National Herald case: Delhi HC seeks Sonia, Rahul Gandhi's response on ED's plea
Apart from Sonia and Rahul Gandhi, notices were also issued to Suman Dubey, Sam Pitroda, Young Indian, Dotex Merchandise Pvt Ltd and Sunil Bhandari.
PTI
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The high court has listed the matter for further hearing on 12 March 2026 (ANI)
New Delhi, 22 Dec
The Delhi High Court on Monday sought responses from
Congress leaders Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi and others on a plea by the
Enforcement Directorate (ED) challenging a trial court order that refused to
take cognisance of its prosecution complaint in the National Herald money
laundering case.
Justice
Ravinder Dudeja issued notice on the ED’s main petition as well as on its
application seeking a stay on the December 16 trial court order. The trial
court had held that taking cognisance of the ED’s complaint was “impermissible
in law” as it was not based on a first information report (FIR) for a scheduled
offence under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA).
The high
court has listed the matter for further hearing on 12 March 2026.
Apart
from Sonia and Rahul Gandhi, notices were also issued to Suman Dubey, Sam Pitroda,
Young Indian, Dotex Merchandise Pvt Ltd and Sunil Bhandari.
Solicitor
General Tushar Mehta appeared for the ED, while senior advocates Abhishek
Singhvi and RS Cheema represented the Gandhis. During the hearing, Mehta
argued that the trial court’s reasoning had gone “horribly wrong” and warned
that the interpretation would have wider ramifications for other money
laundering cases.
He
submitted that after completing an investigation, the ED files a prosecution
complaint akin to a police chargesheet. Singhvi disputed the ED’s submissions
but accepted notice on behalf of the Gandhis, saying, “I want to say something.
I am only saying that there is a perspective which is contrary to what my
friend is saying.”
In its
plea, the ED contended that the trial court order effectively granted immunity
to a category of alleged money launderers solely because the scheduled offence
originated from a private complaint rather than an FIR registered by a law
enforcement agency. It argued that serious allegations against the accused
could not be brushed aside on technical grounds.
The
agency also alleged that the trial court order suffered from judicial
overreach. “The sole ground given for declining cognisance is that a
prosecution complaint filed by an authorised officer under the PMLA cannot be
based on a scheduled offence emanating from a private complaint filed by a
private individual…,” the plea stated.
The
trial court had earlier observed that despite a complaint by BJP leader
Subramanian Swamy and a summoning order in 2014, the CBI did not register an
FIR for the scheduled offence. It noted that the ED recorded an ECIR in June
2021 despite the absence of such an FIR.
The ED has accused the Gandhis and others of conspiracy and money laundering, alleging that the acquisition of AJL properties worth approximately Rs 2,000 crore was facilitated through Young
Indian.
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