advertisement
A special court on Saturday issued fresh summons against three accused in a money laundering case related to the Rs 3,600-crore VVIP chopper deal in which it had earlier issued an open-ended non-bailable warrant (NBW) against British national and alleged middleman Christian Michel James.
Special Judge Arvind Kumar re-issued the summons against India-based firm M/s Media Exim Private Limited and its directors RK Nanda and JB Subramaniyam while asking them to be present in court on 22 February. The firm was set up by James, Nanda and Subramaniyam.
The court passed the order after advocate NK Matta, appearing for the Enforcement Directorate, informed it that the summons issued against the three accused on the last date of hearing could not be executed.
The NBW was issued against James after ED had told the court that the alleged middleman was out of India and pressed for an arrest warrant against him to bring him here to face the trial. An open-ended NBW (arrest warrant) does not carry a time limit for its execution.
In June last year, ED had filed a 1,300-page prosecution complaint (equivalent for charge sheet) in connection with its money laundering probe in the case.
It had said the agency's investigation into the case had found that James allegedly received Euro 30 million (about Rs 225 crore) from M/s AgustaWestland which was nothing but "kickbacks" paid by the firm to execute the deal for sale of 12 helicopters to India in favour of the firm in "guise" of genuine transactions for performing multiple work contracts in the country.
The present complaint delved into the alleged detailed role of James in the deal, his multiple visits to India and his transactions. The first complaint in the case was filed in November 2014.
According to sources, ED has already sought James' extradition from the UK.
In this complaint, the agency has also claimed that the three middlemen "managed" to make inroads into the Indian Air Force in order to influence and subvert the stand of the force regarding reducing the service ceiling – the altitude at which a helicopter can fly – in 2005 after which AgustaWestland became eligible to supply the choppers for VVIP flying duties.
Former IAF chief SP Tyagi was granted bail on 26 December 2016 while his cousin Sanjeev Tyagi and lawyer Gautam Khaitan were granted the relief on 4 January by the court in a separate case filed by CBI in connection to the same deal.
The agency had arrested all the three accused on 9 December 2016.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)