Supreme Court: ED waiting for FIR in scheduled Offence renders PMLA ineffective

Khushi Doshi

Published On: February 17, 2022 at 16:11 IST

The Supreme Court stated on Wednesday that, while the presence of the predicate Offence is required for the Enforcement Directorate (ED) to begin an investigation under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), requiring the ED to wait for the registration of the FIR in respect of the scheduled Offence would render the system “Unworkable” and “Counter-productive” to the PMLA’s intension.

“What happens to the money laundering offence if the FIR is not registered and if the ED was not to proceed until then?”, the Court observed.

It was stated that Section 43(2) of the PMLA states that while trying a money laundering Offence, the Special Court shall also try any other offence .

Section 44(1) states that the scheduled Offence shall also be tried by the Special Court trying the money laundering Offence. Mr. Reddy advanced that his limited submission is that the decision in the PMLA Case cannot precede the decision in the scheduled Offence Case, even if both Cases are being heard concurrently.

According to Justice Khanwilkar, there is no investigation procedure per se under the Act, and what is anticipated is only a form of inquiry, where content is collected for attachment, arrest, and the ED can only file a complaint under the Act.

According to Justice Ravikumar, the term “Investigation” should be interpreted as it is defined in Section 2(na) of the Act, as implying the gathering of Evidence. The Act implies it in the form of an investigation in which the police are barred from participating and authority is delegated to enforcement directorate officials.

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