Fugitive diamantaire Nirav Modi is afraid of "getting lynched" and so cannot return to India, his lawyer Vijay Agarwal told a special court Saturday, adding he is being compared to demon 'Ravan'. The lawyer’s claim were however, dismissed by the Enforcement Directorate (ED), as it said he should have filed a police complaint if he sensed any ‘security threats’.
Agarwal’s statement came while arguing against the Enforcement Directorate's (ED) application before Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) court Judge MS Azmi. The application sought to declare Modi a fugitive under the Fugitive Economic Offenders Act.
Countering the ED plea, Nirav Modi also said through his lawyer that he had no record or data with him about his finances.
These points are "irrelevant" to the case, the ED said, as it referred to Nirav Modi's claims of "security threats" in India.
The ED has claimed that Nirav Modi had refused to join the probe despite acknowledging mails and summons issued to him and that he doesn't want to return to India.
Agarwal, however, said the diamond trader had responded to the emails sent by the investigating agencies and expressed his inability to return due to "security threats".
"In a letter addressed to both the CBI and the ED, Modi had stated that he was not able to join the probe because of security threats (in India) from private persons, the families of those who have been detained (in the PNB case), landlords, the creditors who have not been paid and the customers whose jewellery was taken away by the ED," he said.
"My (Modi's) 50-ft tall effigy was burnt in India. There was evidence of a mob lynching (against me) and I (Modi) was being compared with 'Ravan'. I have been projected as evil and being made the poster boy of the bank fraud," said Agarwal.
Modi cannot be declared a fugitive as various legal requirements stipulated by the Fugitive Economic Offenders (FEO) Act have not been met by the investigating agency, the lawyer claimed.
"The main reason the ED is seeking to declare Nirav Modi a fugitive is that he left India under suspicious circumstances on January 1, 2018. However, there was no criminal case (against him) when he had left the country," Agarwal said.
"They cannot just say that he left the country under suspicious circumstances. They need to specify what those suspicions were. Also, there is no material on record to say that he is refusing to return to India," he said.
Unlike liquor baron Vijay Mallya, who is accused of a loan default of over Rs 9000 crore, Modi had no Non-Performing Assets (NPAs) when he left the country, Agarwal argued.
He said that being a (jewellery) designer, Modi is a sort of an "artist" who cannot provide any financial information as desired by the ED.
"All my (Modi) finances were taken care of by my employees who are already in the custody of the investigating agency. I have no record or data. What are they going to investigate with me, as they have taken away all my source of information," Agarwal said.
Countering Agarwal's submission, ED counsel Hiten Venegaonkar said all these arguments have nothing to do with the Fugitive Act (FEO).
"As far as security threats are concerned, any prudent person who is fearing threats to his life needs to file a police complaint. Until now, there is no material before the ED or the court (about any such complaint). So these points are irrelevant," he said.
As per the investigating agencies, Modi and his uncle Mehul Choksi, in connivance with certain bank officials, allegedly cheated the Punjab National Bank (PNB) to the tune of Rs 14,000 crore through issuance of fraudulent Letters of Undertaking (LoUs).
These LoUs were allegedly issued in a fraudulent manner by a Mumbai branch of the PNB to the group of companies belonging to Modi since March 2011 till the case came to light.
Nirav Modi is a key accused in the USD 2 billion PNB fraud case.
(With PTI inputs)