<p>An Indian man here in the UAE has been jailed for a month for refusing to return AED 570,000 (approximately Rs 1.28 crore), which was incorrectly transferred to his bank account by a medical trading company in October 2021.</p>.<p>The man, whose identity has not been revealed, has been asked to pay the same amount in fines and will be deported at the end of his sentence, according to a verdict passed recently by the Dubai Criminal Court, <em>The National</em> newspaper reported.</p>.<p>The medical trading company intended to transfer the AED 570,000 to a business client but accidentally sent it to the man, an official of the company told the judges.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/indian-driver-in-uae-wins-lottery-worth-rs-33-crore-1174732.html" target="_blank">Indian driver in UAE wins lottery worth Rs 33 crore</a></strong></p>.<p>"We discovered the transfer was done to an account similar to the supplier's account without checking the details,” the official was quoted as saying in the report</p>.<p>The man confirmed that he received a transfer notification of the deposited amount but did not verify where the money came from.</p>.<p>“I was surprised when AED 570,000 was deposited in my bank account. I paid for my rent and expenses,” the report quoted the accused as saying.</p>.<p>The accused refused to return the money to the bank despite knowing it was transferred by mistake.</p>.<p>“A company asked me to return the money, but I refused because I was unsure if the money belonged to them. They asked me several times,” the report quoted him as saying in court.</p>.<p>On his refusal to return the money, the company reported the incident to Dubai's Al Raffa police station while the bank froze his account, but the money was not recovered.</p>.<p>It was not revealed if the accused had moved the money out of his account and deposited it elsewhere.</p>.<p>Dubai Public Prosecution charged him with obtaining the money illegally, the report said.</p>.<p>He has now appealed against the verdict, and a hearing is expected next month.</p>
<p>An Indian man here in the UAE has been jailed for a month for refusing to return AED 570,000 (approximately Rs 1.28 crore), which was incorrectly transferred to his bank account by a medical trading company in October 2021.</p>.<p>The man, whose identity has not been revealed, has been asked to pay the same amount in fines and will be deported at the end of his sentence, according to a verdict passed recently by the Dubai Criminal Court, <em>The National</em> newspaper reported.</p>.<p>The medical trading company intended to transfer the AED 570,000 to a business client but accidentally sent it to the man, an official of the company told the judges.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/indian-driver-in-uae-wins-lottery-worth-rs-33-crore-1174732.html" target="_blank">Indian driver in UAE wins lottery worth Rs 33 crore</a></strong></p>.<p>"We discovered the transfer was done to an account similar to the supplier's account without checking the details,” the official was quoted as saying in the report</p>.<p>The man confirmed that he received a transfer notification of the deposited amount but did not verify where the money came from.</p>.<p>“I was surprised when AED 570,000 was deposited in my bank account. I paid for my rent and expenses,” the report quoted the accused as saying.</p>.<p>The accused refused to return the money to the bank despite knowing it was transferred by mistake.</p>.<p>“A company asked me to return the money, but I refused because I was unsure if the money belonged to them. They asked me several times,” the report quoted him as saying in court.</p>.<p>On his refusal to return the money, the company reported the incident to Dubai's Al Raffa police station while the bank froze his account, but the money was not recovered.</p>.<p>It was not revealed if the accused had moved the money out of his account and deposited it elsewhere.</p>.<p>Dubai Public Prosecution charged him with obtaining the money illegally, the report said.</p>.<p>He has now appealed against the verdict, and a hearing is expected next month.</p>