comes to investigating and collecting evidence. Representation Pic
The first recorded big financial fraud in India is widely said to be the Jeep Scandal of 1948, when VK Krishna Menon, the then Indian High Commissioner to Britain, allegedly signed a deal for the purchase of 2,000 jeeps for the Indian Army for Rs 80 lakh. Only 155 jeeps, however, were delivered, were refurbished ones instead of new, were rejected as substandard and the company that supplied it was later found to have a capital of only 605 British Pounds.
Fast forward to 2024, when the Mumbai Police’s Economic Offences Wing arrested Ambar Dalal, a Mumbai-based businessman, for allegedly cheating over 592 investors to the tune of Rs 380 crore in a Ponzi scheme. The country has also witnessed other multi-crore rupee scams from 1948 to now.