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National Herald Case: Court Rejects ED Complaint, Gandhis Get Major Relief

In a major development in the National Herald case, a Delhi court on Tuesday threw out the Enforcement Directorate’s prosecution complaint, offering significant relief to senior Congress leaders Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi. The ruling has, for the time being, stalled the ED’s move to pursue money-laundering charges linked to the control of Associated Journals Limited (AJL).

Special Judge Vishal Gogne of the Rouse Avenue Courts held that the complaint filed under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) could not be sustained in law. The court noted that the ED’s case was founded on a private complaint and subsequent summons, rather than on a registered First Information Report (FIR), which is essential to trigger proceedings under the PMLA.

Though the court stopped short of giving a clean chit, the decision substantially undercuts the agency’s case in what has been one of its most high-profile and politically sensitive investigations.

The ED had recently submitted a fresh complaint accusing Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi of committing the offence of money laundering under Section 3 of the PMLA, read with Sections 44 and 70, and punishable under Section 4 of the Act.

Separately, the court ruled that the Gandhis and other accused persons are not entitled to receive copies of the FIR in proceedings arising from a newly registered case by the Economic Offences Wing (EOW) of the Delhi Police.

Court’s Observations
The court emphasised that the ED failed to demonstrate the existence of “proceeds of crime,” a foundational requirement for invoking the PMLA. Without clear evidence of illegal gains, the judge said, the offence of money laundering cannot be presumed.

According to the ED, Young Indian Private Limited—where Sonia and Rahul Gandhi hold majority stakes—had allegedly taken control of AJL and its properties, valued at several thousand crore rupees, through a sham arrangement. However, the court found that such allegations, without concrete proof of criminal proceeds, were insufficient to sustain prosecution.

Legal observers point out that recent judicial trends, reinforced by Supreme Court rulings, demand strict compliance with PMLA provisions and reject speculative or assumption-based prosecutions.

Setback for the ED
The dismissal marks a significant blow to the ED’s narrative and highlights judicial insistence that investigative agencies must establish clear legal foundations before pursuing economic offence cases.

While the ED retains the option to challenge the order before a higher court, the trial court’s findings underscore the hurdles the agency must overcome to revive its case.

Broader Impact
Beyond providing immediate relief to Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi, the ruling sends a wider message on the limits of money-laundering prosecutions. Courts, it reiterates, will not allow cases to proceed on political suspicion or perception alone, but only on demonstrable evidence of crime and illicit financial activity.

As proceedings continue, the National Herald case remains a focal point where law, politics, and institutional authority intersect—making every judicial development closely watched.