SC Slams ED's 'Inhuman Conduct' During 'Illegal' Interrogation Of Congress Ex-MLA
The Supreme Court slammed the Enforcement Directorate's interrogation of ex-MLA Surender Panwar, deeming it "inhuman conduct".
New Delhi, Jan 3 (PTI) The Supreme Court has observed ED's "high-handedness" and "inhuman conduct" during an almost 15-hour-long interrogation of former Haryana Congress MLA Surender Panwar and upheld an order saying his arrest was illegal.
A bench of Justices Abhay S Oka and Augustine George Masih said it was an "inhuman conduct" on part of ED officers as the case was not related to some terror activity but of an alleged illegal sand mining.
"This is not the way to treat people in such a case. You have virtually forced a person to make a statement," it said.
Dismissing the Enforcement Directorate (ED)'s plea against the high court order, the bench held, "We are not inclined to interfere with the finding of the high court that the arrest of the respondent was illegal." The high court's findings, it said, were only for deciding whether Panwar's arrest was illegal.
"These findings will not affect the merits of the pending complaint under Section 44 of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), 2002," said the bench in its order on December 2.
The court said the ED’s approach in conducting the probe was a "shocking state of affairs" where a person was virtually forced to make a statement.
ED's counsel Zoheb Hussain said the high court had erred in its finding that Panwar was continuously quizzed for 14.40 hours, pointing to a dinner break during the interrogation.
The lawyer said ED in a 2024 circular asked its officials to maintain certain standards of interrogations and to ensure people were not interrogated during late night and in early hours of the day.
On September 29, 2024, the high court said primarily, as per the grounds of arrest, the allegation(s) against the petitioner pertained to illegal mining or supplying the illegally mined material.
Therefore, it said, the foundation of case was illegal mining whereas the rest of the allegations in all the nine FIRs were peripheral, relatable to illegal mining.
"Of course, 'illegal mining' is an offence under Section 21 of the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957 (MMDR Act), but neither 'illegal mining' nor the MMDR Act has been included under the schedule attached with the PMLA. In other words, 'illegal mining' is not a scheduled offence under the PMLA. Hence, prima facie, petitioner cannot be prosecuted on that count," said the high court.
It noted the ED itself said Panwar was issued summons under Section 50 of the PMLA and appeared before the agency at around 11 am in Gurugram on July 19, 2024 and was constantly interrogated till 1:40 am (July 20, 2024) for 14 hours and 40 minutes.
The high court observed the continuous interrogation for over 14 hours "was not heroic" on ED's part and it was rather against the dignity of a human being.
"For future, in view of the mandate under Article 21 of the Constitution, this court is observing that Directorate of Enforcement shall take remedial measures and sensitize the officers to follow some reasonable time limit for investigation in one go against the suspect(s) in such cases," it said.
Instead of subjecting someone to "unnecessary harassment" for such a long duration, the high court called for a necessary mechanism to carry out a fair investigation of the accused in line with the basic human rights laid down by the United Nations.
It said there was no material with the ED to substantiate that petitioner was directly or indirectly involved in any process or activity connected with the proceeds of crime, in any manner or projected it as untainted by any means.
Panwar, 55, was taken into custody in the wee hours of July 20, 2024, in Gurugram and produced before a special PMLA court in Ambala which sent him to the custody of the ED till July 29, 2024 in an illegal mining-linked money-laundering case.
The agency raided the premises of the former Sonepat MLA in January, 2024, on charges of "large-scale illegal mining" in the Yamunanagar area of the state.
The money-laundering case stems from several FIRs registered by the Haryana Police for probing alleged illegal mining of boulders, gravel and sand that took place in the past in Yamunanagar and nearby districts despite a ban imposed by the NGT.
The ED is also probing an alleged fraud in the "e-rawana" scheme, an online portal that was introduced by the Haryana government in 2020 to simplify the collection of royalties and taxes and prevent tax evasion in mining areas.
According to the ED, the alleged illegal mining generated slush funds of about Rs 400-500 crore over the last few years.
(This report has been published as part of the auto-generated syndicate wire feed. Apart from the headline, no editing has been done in the copy by ABP Live.)