Karnataka: ED conducts fresh searches in MUDA case
About seven to eight premises in Bengaluru and Mysuru are being covered in the search, the sources said. This includes the premises of a builder in Bengaluru and some linked persons
PTI
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Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah
Bengaluru, 28 Oct
The Enforcement Directorate
undertook fresh searches on Monday in connection with the money laundering case
involving the Mysuru Urban Development Authority in which it has booked
Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, his family and others, official sources
said.
About seven to eight premises in
Bengaluru and Mysuru are being covered in the search, the sources said. This
includes the premises of a builder in Bengaluru and some linked persons.
The federal agency conducted the
first round of raids in this case on 18 October when it searched the Mysuru
Urban Development Authority (MUDA) office in Mysuru and some other locations. It
also questioned some lower-rank officials of the MUDA at its Bengaluru zonal
office last week.
Taking cognisance of a Lokayukta
FIR, the ED has filed an enforcement case information report (ECIR) under the
Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) to book the Karnataka chief minister
and others.
Siddaramaiah is facing Lokayukta
and ED probes into alleged irregularities in the allotment of 14 sites to his
wife by the MUDA.
Siddaramaiah's wife Parvathi BM,
brother-in-law Mallikarjuna Swamy, Devaraju -- from whom Mallikarjuna Swamy
purchased land and gifted it to Parvathi -- and others are named as other
accused in the case by two probe agencies. Parvathi was recently questioned by
the Lokayukta Police in Mysuru.
It is alleged that 14 compensatory
sites were allotted to Parvathi in an upmarket area in Mysuru (Vijayanagar
Layout third and fourth stages), which had higher property value as compared to
the location of her land which had been "acquired" by MUDA.
The MUDA had allotted plots to
Parvathi under a 50:50 ratio scheme in lieu of 3.16 acres of her land, where it
developed a residential layout.
Under the controversial scheme,
MUDA allotted 50 per cent of developed land to the land losers in lieu of
undeveloped land acquired from them for forming residential layouts. It is
alleged that Parvathi had no legal title over this 3.16 acres of land at survey
number 464 of Kasare village, Kasaba Hobli of Mysuru taluk.
After the controversy broke out,
Parvathi announced that she was returning the allotted plots to MUDA. The chief
minister had denied any wrongdoing by him or his family, saying the opposition
was "scared" of him and had noted that it was the first such
"political case" against him.
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