Bank fraud case: ED to produce Jet Airways founder Naresh Goyal in PMLA court on Saturday

Goyal was arrested late on Friday after a long session of questioning in connection with the ₹538 crore bank fraud case against him.

ByPTI

Published Sep 02, 2023 | 9:42 AM Updated Sep 02, 2023 | 7:25 PM

Naresh Goyal was arrested after a prolonged questioning session on Friday. (File photo/Vikas Gupta/Wikimedia Commons)

The Enforcement Directorate (ED) is expected to produce Jet Airways founder Naresh Goyal before a court hearing cases charged under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) in Mumbai on Saturday, 2 September.

The central agency took Goyal, 74, into custody late on Friday, 1 September, in a money-laundering case linked to an alleged bank fraud of ₹538 crore at the Canara Bank, official sources said.

He was taken into custody under the PMLA after a long session of questioning at the central agency’s office in Mumbai. The ED will seek Goyal’s custody on Saturday.

Jet Airways, a full-service carrier, had shut its operations in April 2019, after running out of cash. Later, Goyal stepped down as the chairperson of the airline.

Bank’s complaint

The money-laundering case stems from an FIR of the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) against Jet Airways, Goyal, his wife Anita, and some former company executives in connection with the alleged ₹538-crore fraud case at the Canara Bank.

The ED had carried out raids against Goyal and others involved in the case in July.

The CBI FIR was registered on the bank’s complaint which alleged that it sanctioned credit limits and loans to Jet Airways (India) Ltd (JIL) to the tune of ₹848.86 crore, of which ₹538.62 crore was outstanding. The CBI had said the account was declared “fraud” on July 29, 2021.

The bank alleged that the forensic audit of JIL showed that it paid “related companies” ₹1,410.41 crore out of a total commission expenses, thus siphoning off funds from JIL.

“As per sample agreement of Jet Airways (India) Ltd (JIL), it was noted that the expenses of General Selling Agents (GSA) was to be borne by GSA itself and not by JIL. However, it was observed that JIL has paid various expenses amounting to ₹403.27 crore which is not in tune with the GSA,” the complaint now part of the CBI FIR alleged.

It said personal expenses such as salaries of staff, phone bills and vehicle expenses among others of the Goyal family were paid paid by JIL.

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Among other allegations, it surfaced during the forensic audit that funds were also siphoned off through Jet Lite (India) Ltd (JLL) by way of making advance and investing and subsequently writing off of the same by making provisions.

JIL diverted the funds for subsidiary JLL in the form of loans and advances and investments extended.

In February, another money laundering case against Goyal, linked to alleged cheating and forgery filed by Mumbai-based Akbar Travels, was quashed by the Bombay High Court after the Maharashtra Police filed a closure report stating it found no substance in the complaint and the dispute seemed to be civil in nature.

As this ED case was based on police FIR, and was the predicate offence for filing a money-laundering case, it was declared quashed by the high court.

A division bench of justices Revati Mohite Dere and Prithviraj Chavan quashed the ECIR (Enforcement Case Information Report or the ED equivalent of an FIR) registered on February 20, 2020, and all proceedings against Goyals on the ground of “being illegal and contrary” to law.

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