
Former Kia India workers, scrap dealers face probe over theft of 1,008 engines
Though the engines were worth only $2.3 million, the police investigation noted the case had 'widespread impact on industrial operations, stakeholder trust and employment security', and raised concerns about inter-state crime networks.
Kia in March complained to police in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh that a review of internal records found engines sourced from its sister carmaker, Hyundai, were missing and it suspected a conspiracy between past and present employees.
An initial police investigation found two former Kia India factory workers - a team leader and a head of section in the engine dispatch section - were involved in illegally transporting the engines from the factory using forged invoices and manipulated gate passes, according to an April 16 police document.
They worked with at least two other individuals who helped arrange transport, and two other scrap dealers who helped sell them to buyers as far away as the capital city New Delhi.
'The entire operation involved repeated illegal transactions, use of multiple trucks bearing manipulated or pseudo registration numbers,' Inspector K. Raghavan said in his investigation document dated April 16, seen by Reuters.
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Raghavan declined to comment when contacted, citing confidentiality.
In a statement to Reuters, Kia India said it identified the discrepancies as it enhanced its inventory management processes last year. Kia India conducted an internal investigation, reported the case to police and was continuing to strengthen internal process governance and reinforce stringent monitoring systems, it added.
'Disappearance' of engines
The former head of the engine dispatch section at Kia's factory, Vinayagamoorthy Veluchamy, 37, is currently under arrest in custody, and has applied to the state High Court for bail, according to court papers seen by Reuters. He denied any involvement in the alleged thefts, the papers showed. He left the company in 2023.
The other Kia worker accused is 33-year-old former team leader Patan Saleem, who worked at the factory from 2020 to 2025, police documents showed. His whereabouts were not known and two phone numbers cited in the police document were not in service.
The two former employees are yet to be formally charged with any offence, but have been named as accused in the investigation, which is still in initial stages.
Given the 'high-level preplanning, internal access manipulation', they could face punishment of 10 years imprisonment or more under Indian laws if charged and convicted, the police document said.
While theft is relatively common in India, such large-scale, prolonged corporate-level cases such as the one involving Kia are rare.
Kia first reported the matter of the 'disappearance' of engines to police after stock reconciliation in January 2025, a month after it also found unauthorized vehicle movement in the factory's CCTV footage. Its March complaint put the missing engines number at 940, documents show.
Police recovered nine mobile phones containing WhatsApp screenshots, transport invoices and truck photos.
'The proceeds of crime were either spent on personal needs, clearing debts, purchasing immovable property or reinvested in businesses,' said the police document.

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