Mumbai builder booked after man alleges property sold using grandmother's 'forged' deed signed 11 years after her death
MUMBAI: Bandra-based builder Akhtar Rizvi and his staffers have been booked in a fresh case of cheating and forgery after a 74-year-old man lodged an FIR alleging that Rizvi fraudulently executed a sale deed using forged documents linked to his grandmother.
The complainant alleged that the property was originally purchased in the name of his grandmother, who died in 1968 and was illiterate. He claimed that records obtained through the Right to Information (RTI) Act revealed a sale deed allegedly signed by his grandmother in 1979, nearly a decade after her death. Akhtar Rizvi did not respond when contacted by TOI.

The Bandra police have registered an FIR against Rizvi under sections related to cheating, forgery, breach of trust and fraudulent documentation.
Complainant Abdul Jabbar Ramzan alias Ramju Sheikh claimed that a piece of land was originally purchased by his father in the name of his grandmother, Hajani Nurbibai Kalu , in 1957. A building named Rahenam Allah Ka Manzil was later constructed on the plot in 1962.
The complainant alleged that the property was originally purchased in the name of his grandmother, who died in 1968 and was illiterate. He claimed that records obtained through the Right to Information (RTI) Act revealed a sale deed allegedly signed by his grandmother in 1979, nearly a decade after her death. Akhtar Rizvi did not respond when contacted by TOI.
The Bandra police have registered an FIR against Rizvi under sections related to cheating, forgery, breach of trust and fraudulent documentation.
Complainant Abdul Jabbar Ramzan alias Ramju Sheikh claimed that a piece of land was originally purchased by his father in the name of his grandmother, Hajani Nurbibai Kalu , in 1957. A building named Rahenam Allah Ka Manzil was later constructed on the plot in 1962.
Next Story