Technicians expected a routine repair when they arrived at the ATM in Tinsukia. It had been out of service for days, and the job seemed straightforward—open the machine, identify the fault, get it running again. But the moment they accessed the interior, they realized something far more unusual had happened.
Inside, instead of a simple mechanical issue, they found shredded currency scattered throughout the compartment. Thousands of rupee notes had been torn into fragments, with clear signs that rodents had made their way inside the machine. The ATM, operated by the State Bank of India, had effectively become an unexpected shelter.
Over time, the unattended machine had allowed rats to nest within its structure. With access to stored cash, they chewed through bundles of notes, reducing a significant amount of currency to unusable pieces. By the end of the discovery, approximately ₹12 lakh had been destroyed, with only a portion of the money still salvageable.
Among the debris, technicians also found a dead rat, confirming how long the infestation had gone unnoticed. What was designed as a secure financial system had, in its period of inactivity, turned into something entirely different.
The incident serves as a stark reminder that even the most secure systems depend on constant maintenance. Without it, control can quietly slip away in the most unexpected ways.