Arms dealer Sanjay Bhandari opposes ED’s plea to declare him ‘fugitive’, calls his stay in UK legal

High-profile arms dealer Sanjay Bhandari has opposed the Enforcement Directorate’s (ED) plea before a Delhi court seeking to declare him a “fugitive” in connection to a black money case, claiming that his stay in the UK was legal since his extradition to India was denied by the London High Court.

The London HC’s order in Bhandari’s case was cited by an England court on April 11 to turn down the Indian government’s request to extradite another accused in an alleged multi-crore rice buying scam.

According to reports, fugitive Indian diamantaire Mehul Choksi, arrested in Belgium recently, has also cited the HC order to oppose his extradition for a trial to India in connection to the alleged Rs 13,000 crore Punjab National Bank fraud.

Bhandari’s name has also cropped up in ED’s ongoing probe in a money laundering case against Robert Vadra, the brother-in-law of Congress leader Rahul Gandhi.

The High Court of Justice, London, UK in February allowed Bhandari’s appeal against his extradition to face charges of alleged tax evasion and money laundering, saying that in Tihar jail here he would be at “real risk” of extortion, accompanied by threat or “actual violence” from other prisoners and prison officials.

The High Court of Justice, UK earlier this month also dismissed the petition filed by the Government of India (GOI) seeking permission to appeal in Britain’s Supreme Court against its order.

Bhandari made the submissions before the court through his lawyer on April 19, citing the rulings before special Judge Sanjeev Aggarwal here, claiming that his “client’s stay could not be called illegal in the UK as he has a legal right to reside in the UK and the GOI is bound by the judgement of the UK court… Bhandari is legally living there, and declaring him a ‘fugitive’ in that scenario is legally wrong.” Bhandari’s lawyer, senior advocate Maninder Singh, claimed that ED’s application was “vague, misplaced and without jurisdiction as the same does not comply with the requirements of the Fugitive Offenders Act”.

Singh further claimed that as per Fugitive Offenders Act, the value involved in the scheduled offence (black money case against Bhandari in the current matter) is required to be Rs 100 crore or more to declare a person “fugitive”.

However, when the ED filed its application seeking to declare Bhandari a fugitive, no such assessment by the income tax department was available with them and the court was misled into believing that the value of offence involved was more than Rs 100 crores, he said.

“Further, according to the income tax department itself as per their submission before the Delhi High Court in a case filed by Bhandari to quash the proceedings in March 2020, the value of the offence involved was less than Rs 100 crore”, the counsel said.

Further, the non-bailable warrants based on which he was arrested in the UK, he has been discharged as per the judgement of the UK high court and no fresh warrants are pending against him, he said.

India