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Supreme Court to hear Arvind Kejriwal’s plea against ED arrest on April 15

The Delhi High Court had said that the ED was in “possession of enough material” to arrest Arvind Kejriwal in the excise policy case.

KejriwalDelhi CM Arvind Kejriwal was arrested by the ED on March 21. (File Photo/PTI)

The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal’s plea against the High Court’s decision to uphold his arrest in the excise policy case, on April 15. The matter has been listed before a two-judge bench of Justices Sanjiv Khanna and Dipankar Gupta.

Earlier this week, the Delhi HC had dismissed Kejriwal’s plea challenging his arrest by the Enforcement Directorate (ED), saying the agency was in “possession of enough material” to arrest him. Arrested on March 21, Kejriwal is in judicial custody till April 15 and is lodged in Tihar Jail.

Appealing against the HC’s April 9 ruling, Kejriwal questioned the timing of his “illegal” arrest under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), saying it was “in the middle of the election cycle and especially after the declaration of the schedule of General Elections 2024.”

Saying that his arrest was “obviously motivated by extraneous considerations”, he said it “was made solely relying on subsequent, contradictory, and highly belated statements of co-accused who have now turned approvers”. These statements and material were in the ED’s possession for the last nine months but the arrest was made just ahead of Lok Sabha elections, he said in his plea.

Naming some of the co-accused, Kejriwal said the statements of C Arvind, Magunta Reddy and Sarath Reddy, who claim to have met him, don’t suggest that he had done any act of commission or omission within the scope of Section 3 PMLA. The statements by two others — Butchi Babu and Raghav Magunta — are entirely hearsay, he said, adding that they had not even met him.

In his petition, Kejriwal said the HC failed to appreciate that Section 164 CrPC statements are not held to be the gospel truth, and can always be doubted by the courts. Section 164 CrPC can never be used as substantive evidence of the truth of the facts but may be used for contradictions and corroboration of a witness who made it, he said.

The plea argued that the HC also failed to appreciate that the statement of the co-accused turned approver cannot be the starting point for ascertaining the accused person’s guilt. Moreover, the court failed to appreciate the procedure adopted by the ED in procuring such statements by coercion, on the inducement of bail and exoneration, and hence cannot be ex-facie relied upon to ascertain his guilt, Kejriwal said.

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Underlining the urgency of the SC’s intervention, he said that “over and above the issue of illegal curtailment of liberty, the… arrest also constitutes an unprecedented assault on the tenets of democracy, free-and-fair elections and federalism, both of which form significant constituents of the basic structure of the Constitution”.

“The ED has allowed its process to be used and misused by vested interests as an instrument of oppression to not only invade the liberty of the political opponents in the midst of general elections 2024 of such vested interests but also to tarnish their reputation and self-esteem. Such lawlessness cannot be allowed to be perpetrated under any circumstances,” Kejriwal said in his plea.

Saying that the arrest “bears serious, irreversible ramifications for the future of electoral democracy in India”, he said that if he “is not released forthwith to participate in the upcoming elections, it will establish a precedence in law for ruling parties to arrest heads of political opposition on flimsy and vexatious charges before elections, thereby eroding the core principles of our Constitution”.

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