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Arpita Mukherjee, arrested along with Bengal Minister Partha Chatterjee in a school jobs scam, has reportedly claimed that he used to stash money at her home and treat it like a "mini-bank".

Arpita Mukherjee's lawyers are likely to deny the claims of the ED in court at the next hearing and have hit out at the agency for leaking details of their investigation to the media and pointed out the lack of convictions in cases by central agencies.

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Investigators had found ₹ 21 crore in cash from the home of Arpita Mukherjee, a former actor-model and a close aide of the minister. Visuals of a large pile of cash at her home emerged a day before she and Partha Chatterjee were arrested on Saturday.

Rev. Bonnie McCubbin holds a journal containing the last word of Bishop Francis Asbury, which is part of a cache of previously unknown documents written by Bishop Francis Asbury that she discovered at Lovely Lane Methodist Museum and Archives. McCubbin is examining the entry written by Bishop Asbury two days before he died. Known as the “father of American Methodism.”

Arpita Mukherjee, say sources, has told the Enforcement Directorate that "all the money used to be stashed in one room that only Partha Chatterjee and his people entered".

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Sources say she claimed that the minister used to visit her home every week or every 10 days. "Partha used my house and that of another woman as a mini-bank. That other woman is also his close friend," Arpita Mukherjee reportedly told investigators.

She claimed, according to sources, that the minister never revealed how much money there was in the room.

Arpita Mukherjee told them that she was introduced to Partha Chatterjee by a Bengali actor and that the two had been close since 2016.

Sources claim she admitted that the money came from kickbacks received for transfers and for helping colleges get recognition. And that the money was always brought by others, never the minister.

The Enforcement Directorate has reportedly found incriminating documents. The agency alleges that the minister was in contact with Ms Mukherjee and that the cash found in her home was "proceeds of crime".

Partha Mukherjee has been sent to the probe agency's custody till August 3.

Sources say the ED also recovered an incriminating diary with around 40 pages of notes that could provide crucial leads in the investigation. The ED has also recovered several deeds of properties that could implicate Partha Chatterjee.

26CommentsThe minister, a top Trinamool Congress leader who used to be a close aide of Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, is accused of irregularities in the recruitment of teachers and staff in state-sponsored and aided schools.


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