Multiple reports describe how the Ram temple trust’s donation and cash-handling process is structured, from sealed donation boxes to counting facilities and eventual bank deposits. According to the coverage, cash is collected through donation boxes, then moved for counting in dedicated halls or counting areas, after which the amounts are recorded and deposited through banking channels. Investigators are reported to be reviewing this chain of custody to determine whether correct procedures are followed at each stage. The articles indicate that attention is focused on potential breakdowns in controls or recordkeeping—such as discrepancies between collection totals from donation boxes, counted amounts reported in counting operations, and the figures deposited with banks. While the reports outline the overall workflow, they frame the central issue as an ongoing investigation into how the cash trail is maintained and where it may not align across steps. The reporting highlights the trust’s internal mechanisms—sealed collection, counting and documentation, and banking transfers—as the main components being scrutinized for transparency and compliance.