ETV Bharat / business

PNB scam case: Bombay High Court adjourns Mehul Choksi's pleas

Choksi had filed two pleas--one against him declaring him a 'fugitive economic offender and another to permit him to cross-examine a person on the basis of whose statements the Enforcement Directorate had declared him an offender.

Mehul Choksi
author img

By

Published : Jun 4, 2019, 3:27 PM IST

Mumbai: The Bombay High Court on Tuesday adjourned hearing on Mehul Choksi applications till June 10 as he termed the investigation into the PNB scam case as 'incomplete" and sought further probe.

Choksi had filed two pleas--one against him declaring him a 'fugitive economic offender and another to permit him to cross-examine a person on the basis of whose statements the Enforcement Directorate had declared him an offender.

On Monday, a special court had issued a notice to the CBI on his application.

The plea filed by Choksi's counsel Vijay Agarwal came up for hearing before Special CBI Judge UM Mudholkar, who posted the matter for hearing to June 17.

"There has been an incomplete investigation of various vital aspects by the investigating officer. The IO has submitted an incomplete charge sheet before the court without making proper and complete investigation," the application said.

Read more:Bolstering infrastructure, creating jobs through small industries will be priority: Gadkari

It contended that the incomplete investigation led to the "failure" of Choksi's business. "The failure of the applicant's business was termed as 'fraud' by the CBI. The flaws were on the part of the bank and the auditors and not the accused," the plea submitted.

The petitioner claimed that "false" FIRs were filed by the CBI against him on February 2 and February 15, 2018.

Choksi and nephew Nirav Modi are key accused in the PNB fraud case. They fled the country a year ago. The scam is estimated at USD two billion.

Choksi was granted citizenship of Antigua and Barbuda on January 15, 2018.

On March 22, Choksi had moved an application before the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) court, stating his long history of heart ailment and a blood clot in the brain as the reason for not being able to appear before it.

Mumbai: The Bombay High Court on Tuesday adjourned hearing on Mehul Choksi applications till June 10 as he termed the investigation into the PNB scam case as 'incomplete" and sought further probe.

Choksi had filed two pleas--one against him declaring him a 'fugitive economic offender and another to permit him to cross-examine a person on the basis of whose statements the Enforcement Directorate had declared him an offender.

On Monday, a special court had issued a notice to the CBI on his application.

The plea filed by Choksi's counsel Vijay Agarwal came up for hearing before Special CBI Judge UM Mudholkar, who posted the matter for hearing to June 17.

"There has been an incomplete investigation of various vital aspects by the investigating officer. The IO has submitted an incomplete charge sheet before the court without making proper and complete investigation," the application said.

Read more:Bolstering infrastructure, creating jobs through small industries will be priority: Gadkari

It contended that the incomplete investigation led to the "failure" of Choksi's business. "The failure of the applicant's business was termed as 'fraud' by the CBI. The flaws were on the part of the bank and the auditors and not the accused," the plea submitted.

The petitioner claimed that "false" FIRs were filed by the CBI against him on February 2 and February 15, 2018.

Choksi and nephew Nirav Modi are key accused in the PNB fraud case. They fled the country a year ago. The scam is estimated at USD two billion.

Choksi was granted citizenship of Antigua and Barbuda on January 15, 2018.

On March 22, Choksi had moved an application before the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) court, stating his long history of heart ailment and a blood clot in the brain as the reason for not being able to appear before it.

ZCZC
PRI COM ECO ESPL
.NEWDELHI DCM16
BIZ-ONION-PRICES
Govt creating 50,000 tonne of onion buffer to curb price rise
         New Delhi, Jun 4 (PTI) The Centre has started creating a buffer stock of 50,000 tonne of onion to check prices in the coming months in view of drought conditions in producing states, a senior food ministry official said Tuesday.
         Wholesale prices at Lasalgaon in Maharashtra, Asia's largest wholesale market for onion, have shot up by over 29 per cent to Rs 11 per kg Tuesday when compared to Rs 8.50 per kg on the same day a year ago, as per official data.
         In the national capital, retail onion prices are ruling at Rs 20-25 per kg depending on the varieties, as per the trade data.
         "Due to drought conditions in producing region, the production of rabi onion is expected to be lower. The likely shortfall in production may put pressure on both availability and prices during the lean season," the official told PTI.
         Cooperative Nafed, which has been asked to undertake the procurement under the Price Stabilisation Fund, has so far purchased about 32,000 tonne of rabi (winter) onion, the only variety that can be stored and used later during the lean period after July.
         Besides onion, the official said the government is creating buffer stock of 16.15 lakh tonne of pulses this year.
          Key onion growing states such as Maharashtra, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh are reeling under drought conditions this year.
          As per the first estimate, onion production in the current 2018-19 crop year ending June is estimated to be slightly higher at 23.62 million tonne as against 23.26 million tonne in 2017-18. The government is expected to revise the estimate later factoring drought impact on production.
          Harvesting of rabi crop, which accounts for 60 per cent of India's onion production, is almost complete. India has three seasons for onion - kharif (summer), late kharif and rabi (winter). PTI LUX LUX
ANU
ANU
06041438
NNNN
ETV Bharat Logo

Copyright © 2024 Ushodaya Enterprises Pvt. Ltd., All Rights Reserved.