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On Monday, the court, set up under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), had allowed the central agency’s plea seeking issuance of Letters Rogatory (LRs) to six countries for obtaining information about the overseas businesses and assets of the diamantaire.
Special PMLA Court Judge M S Azmi on Tuesday heard the arguments of ED’s special counsel Hiten Venegoankar on the agency’s plea seeking issuance of the NBW against Nirav Modi, who is believed to be in the US. On Wednesday, the judge will hear Modi’s lawyer Ashul Agarwal on the issue of his locus standi to address the court in the absence of his client.
Venegoankar told the court that the ED registered a case against Nirav Modi on February 15 and from that time issued three summonses to him to appear before the agency. He said the summonses were issued on February 15, February 17 and February 22, asking him to appear before the ED on February 16, February 22 and February 26, respectively.
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He said the agency received replies from Nirav Modi for two summonses. In response to the second summons, Nirav Modi said he cannot appear before the agency owing to his business commitments. In reply to the third summons, the businessman raised the issue of his security, the ED counsel said.
“He has violated all the three summonses,” Venegoankar told the court and requested the court to issue an open-ended NBW against Nirav Modi. However, Nirav Modi’s advocate Agarwal told the court he should be heard before any decision is taken on issuing the NBW as it involved fundamental rights of his client.
Meanwhile, the agency filed an application seeking LRs to seven more countries – Malaysia, Armenia, France, China, Japan, Russia and Belgium – in connection with the case. On Monday, the court had issued LRs for recovery/ seizure of proceeds of crime and collection of documents, evidence lying in Hong Kong, the USA, the UK, the UAE, South Africa and Singapore for purpose of investigation.
LRs are a formal request from a court of a sovereign nation to a court of another sovereign nation for judicial assistance in a case.