Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Al Falah Chief Jawad Siddique In Judicial Custody In Rs 400 Cr Case


(MENAFN- AsiaNet News)

Siddique Sent to 14-Day Judicial Custody

The Saket District Court on Monday remanded Al Falah Group Chairman Jawad Ahmed Siddique in 14 days' Judicial custody after ED's interrogation. He was arrested in a case of alleged money laundering of more than Rs 400 crores.

Additional Sessions Judge (ASJ) Sheetal Chaudhary Pradhan remanded Jawad Ahmed Siddique in judicial custody till December 15. Special Public Prosecutor (SPP) Simon Benjamin appeared for the Enforcement Directorate (ED) and prayed for the accused to be remanded to 14 days of judicial custody.

During the hearing, ED said that during the investigation, it was revealed that there is Money laundering, involvement of other persons, and cross-border participation.

During the investigation, the accused was required to be sent to judicial custody. The ED also said that it reserved its right to seek further 2 days' custody of ofthe accused, as he had been in the ED's custody for only 12 days. Counsel for the accused opposed this submission, stating that the ED has only one more day, as it has interrogated the accused for 13 days.

After hearing the submissions, the court allowed the application seeking permission to carry the accused's medical prescription and spectacles while in judicial custody. However, the court refused to allow carrying books in judicial custody and said that there is a full-fledged library in jail. Books can be borrowed from there.

Background of the Arrest and Investigation

The court had remanded Al Falah Group Chairman Jawad Ahmed Siddiqui to 13 days of Enforcement Directorate (ED) custody, noting in a detailed remand order that there exist reasonable grounds to believe he committed the offence of money laundering linked to large-scale fraud, forged accreditation claims, and diversion of funds from the Al-Falah University ecosystem.

The remand order passed by Additional Sessions Judge Sheetal Chaudhary Pradhan at her camp office shortly after midnight records that Siddiqui was arrested late on November 18 following compliance with Section 19 of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) and that ED sought custodial interrogation based on substantial evidence of deception, misrepresentation, and movement of suspected proceeds of crime.

Details of the Allegations

The court, after examining ED's submissions, held that the investigation is at a "nascent stage," the alleged financial offences are "grave," and custodial interrogation is essential to trace further proceeds of crime, prevent dissipation of tainted assets, and avoid influence over witnesses or destruction of electronic and financial records.

The Enforcement Directorate arrested Siddiqui under Section 19 of PMLA on November 18, 2025, in connection with alleged money laundering involving the Al-Falah Charitable Trust, which controls the University and its educational institutions. The ED action follows two FIRs registered by the Delhi Police Crime Branch on November 13, 2025.

The FIRs allege that expired NAAC accreditation grades were falsely advertised by Al-Falah University and affiliated institutions. The University fabricated claims of UGC recognition under Section 12(B) of the UGC Act--despite never applying for it and being ineligible for grants. These claims were allegedly used to mislead students and parents into believing the institution held valid approvals and credibility, thereby attracting admissions and fees through fraudulent inducement, the court had noted.

The court had recorded that the ED's financial analysis showed Al-Falah institutions generated about ₹415.10 crore between FY 2018-19 and 2024-25 through student fees collected, while the University was allegedly misrepresenting its NAAC accreditation and UGC status. The court noted that this money appeared to have been obtained through cheating and forgery, making it proceeds of crime under PMLA.

Court's Justification and Further Probe

Searches at 19 locations on November 18, 2025, led to the recovery of ₹48 lakh in cash, digital devices, financial records and evidence of shell entities. The ED told the court that construction and catering contracts were diverted to firms linked to Siddiqui's family, and that senior officials confirmed he approved all major financial decisions. The agency also pointed to fund layering and related entities used to conceal the money trail.

Granting 13 days of custody, the court said that ED interrogation was needed to trace additional proceeds of crime, prevent the dissipation of assets, and avoid tampering with digital and financial records. It also cited the risk of influencing witnesses and possible flight risk, given Siddiqui's resources and family connections abroad.

Siddiqui's counsel claimed the FIRs were false and that he was ready to cooperate, but the court held that custody was justified due to the seriousness of the allegations.

The ED had said the proceeds of crime may exceed the ₹415 crore identified so far and is examining fund flows, shell entities, properties and the roles of family members and office-bearers. (ANI)

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Asianet Newsable English staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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