The Enforcement Directorate (ED) has filed a money laundering case against businessman Navneet Kalra and his associates in a recent case of alleged hoarding and black marketing of oxygen concentrators which were being anxiously scoured by those gasping for air due to COVID-19 infection, officials said today.
The central probe agency took cognisance of a Delhi Police case that was filed on May 5 after policemen raided some restaurants and premises owned and linked to Navneet Kalra and recovered more than 500 of these life-saving machines from there.
Official sources said a criminal case under various sections of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) has been filed against Navneet Kalra and his associates and the ED will probe the money trail in the matter.
The agency, they said, will probe if the oxygen concentrators were illegally hoarded and offered to the family members or caregivers of coronavirus-infected patients at exorbitant prices, thereby leading to generation of "proceeds of crime" as defined under the PMLA.
The ED is empowered to question and record the statements of the accused and it can even attach their properties during the course of investigation, following which it files a charge sheet before a special PMLA court seeking their prosecution under the anti-money laundering law.
Sources said exchange of basic documents and information sharing between the two agencies-- ED and Delhi Police crime branch-- has been done.
Navneet Kalra was arrested by Delhi Police crime branch sleuths from Gurgaon on Sunday night and was formally arrested the next day. He was later sent to three days police custody by a local court.
Navneet Kalra was on the run for over a week since the seizure of more than 500 oxygen concentrators from his restaurants like Khan Chacha, Town Hall, and Nega & Ju.
The police have said the concentrators seized from Navneet Kalra's restaurants were imported from China and were being sold at an exorbitant price of Rs 50,000-Rs 70,000 a piece as against a cost of Rs 16,000-Rs 22,000 per piece.
An oxygen concentrator is a vital medical equipment used to provide oxygen to COVID-19 patients and they are in high demand amid the second wave of the pandemic being witnessed by the country at present.
The police have pressed charges under Section 420 (cheating), 188 (disobedience to order promulgated by public servant), 120-B (criminal conspiracy) and 34 (common intention) of the Indian Penal Code, Essential Commodities Act and Epidemic Diseases Act against Kalra and others.
Four employees of Matrix Cellular company, including its CEO and vice president, were also arrested in this case by the police. They were, however, granted bail by the court.
Navneet Kalra is alleged to have purchased the concentrators from Matrix Cellular which had imported them.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
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