Mumbai: A special court here has said that Shiv Sena MP Sanjay Raut dealt with some "unaccounted money" for purchasing plots at Kihim near Alibag in Raigad district, but the same cannot be "thrown in the stock of proceeds of crime (POC) under the provisions of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA)". Special PMLA court judge M G Deshpande made this observation on Wednesday while granting bail to Raut in a money laundering case related to the Patra Chawl redevelopment project in which he had been arrested by the Enforcement Directorate (ED) on August 1 this year.
Raut, a close confidante of Sena chief Uddhav Thackeray, walked out of the Arthur Road jail in central Mumbai on Wednesday after being granted bail. In its order, the court said that possessing and dealing with unaccounted money may have different consequences under the different penal laws, but the same cannot be termed proceeds of crime under the provisions of the PMLA.
Though Sanjay Raut had received some money as alleged in the prosecution complaint (charge-sheet) from co-accused Pravin Raut, there is absolutely nothing to show that it is a proceeds of crime with knowledge thereof to the Shiv Sena leader, it said. "Therefore, some unaccounted money had been dealt with by Sanjay Raut at the relevant time during 2007-11 or any other period thereafter, for purchasing plots at Kihim, cannot be thrown in the stock of POC," the court held.
Unaccounted money without explanation and without nexus with POC or any activity relating to scheduled offence cannot be capitalised as done by the ED herein (in the case), the court added. The probe agency contended that Sanjay Raut and his family had undertaken foreign trips from the ill-gotten money arranged by co-accused Pravin Raut.
The court said, "Even certain facts are on record. These two close families had travelled at the relevant time. Merely Pravin Raut could not give the account of money relating to travel tickets for want of remembrance, can it be straightaway connected with POC or the criminal activity relating to Scheduled Offence?" The probe agency had claimed that a vehicle used by Sanjay Raut, which is in the name of his friend Ramji Veera, was purchased from laundered money. The court, however, said there was nothing as such at the prima facie stage to "draw such far-fetched inference".