BB reserve heist: Probe report submission deferred for 75th time
Staff Reporter :
A Dhaka Court on Thursday deferred again the date of submitting the investigation report of the case filed in connection with the stolen money from Bangladesh Bank’s account with Federal Reserve Bank of New York in February, 2016.
It has asked the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) to submit probe report by December 31, 2023 in Bangladesh Bank cyber heist case, said Md Shah Alam, General Register Officer (GRO) for Motijheel Police Station cases.
Metropolitan magistrate of Dhaka, Rajesh Chowdhury, passed the order after Abdullah AlYasin, Additional Superintendent of Police and also Investigation Officer of the case, failed to submit the probe report by Thursday (November 9).
Earlier on September 20, the same court fixed November 9, 2023 to submit the probe report. The CID has already passed more than seven years to probe the case, but failed to submit the probe report yet.
Md Shah Alam said, the CID has taken 75 dates to complete its probe into the case filed over the heist of $101 million from Bangladesh Bank’s account with Federal Reserve Bank of New York in February 2016.
On February 4, 2016, hackers broke into the central bank’s system and generated 70 fake payment orders to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York amounting to $1.94 billion.
The NY Fed’s security system flagged the payment orders but only five of them fell through and $101 million was released.
On March 15, 2016, Joint Director of Accounts and Budgeting Department of Bangladesh Bank Zobayer Bin Huda filed a case with the Motijheel Police Station under the money laundering prevention act.
The Criminal Investigation Department of the police is now investigating the case.
On March 22, 2016, the then Metropolitan Magistrate Md Mahbubur Rahman allowed CID to conduct forensic tests on the hard disks of three Bangladesh Bank computers. The three hard disks were seized from Bangladesh Bank, after the heist occurred.
At least $81 million was transferred to the accounts in Manila-based RCBC, from where it disappeared into the casinos of Philippines.
