The Supreme Court today refused to grant bail to Maharashtra cabinet minister and NCP leader Nawab Malik in a case of money laundering, saying the probe is at a nascent stage.
A bench of Justices DY Chandrachud and Surya Kant said it will not interfere with the Bombay High Court order of March 15 but Mr Malik can avail the remedy available under the law before the trial court.
Senior advocate Kapil Sibal, appearing for Nawab Malik, said they arrested me in 2022 for something that happened in 1999. He said there is no case under the Prevention of Money Laundering (PMLA) made out as there is no predicate offence.
The bench said the investigation it is at a very nascent stage and that it will not interfere with the high court order.
On March 15, the Bombay High Court had rejected Mr Malik's interim application seeking immediate release in a case of money laundering, saying just because the special PMLA court's order remanding him in custody is not in his favour; it does not make that order illegal or wrong.
The Enforcement Directorate had arrested Mr Malik in February under provisions of the PMLA after which he had filed a habeas corpus plea in the high court, claiming his arrest by the ED and the consequent remands were illegal.
The high court had said Mr Malik's counsel had argued before the PMLA court and vehemently opposed probe agency Enforcement Directorate's request for the minister's custody.
Yet, the special court had remanded him to Enforcement Directorate's custody and subsequently to judicial custody based on valid legal grounds.
The high court had said that the minister still had the option to apply for bail in the case before the special court.
It had held that Mr Malik was arrested by the ED in accordance with the law, and subsequently been remanded to the probe agency's custody and then to judicial custody following due process.
Therefore, there was no reason for the high court to pass any interim order directing Mr Malik's release from custody, it had said.
Nawab Malik was arrested by the ED over a property deal allegedly linked to the aides of gangster Dawood Ibrahim.
The central agency has accused Mr Malik of being part of an alleged criminal conspiracy to usurp a property in Mumbai's Kurla area which currently has a market value of Rs 300 crore and belongs rightfully to one Munira Plumber.
Nawab Malik contended before the high court that he had bought the property in a bonafide transaction three decades ago, and Plumber has now changed her mind about the transaction.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
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