TO AVOID CHEQUE RELATED
FRAUDS, THE RESERVE BANK OF INDIA HAS ISSUED FRESH GUIDELINES FOR CHEQUE
CLEARING BY BANKS IN INDIA
November 5, 2014
The Chairperson
/ Chief Executive Officers
All Scheduled Commercial Banks (excluding RRBs) / Local Area Banks
Dear Sir /
Madam,
Cheque related fraud cases - preventive measures
The rise in the
number of cheque related fraud cases is a matter of serious concern. It is
evident that many of such frauds could have been avoided had due diligence been
observed at the time of handling and/or processing the cheques and monitoring
newly opened accounts. Banks are, therefore, advised to review and strengthen
the controls in the cheque presenting/passing and account monitoring processes
and to ensure that all procedural guidelines including preventive measures are
followed meticulously by the dealing staff/officials. Given below are some of
the preventive measures banks may follow in this regard. The list is only
indicative.
I.
Ensuring the use of 100% CTS -
2010 compliant cheques.
II.
Strengthening the infrastructure
at the cheque handling Service Branches and bestowing special attention on the
quality of equipment and personnel posted for CTS based clearing, so that it is
not merely a mechanical process.
III.
Ensuring that the beneficiary is
KYC compliant so that the bank has recourse to him/her as long as he/she
remains a customer of the bank.
IV.
Examination under UV lamp for all
cheques beyond a threshold of say, Rs.2 lakh.
V.
Checking at multiple levels, of
cheques above a threshold of say, Rs. 5 lakh.
VI.
Close monitoring of credits and
debits in newly opened transaction accounts based on risk categorization.
VII.
Sending an SMS alert to
payer/drawer when cheques are received in clearing.
The threshold
limits mentioned above can be reduced or increased at a later stage with the
approval of the Board depending on the volume of cheques handled by the bank or
it's risk appetite.
2. In addition
to the above, banks may consider the following preventive measures for dealing with
suspicious or large value cheques (in relation to an account’s normal level of
operations):
a) Alerting the
customer by a phone call and getting the confirmation from the payer/drawer.
b) Contacting
base branch in case of non-home cheques.
The above may be
resorted to selectively if not found feasible to be implemented systematically.
3. It has been
reported that in some cases even though the original cheques were in the
custody of the customer, cheques with the same series had been presented and
encashed by fraudsters. In this connection, banks are advised to take
appropriate precautionary measures to ensure that the confidential information
viz., customer name / account number / signature, cheque serial numbers and
other related information are neither compromised nor misused either from the
bank or from the vendors’ (printers, couriers etc.) side. Due care and secure
handling is also to be exercised in the movement of cheques from the time they
are tendered over the counters or dropped in the collection boxes by customers.
Yours faithfully,
(Manoj Sharma)
Chief General Manager
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