NSEL scam: Jignesh Shah remanded in ED custody till July 18

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Press Trust of India Mumbai
Last Updated : Jul 13 2016 | 7:22 PM IST
A court here today remanded FTIL founder Jignesh Shah, arrested in the Rs 5,600-crore National Spot Exchange Limited scam, in the custody of Enforcement Directorate till July 18.
ED yesterday arrested Shah under Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), saying that he was not cooperating with the investigation.
Shah has been named in the first charge-sheet filed by ED in the case last year.
ED's lawyer Hiten Venegaonkar argued that new material had come to light indicating that Shah indulged in money laundering. Therefore, ED intended to file a fresh complaint of money laundering for which it needed his custody for eight days, he said.
Advocate Abad Ponda, Shah's lawyer, opposed the plea for ED custody saying Shah had been earlier arrested in the NSEL case and later granted bail. The investigation was over and the facts which may have come to light are not new.
Shah had spent more than 100 days in custody and was granted bail by the High Court, Ponda pointed out.
However, the ED lawyer said that Shah did not answer several questions during the interrogation and the investigation officer stopped questioning him. For further probe, his custodial interrogation was necessary.
ED had recently informed the Union Finance Ministry that
it was going to initiate fresh action for attachment of assets against the accused in the NSEL case and would also question many of them.
The agency registered a case in the NSEL scam under PMLA in 2013 along with the Economic Offences Wing of Mumbai police.
The agency filed a 20,000-page charge-sheet against NSEL and 67 others in the court here in March 2015. According to the charge-sheet, NSEL funds were laundered and "illegally ploughed into purchase of private properties".
It traces a money trail of Rs 3,721.22 crore.
After a high-level meeting chaired by the Economic Affairs Secretary Shaktikanta Das last month, the Centre directed Maharashtra government to expedite the resolution of the case by quickly auctioning assets worth Rs 6,116 crore attached so far and refund investors at the earliest.
NSEL's payment troubles started after it was ordered by the Forward Markets Commission in July 2013 to suspend the spot trade in most of its contracts due to suspected trading violations.
The exchange could not settle the outstanding trades, sparking an investigation as to whether the exchange had defrauded traders by not enforcing rules requiring sufficient collateral.
Financial Technologies India Ltd blamed NSEL executives and the trading parties for the default. There were 24 members who defaulted payment to about 13,000 investors.
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First Published: Jul 13 2016 | 7:22 PM IST

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