Ram Mandir Donation Probe: FIR Names Eight Amid Systemic Lapses in Handling Temple Offerings

by · TFIPOST.com

What should have been the most sacred and tightly protected financial system at the Ram Mandir in Ayodhya is now under a cloud of suspicion, after police registered an FIR naming eight individuals over irregularities in the handling of devotees’ offerings. The development comes after inputs flagged during a Special Investigation Team (SIT) review, which reportedly raised serious questions about how cash donations were being processed inside the temple system.

The allegations strike at the heart of trust. Cash offered by devotees, believed to be a matter of faith and devotion, is now at the centre of a criminal investigation examining whether it was properly counted, properly recorded, or in some cases, possibly mismanaged during its movement through official channels. The FIR suggests that the issue is not limited to one point of failure but could involve multiple stages of handling where safeguards may have broken down.

Police have invoked serious provisions under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, including charges linked to theft, criminal breach of trust, conspiracy, concealment of stolen property and common intention. The Prevention of Corruption Act has also been applied, signalling that investigators are treating this not as a minor accounting lapse but as a matter involving potential abuse of responsibility within a sensitive institutional setup.

At the centre of the probe is a simple but explosive question: how did cash donations move from devotees’ hands into the system, and where did the process go wrong, if it did at all? Investigators are now attempting to reconstruct the entire chain of custody, from collection to counting to official records, to understand whether discrepancies were accidental, systemic, or deliberate.

The FIR names eight individuals who were part of this operational chain at different levels of handling and accounting of donations. Their roles, as described in the complaint, place them within the very process now under scrutiny, raising uncomfortable questions about oversight and internal control.

Avinash Shukla is alleged to have been involved in the management of cash donations and related financial handling within the temple system. Anukalp Mishra is said to have played a role in counting cash offerings and maintaining records. Lavkush Mishra has been linked to the collection and movement of donation cash. Manish Kumar Yadav is accused of assisting in handling and counting the offerings. Karunesh Pandey is named in relation to documentation and cash-counting responsibilities. Ramashankar Mishra is associated with the operational handling of donation funds. Subhash Srivastava is alleged to have been involved in processing donations. Ram Shankar Yadav alias Tinnu is accused of participation in handling and coordinating the donation funds.

All of them have been questioned in the initial phase of the investigation, while the case now moves into a deeper scrutiny of systems, records, and procedures that were supposed to ensure absolute transparency. Officials are tight-lipped, but the direction of the probe is clear: this is no longer just about individuals, but about whether the system itself failed where it mattered the most.

The investigation is ongoing, and the final truth, officials say, will emerge only after verification of records and due legal process.