Skip to Content

Signalling the end of property cheats?

up
261 users have liked.
Everything elseGovernance

The proprietors of Orange and Granity properties gave an undertaking before the High Court that they would refund the amount they had collected from people for allotment of sites and flats in Bangalore ...   The case against Orange and Granity properties was that they had collected money from people promising them sites and flats which they didn’t allot later ... The police have registered a cheating ... both Orange and Granity have to refund of Rs 11 crore to the public ... 70 cases were registered and an FIR was filed against the accused.

For the full report in the New Indian Express, click here

If my understanding is right, all these years, the litigants generally had recourse only to Civil suits, which, with the time taken, allowed the culprits any amount of time to play around and even get away. The difference this time appears to be the pro-activeness of the Police in getting the complainants to file criminal cases, and pursuing them, resulting in the culprits being forced to come to terms without delay. Can we hope that this will signal the end of such property racketeering in the city?

I don't think there's a single Bangalorean whose attention had not been drawn by the all-pervasive ads of 'Orange properties' over the last few months. And, considering that even today, inspite of so many of the 'Nigerian' dupes getting exposed, people still fall for them, it is not surprising that high decibel 'Orange' campaign found so many suckers. While wondering about the gullibility of the public, one may perhaps apportion a part of the blame also on the multiplicity of government agencies involved in the regulation of the housing industry, and the confusion caused their none-too-clear guidelines.  

Muralidhar Rao

[PS: Moderation note: Post was trimmed. please avoid quoting full news report.]

Comments

Rithesh's picture

I am surprised

up
192 users have liked.
Wouldnt this still be the case of cheating, even if they agreed to give the money. What about the interest that the investors lost? What about all the trouble that they have had to go through and the mental agony?

Have these guys submitted any collateral to the court? My guess is they are just buying time. I am surprised by the courts decision.

But hats off to the police - hopefully this is not a one off instance.
admin's picture

Careful

up
191 users have liked.

Murali sir - please avoid posting the full news report when quoting them. That is technically illegal and unethical. Few line summary, and a link is the best way of doing it.

murali772's picture

have given credit

up
207 users have liked.

I have given credit to the source - New Indian Express. As long as that's done, there's nothing unethical or illegal, in my understanding.

And, I generally extract only the highlights. This time it happenned to be almost the entire report because each of the sentences contained something newsworthy.

Muralidhar Rao

Muralidhar Rao

Praja.in comment guidelines

Posting Guidelines apply for comments as well. No foul language, hate mongering or personal attacks. If criticizing third person or an authority, you must be fact based, as constructive as possible, and use gentle words. Avoid going off-topic no matter how nice your comment is. Moderators reserve the right to either edit or simply delete comments that don't meet these guidelines. If you are nice enough to realize you violated the guidelines, please save Moderators some time by editing and fixing yourself. Thanks!



about seo | blog