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HomeAnwar Dhebar vs State Of Chhattisgarh on 3 March, 2026

Anwar Dhebar vs State Of Chhattisgarh on 3 March, 2026

Chattisgarh High Court

Anwar Dhebar vs State Of Chhattisgarh on 3 March, 2026

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                                                2026:CGHC:11113
                                                            NAFR

         HIGH COURT OF CHHATTISGARH AT BILASPUR


                   ORDER RESERVED ON 03.02.2026

                   ORDER DELIVERED ON 03.03.2026
                   ORDER UPLOADED ON 03 .03.2026

                       MCRC No. 9514 of 2025

1 - Anwar Dhebar S/o Late Hazi Zikar Dhebar Aged About 51 Years R/o
Dhebar House, Pension Bada, Raipur, Chhattisgarh
                                                 ... Applicant(s)


                               versus


1 - State Of Chhattisgarh Through The Investigating Officer, Economic
Offence Wing/ Anti-Corruption Bureau Chhattisgarh, Head Quarter At
Telibandha, In Front Of Jai Jawan Petrol Pump, Raipur, Chhattisgarh -
492001
                                                ... Respondent(s)


For Applicant(s)           :   Shri Harshwardhan Parganiha, Shri
                               Mayank Jain, Shri Madhur Jain and Shri
                               Arpit Goel, Shri Harshit Sharma
                               Advocates through VC assisted by Ms.
                               Manubha Shankar, Advocate
For Respondent/State       :   Shri Praveen     Das,   Addl.   Advocate
                               General


             (HON'BLE SHRI JUSTICE ARVIND KUMAR VERMA)
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                              C A V Order

      This is the second application filed by the applicant seeking grant

of regular bail under Section 483 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha

Sanhita, 2023, in connection with Crime No. 04/2024 dated 17.01.2024,

registered by the Economic Offences Wing/Anti-Corruption Bureau,

Chhattisgarh, for offences punishable under Sections 420, 467, 468,

471 and 120-B of the Indian Penal Code, 1860, along with Sections 7

and 12 of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988.


2.    The applicant came to be arrested on 05.04.2024, and after

completion of investigation, charge-sheet has already been filed on

29.06.2024 before the competent Court. The present application arises

out of, and calls in question, the order passed by the learned Special

Judge (Prevention of Corruption Act), Raipur, whereby the applicant's

prayer for grant of regular bail came to be rejected.

FACTS OF THE CASE

3. As per the prosecution, information was received from the

Enforcement Directorate invoking Section 66(2) of the PMLA that during

the period 2019-2023, a large-scale organized syndicate allegedly

operated in the State of Chhattisgarh in connection with manufacture

and distribution of liquor through government licensed outlets. It is

alleged that illegal commissions were collected from distillers and

suppliers; Excise officials and certain public functionaries acted in

collusion; A network was created for manipulation of procurement and

distribution and Public revenue suffered loss while illegal gains accrued

to the conspirators.

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4. Based on the said information, EOW/ACB registered Crime No.

04/2024 and commenced investigation. During investigation, the

applicant was alleged to be one of the key conspirators connected with

financial and administrative arrangements of the syndicate. On this

basis, he was arrested on 05.04.2024. Investigation thereafter resulted

in filing of charge-sheet; however, further investigation is stated to be

continuing.

5. The applicant has earlier approached this Court seeking regular

bail in MCRC No. 3455/2024, which was dismissed on 20.12.2024.

Subsequently, the applicant approached the Supreme Court in SLP

(Criminal) No. 433 of 2025, which was dismissed on 14.07.2025,

granting liberty to the applicant to renew his bail application if no

substantial progress in trial takes place within four months.

SUBMISSION ON BEHALF OF THE APPELLANT

6. Learned Counsel appearing for the applicant, while assailing the

impugned order and pressing for grant of regular bail, has advanced

elaborate submissions, which, in substance, are as follows:

I. Custodial Period and Procedural Background

7. It is submitted that the applicant has remained in judicial custody

since 05.04.2024, and thus has undergone prolonged incarceration

even before commencement of trial. Investigation qua the applicant

already stands completed and charge-sheet was filed on 29.06.2024,

followed by multiple supplementary charge-sheets. Despite lapse of

considerable time, the trial has not commenced and even framing of
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charges is pending. It is urged that continued detention of the applicant

serves no investigative purpose and amounts to punitive incarceration

prior to adjudication of guilt, which is impermissible in criminal

jurisprudence. He has placed reliance upon the decision of the

Supreme Court in Kapil Wadhawan v. CBI, 2025 INSC 1440, wherein

it has been reiterated that prolonged incarceration coupled with delay in

commencement of trial constitutes a significant ground for grant of bail.

The constitutional mandate flowing from Article 21 obligates courts to

ensure that pre-trial detention does not become punitive in character.

II. Liberty Granted by Supreme Court and Absence of Progress in
Trial

8. It is further contended that the Supreme Court, while rejecting the

earlier bail application of the applicant on 14.07.2025, expressly

granted liberty to renew the prayer for bail in the event of absence of

progress in trial within four months. He submits that the period indicated

by the Supreme Court has already elapsed, trial proceedings have not

commenced, investigation qua several accused is still ongoing and no

likelihood exists of conclusion of trial in the near future. Thus, the liberty

granted by the Supreme Court has crystallized into a substantive right

of the applicant to seek bail. He has further relied upon the seminal

judgment in State of Rajasthan v. Balchand, (1977) 4 SCC 308,

wherein the Supreme Court authoritatively laid down that the basic rule

is “bail and not jail,” except where circumstances justify detention.

9. The principle was subsequently reiterated in Sanjay Chandra v.

CBI, (2012) 1 SCC 40, where the Court emphasized that detention
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before conviction must not be resorted to unless necessary to secure

presence of the accused or prevent interference with the course of

justice.

III. Investigation Still Ongoing and Trial Unlikely to Conclude Soon

10. It is submitted that even according to the prosecution,

investigation concerning other accused persons continues, and the

agency has sought further time before higher Courts to complete

investigation. He submits that the case involves more than fifty accused

persons, over a thousand witnesses, voluminous documentary material

running into thousands of pages. In such circumstances, early

commencement or conclusion of trial is practically impossible.

Continued incarceration, therefore, becomes arbitrary and violative of

Article 21 of the Constitution.

IV. Subsequent Grant of Bail to Several Co-Accused — Principle
of Parity

11. Counsel for the applicant submits that after rejection of

applicant’s earlier bail plea, several co-accused persons have since

been granted bail, including persons allegedly occupying official or

operational roles in the case. It is argued that denial of bail to the

applicant while granting liberty to similarly placed or more directly

involved co-accused results in discriminatory treatment. Parity is a well-

recognized principle applicable even in economic offences. It is further

pointed out that in connected proceedings, even excise officials have

been granted interim protection, thereby eliminating any impediment in

granting bail to the applicant.

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12. Counsel for the applicant has also urged parity, placing reliance

upon Krishnan Subramanian v. State, 2022 SCC OnLine Del 1384,

which recognizes parity as a relevant factor in bail matters, including

economic offences. It is not disputed that several co-accused persons

have subsequently been granted bail. Though parity cannot be

mechanically applied, consistency in judicial approach remains a

relevant consideration. Further reliance is placed upon Vipin Yadav v.

Enforcement Directorate, 2025 SCC OnLine Del 6237, wherein it was

observed that parity may extend even to situations where similarly

placed persons have not been arrested.

V. No Recovery or Money Trail Attributable to Applicant

13. Learned counsel for the applicant emphasizes that no illegal

money, no incriminating documents, no liquor consignments, nor any

illegal proceeds have been recovered from the applicant. It is

submitted that even in the earlier order rejecting bail, it was recorded

that no recovery has been made from the applicant, and till date, the

investigating agency has not been able to establish any direct monetary

trail linking the applicant to alleged proceeds.

14. Learned counsel for the applicant further submits that reliance on

loose sheets and informal electronic communications such as

WhatsApp chats is legally insufficient unless duly proved in accordance

with law. In this regard, reliance is placed on Manohar Lal Sharma v.

Union of India, (2017) 11 SCC 731, and CBI v. V.C. Shukla, (1998) 3

SCC 410, where evidentiary limitations of loose documents and
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uncorroborated materials were considered.

VI. Case Based Primarily on Statements of Co-Accused

15. Counsel argues that the prosecution case against the applicant is

founded predominantly on statements of co-accused and alleged

accomplices. It is submitted that the statements of co-accused cannot

constitute substantive evidence, several such statements have

subsequently been retracted and no independent corroborative

evidence connects the applicant with alleged conspiracy. Reliance is

placed on settled law that confession of a co-accused is weak evidence

and cannot by itself sustain prosecution. A substantial part of the

prosecution case against the applicant is alleged to rest upon

statements of co-accused persons.

16. In this context, learned counsel for the applicant has relied upon

Haricharan Kurmi v. State of Bihar, 1964 SCC OnLine SC 28, where

the Supreme Court held that confession of a co-accused is not

substantive evidence and can only lend assurance to other independent

evidence. Similarly, reliance is placed upon Subramanya v. State of

Karnataka, (2023) 11 SCC 255, reiterating that conviction cannot be

founded solely on statements of co-accused without corroboration.

VII. Applicant Not a Public Servant and No Role in Policy Decisions

17. It is further contended that the applicant has never been part of

the Excise Department or any governmental decision-making body. He

neither framed policy nor exercised statutory authority in licensing or

distribution processes. Accordingly, attributing policy manipulation or
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governmental collusion to the applicant is wholly misconceived.

VIII. Applicant Satisfies Triple Test for Bail

18. He submits that the applicant satisfies all parameters governing

grant of bail, namely:

• No flight risk — applicant is a permanent resident of the State

with deep roots in society.

• No possibility of tampering with evidence — evidence is

documentary and already collected.

• No likelihood of influencing witnesses — no complaint of misuse

of liberty even during parole periods.

19. The applicant has strictly complied with parole conditions and

surrendered on time, demonstrating respect for judicial processes.

Reliance has been placed upon P. Chidambaram v. CBI, (2020) 13

SCC 337, and P. Chidambaram v. Directorate of Enforcement,

(2020) 13 SCC 791, wherein the Supreme Court clarified that these

parameters equally apply even in cases involving economic offences.

The material on record presently does not indicate misuse of liberty by

the applicant during parole nor any attempt to interfere with

investigation.

IX. Arrest Not Necessary and Custody Prolonged Artificially

20. Counsel for the applicant contends that arrest of the applicant

was unnecessary and effected merely to prolong custody. It is urged

that statutory safeguards governing arrest require necessity to be

demonstrated, which is absent in the present case.
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21. It is argued that none of the legally recognized grounds–such as

likelihood of absconding, influencing witnesses, or obstructing

investigation–were present at the time of arrest. Reliance is also

placed on the recent decision of the Supreme Court in Arvind Kejriwal

v. CBI, 2024 SCC OnLine SC 2550, wherein the Court deprecated the

practice of arrest being used merely to prolong custody without

demonstrable necessity. The applicant contends that his arrest was not

supported by grounds demonstrating necessity as required by law.

X. Delay in Trial as Independent Ground for Bail

22. Reliance is placed upon judicial pronouncements holding that

delay in trial itself constitutes a valid ground for bail, even in serious

economic offences. It is submitted that continued detention without

progress in trial infringes constitutional guarantees of personal liberty.

XI. Applicant’s Conduct During Parole

23. Learned counsel submits that the applicant was granted parole

on multiple occasions owing to serious illness and subsequent demise

of his mother. During the entire period of release, no complaint of

misuse of liberty arose, the applicant complied with all conditions and

surrendered as directed. This conduct demonstrates absence of risk in

releasing the applicant on bail.

XII. No Prima Facie Case Established

24. Counsel for the applicant ultimately submits that the charge-sheet

fails to establish a prima facie case showing direct involvement of the

applicant. Allegations are general and lack concrete evidentiary support

linking him with alleged illegal transactions.

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25. On the cumulative consideration of prolonged custody, filing of

charge-sheet, absence of recovery, ongoing investigation, delay in trial,

grant of bail to co-accused,compliance with parole conditions and lack

of direct incriminating evidence, learned counsel for the applicant

submits that further detention of the applicant would amount to pre-trial

punishment. Thus, it is submitted that the applicant be enlarged on

regular bail on such terms and conditions as deemed appropriate by

this Court. The Supreme Court in Sanjay Chandra v. CBI (supra)

emphasized that the object of bail is to secure appearance of the

accused at trial and not to impose pre-trial punishment. The Court also

recognized that prolonged detention before conviction results in

disproportionate curtailment of personal liberty.

26. He contended that the Investigation qua the applicant stands

substantially completed, evidence appears largely documentary, and no

misuse of liberty during parole has been demonstrated. The trial

involves numerous accused and witnesses, making early conclusion

improbable. Therefore, continued incarceration at this stage would not

serve the ends of justice.

XIII. Ingredients of Offences Alleged Not Prima Facie Made Out

27. It is contended that even if the prosecution allegations are taken

at their face value, essential ingredients of the offences invoked are not

made out against the applicant. Placing reliance on Mohd. Ibrahim v.

State of Bihar, (2009) 8 SCC 751, it is submitted that mere execution

or alteration of a document does not constitute an offence of forgery
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unless it is shown that the document was made dishonestly or

fraudulently with intent to cause it to be believed as having been made

under lawful authority. No such material exists against the applicant.

28. Similarly, with respect to Section 420 IPC, it is argued that

cheating requires dishonest inducement resulting in delivery of property.

There is no allegation or evidence that the applicant induced any

person to part with property. Therefore, essential ingredients of the

offence are absent. With respect to Sections 7 and 12 of the

Prevention of Corruption Act, learned counsel submits that the applicant

is not a public servant and there is no material indicating abetment of

any such offence. No such allegation appears even in grounds of arrest

or remand applications.

XIV. Bail Stage Not Meant for Mini Trial

29. Learned counsel submits that the prosecution is inviting this

Court to undertake a meticulous examination of evidence, which is

impermissible at the stage of bail. It is urged that determination of

evidentiary admissibility, reliability of witnesses and evaluation of

documents are matters reserved for trial and not for bail proceedings. At

this stage, only prima facie considerations and necessity of custody are

relevant.

XV. Selective Arrest and Pick-and-Choose Policy

30. It is argued that the investigating agency has adopted a selective

approach in effecting arrests. Persons alleged to be actual

beneficiaries, including aggregators, distillery owners and officials, have

not been arrested, while the applicant has been singled out.
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Reliance is placed upon Vipin Yadav v. ED, 2025 SCC OnLine Del

6237, wherein it was observed that when the investigating agency

selectively arrests individuals, parity may extend even to those not

arrested.

XVI. Majority of Accused Not Arrested

31. It is further submitted that out of the total number of accused

persons arrayed in charge-sheets, only a small fraction have been

arrested, while several accused have been charge-sheeted without

arrest and many have been granted bail. Thus, continued incarceration

of the applicant becomes disproportionate and inconsistent with

treatment accorded to other accused persons.

XVII. Bail Granted to Excise Officers and Other Accused

32. Learned counsel for the applicant submits that even excise

officers and other functionaries alleged to be directly connected with the

alleged policy and operational aspects have been granted bail either by

the Hon’ble Supreme Court or by this Court. Once similarly or more

directly placed accused persons have been granted bail, denial of bail

to the applicant would be inconsistent with settled principles of parity.

Reliance is placed upon Krishnan Subramanian v. State, 2022 SCC

OnLine Del 1384, and Chandra Prakash Khandelwal v. ED, 2023

SCC OnLine Del 1094, where parity in bail was recognized as a

relevant consideration.

XVIII. Applicant Already Granted Bail in ED Case

33. Learned counsel points out that in connected proceedings arising

out of Enforcement Directorate investigation, the Supreme Court has
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already granted bail to the applicant. It is argued that the present

prosecution is substantially founded upon the same set of allegations,

and therefore continued detention in the present matter becomes

unwarranted.

XIX. Long Custody and Improbability of Early Trial

34. It is submitted that the applicant has undergone custody

exceeding a year and a half, while the case involves:

• large number of accused,

• hundreds of witnesses,

• voluminous documentary evidence and ongoing investigation

concerning other accused. Thus, early commencement or

completion of trial appears unlikely.

Reliance is placed upon Manish Sisodia v. Directorate of

Enforcement, 2024 SCC OnLine SC 1920, Ramkripal Meena v.

Directorate of Enforcement, and Union of India v. K.A. Najeeb,

(2021) 3 SCC 713, wherein prolonged incarceration pending trial was

recognized as ground for bail.

XX. Evidence Entirely Documentary

35. It is submitted that prosecution evidence is documentary and

already in possession of investigating agency. No further recovery is

alleged to be pending from the applicant, and therefore custodial

detention serves no investigative purpose.

XXII. Applicant’s Cooperation with Investigation

36. Learned counsel for the applicant submits that the applicant has

throughout cooperated with investigating authorities and never
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attempted to evade process of law. His conduct does not indicate flight

risk.

XXIII. No Misuse of Liberty During Parole

37. The applicant was granted parole on multiple occasions owing to

illness and demise of his mother. It is submitted that the applicant

complied with all conditions, surrendered on time, and no complaint of

misuse of liberty arose. This conduct demonstrates that apprehensions

of misuse of liberty are unfounded.

XXIV. Apprehension of Witness Influence Must Be Based on

Material

38. Reliance is placed upon Zahur Haider Zaidi v. CBI, (2019) 20

SCC 404, wherein it was held that apprehension of influencing

witnesses must be based on tangible material and cannot be presumed

at bail stage. Such considerations become relevant primarily for

cancellation of bail rather than refusal in the first instance.

XXV. Departmental Enquiry Did Not Reveal Illegality

39. It is further submitted that departmental inquiry conducted by

competent authorities did not reveal illegality in excise policy or related

transactions, thereby weakening prosecution’s broad allegations.

XXVI. Applicant’s Undertaking and Roots in Society

40. The applicant is a permanent resident of the State with deep

roots in society, possessing family and property within jurisdiction of the

Court. He undertakes to abide by all conditions imposed and to furnish

adequate sureties as directed. In culmination, learned counsel submits
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that investigation qua applicant is complete, no recovery is attributed,

evidence is documentary, co-accused have been granted bail,

prolonged custody has occurred, trial is unlikely to conclude soon, and

applicant has not misused liberty. Therefore, continued detention would

amount to pre-trial punishment, warranting enlargement of the applicant

on bail subject to conditions deemed appropriate by this Court.

SUBMISSIONS ON BEHALF OF THE RESPONDENT/STATE

41. The Respondent-State/EOW, has submitted the following

reply/objections opposing the relief sought by the applicant:

At the very outset, the Respondent-State submits that the

present application is misconceived, premature and legally untenable.

The applicant seeks indulgence of this Court despite the fact that the

investigation in the present matter is active, wide-ranging and

progressing on several crucial aspects involving an organised economic

offence of enormous magnitude. Grant of relief at this stage would

seriously prejudice the ongoing investigation and undermine efforts to

unearth the full contours of the conspiracy and financial trail.

II. Earlier Rejection of Bail by this Court

42. It is submitted that the applicant’s bail application had already

been rejected by this Court vide order dated 20.12.2024 passed in

M.Cr.C. No. 3455 of 2024, after due consideration of the seriousness of

allegations and the material collected during investigation. The findings

recorded therein continue to hold good, and there has been no change

in circumstances warranting reconsideration.

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III. Proceedings Before the Supreme Court

43. Thereafter, the applicant approached the Supreme Court by filing

SLP (Crl.) No. 433 of 2025, which was dismissed vide order dated

14.07.2025. While dismissing the petition, liberty was granted to

renewthe bail application only in the event of lack of progress in

investigation within four months. It is submitted that such liberty cannot

be invoked mechanically or as a matter of right. The record clearly

demonstrates substantial investigative progress subsequent to the said

order.

IV. Investigation is presently underway and continues unabated

44. The allegation that investigation is stagnant is wholly incorrect

and contrary to the record. The investigating agency has, during the

relevant period:

• examined voluminous digital evidence approximating one

terabyte of data,

• traced complex financial transactions and layering of proceeds of

crime,

• identified foreign routing and hawala channels,

• examined beneficiary entities and money flow structures,

• analysed digital chats and financial communications and filed

multiple supplementary charge-sheets incorporating further

evidence and additional accused persons.

• Critical aspects including complete quantification of proceeds of

crime, identification of ultimate beneficiaries, and international
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financial linkages remain under active investigation.

V. Filing of Supplementary Charge-Sheets

45. It is submitted that the investigation did not stop after filing earlier

charge-sheets. Rather, further investigation resulted in filing successive

supplementary charge-sheets, including the 7th Supplementary

Charge-Sheet dated 22.12.2025, which incorporates material collected

during subsequent investigation, including emerging conspiracy links

and role of connected persons. Further reports are likely to be filed as

investigation progresses.

VI. Continued Investigation Qua the Applicant

46. The contention that no investigation survives against the

applicant is factually incorrect. Post-challan investigation has continued

specifically with respect to the applicant, including collection and

forensic analysis of additional digital evidence, examination of money-

trail and financial layering, verification of beneficiary channels,

investigation of foreign and hawala routing and corroboration through

witness statements and documentary material. Prima facie, the material

garnered fortifies the prosecution’s narrative, evincing heightened

complicity and an extended conspiratorial chain among the accused.

VII. Risk of Witness Influence and Evidence Tampering

47. Considering the nature of allegations, operational reach of the

syndicate and influence wielded by the applicant, there exists a genuine

and immediate apprehension that if released, the applicant may

influence or intimidate material witnesses, tamper with documentary
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and digital evidence, obstruct investigation, interfere with identification

of additional accused and beneficiaries. Thus, protection of evidence

and witnesses remains crucial at this stage of investigation.

VIII. Seriousness and Magnitude of the Offence

48. The present matter concerns a systematic and organised

economic offence involving generation, concealment and diversion of

massive illegal proceeds, resulting in grave loss to public revenue and

affecting public administration. The investigation has already revealed

financial impact running into hundreds/thousands of crores, with further

quantification in progress. It is settled law that economic offences

involving public funds stand on a different footing and demand stricter

scrutiny while considering bail.

IX. Wider Nexus Under Investigation

49. Further investigation has revealed linkages of the applicant with

broader organised illegal activities and financial irregularities, including

tender-related manipulations and illegal financial arrangements.

Documentary and digital evidence relating to these aspects is under

verification and corroboration. Therefore, the release of the applicant at

this juncture would seriously hamper these investigations.

X. Digital and Documentary Evidence Indicating Active Role

50. Forensic analysis of seized mobile devices and digital records

has revealed communications indicating the applicant’s active

involvement in facilitating illegal arrangements and coordinating

processes connected with grant of undue benefits and financial
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transactions. The investigation also indicates involvement of

absconding and other associated persons whose roles are under

investigation.

XI. Liberty Granted by Supreme Court Cannot Be Invoked

Mechanically

51. The liberty granted by the Supreme Court was conditional upon

absence of progress in investigation. However, the record clearly

demonstrates sustained and substantial progress including filing of

supplementary charge-sheets and further collection of evidence.

Hence, the premise on which the present application rests is itself

erroneous.

XII. Balance Between Liberty and Societal Interest

52. He submtis that while personal liberty is an important

constitutional value, the same cannot override societal interest where

investigation involves organised economic crime of enormous scale. At

the present stage, safeguarding the investigation, protecting evidence,

and ensuring accountability of all involved persons must take

precedence over individual liberty claims.

53. Taking into consideration the gravity of allegations, nature of

evidence collected, continuing investigation, magnitude of financial

impact, possibility of witness influence and evidence tampering, and

thestage of investigation, it is respectfully submitted that no ground

exists for granting relief to the applicant. Therefore, grant of bail at this

stage would irreparably prejudice ongoing investigation and frustrate
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efforts to expose the full conspiracy.

XIII. Ongoing Quantification of Illegal Proceeds

54. It is submitted that the investigation has revealed that the exact

quantum of illegal money received by the applicant and other accused

persons from the multi-crore liquor scam is still under systematic

quantification through detailed money-trail analysis. The illegal

proceeds were generated and routed in multiple forms, including: cash

collections, layered banking transactions, accommodation entries,

benami investments, investments in immovable and movable

properties, and conversion of cash into high-value assets. Tracing of

these proceeds is presently in progress and requires further financial

and digital examination.

XIV. Role of the present applicant as Key Operator

55. Material placed on record through earlier charge-sheets and

updated investigation establishes that the present applicant functioned

as a principal operator and major financial beneficiary of the liquor

syndicate. Investigation indicates that meetings held with distillery

representatives and senior intermediaries led to the formulation of

mechanisms whereby illegal commissions were embedded within

supply pricing structures and recovered through enhanced landing

prices. Thus, illegal commission structures were institutionalised

through coordinated decisions at syndicate level.

XV. Manipulation in Procurement Chain and Over-Invoicing

56. Investigation further reveals that procurement of broken rice used
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by distilleries was deliberately routed through intermediary entities

connected with accused persons instead of direct sourcing from millers.

Entities such as companies linked with relatives/associates of accused

persons were used as intermediaries, enabling approximately 20%

over-invoicing, thereby embedding illegal commission within billing

structures. Banking and documentary evidence indicates that such

over-invoicing resulted in substantial illegal gains subsequently invested

in immovable properties and other assets.

XVI. Illegal Sale of B-Part Liquor and Commission Mechanism

57. Further investigation revealed that a parallel and illegal

distribution mechanism relating to “B-Part” country liquor was

implemented through collusion with distilleries. Under this mechanism,

large quantities of unaccounted liquor were distributed through

government retail channels, illegal commission at fixed rates per case

was collected and proceeds were distributed among key conspirators.

Initial district-level analysis indicated illegal commission in excess of

₹120 Crores, while consolidated data correlating statewide records

indicates that approximately 60.5 lakh cases of unaccounted liquor

were illegally sold, resulting in estimated loss exceeding ₹2,100 Crores

to the State exchequer. Correspondingly, the illegal commissions

attributable to key operators run into hundreds of crores.

XVII. Illegal Proceeds Attributable to Accused

58. Based upon available material and prima facie financial

assessment, proceeds attributable to the present applicant alone are
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estimated to run into hundreds of crores, and further quantification

across procurement, distribution, manpower placement and supply

chains is still under computation. Preliminary assessment indicates

aggregate proceeds attributable to him may lie in the range of ₹250-

300 Crores, subject to final verification.

XVIII. Laundering of Illegal Proceeds

59. Investigation has further revealed attempts to legitimize illegal

cash proceeds through routing funds via banking accommodation

entries, creation of artificial loan/advance documentation, layering

transactions through multiple shell or intermediary entities and

investments in real estate and business concerns in names of relatives

and associated persons. More than ₹60 Crores worth suspicious

banking entries have already been traced, while property investments

exceeding ₹100 Crores linked to the accused and associated persons

are presently under examination.

XIX. Accommodation Entry Network Through NBFC Channels

60. It is submitted that the statements recorded during further

investigation reveal that cash collections were converted into banking

entries through accommodation entry operators and NBFC-linked

networks operating across multiple cities. Cash was collected through

intermediaries and corresponding NEFT/RTGS transfers were routed to

beneficiary accounts disguised as loans or advances, thereby

concealing the true origin of funds. This mechanism is presently under

detailed forensic financial examination.

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XX. Digital Evidence Demonstrating Active Operational Role

61. Analysis of WhatsApp chats and digital evidence recovered from

devices linked to accused persons demonstrates direct involvement in

planning and monitoring B-Part operations, coordination in procurement

and distribution mechanisms, facilitation of distillery operations,

management of complaints and enforcement pressures, discussions

concerning postings, transfers and operational control, district-wise

cash collection and routing instructions and coordination with multiple

operational intermediaries. These communications establish the

accused as a central operational and financial coordinator of the

syndicate.

XXI. Evidence of Political Protection and Organised Structure

62. He submits that the Chats and witness statements further

indicate that the syndicate functioned with organized structure involving

multiple layers of protection and facilitation, strengthening the inference

that the accused functioned as a key ground-level operator and

financial coordinator.

XXII. Conversion of Cash Into Movable and Foreign Assets

63. Investigation also reveals that portions of illegal proceeds were

converted into bullion and other high-value movable assets and routed

through intermediary handlers to avoid detection. Further leads indicate

routing of substantial funds outside the State and thereafter outside the

country through hawala networks, including routing chains operating

between Raipur, Mumbai and foreign destinations. Quantification and
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tracing of these proceeds remain under active investigation.

XXIII. Risk of Prejudice to Investigation

64. At this critical stage, disclosure of granular operational and

financial details would seriously jeopardize investigation, enable

tampering with evidence, alteration of money trails and influence over

witnesses. Grant of bail would significantly increase such risks,

particularly considering the influence, reach and financial capacity of

the accused and associated persons.

XXIV. Investigation Continues to Progress

65. It is submitted that the applicant’s contention that investigation

has not progressed stands completely falsified by the extensive

material collected post earlier charge-sheets, including digital evidence,

financial records, witness statements and supplementary reports.

Investigation has now progressed into deeper layers of financial routing

and beneficiary identification. Further charge-sheets and reports shall

be filed upon crystallisation of evidence.

XXV. Necessity of Continued Custodial Control

66. Considering the magnitude of economic offence, continuing

financial investigation, risk of witness influence, possibility of evidence

tampering and involvement of complex financial networks, custodial

control or continued restraint on liberty of accused persons remains

necessary for effective completion of investigation.

XXVI. Updated Consolidated Assessment of Illegal Proceeds –
Country Liquor Operations
25

67. It is submitted that upon consolidation of district-wise sales data,

warehouse records, transport movement details and digital evidence,

investigation has established large-scale illegal sale of unaccounted B-

Part country liquor. The updated assessment indicates illegal sale of

approximately 60.5 lakh unaccounted cases resulting monetary impact

and illegal accrual aggregating to approximately ₹2,174.60 Crores and

further illegal collections of approximately ₹52 Crores under supply

area/zone determination mechanisms. Accordingly, investigation

indicates that illegal gains derived from country liquor operations alone

amount to approximately ₹2,545.93 Crores.

XXVII. Illegal Commission from Foreign Liquor Operations

68. The Investigation into foreign liquor (FL/IMFL and beer)

operations reveals that illegal commissions for the year 2019-20 have

been quantified at approximately ₹88.69 Crores, additional illegal

commission of approximately ₹21.56 Crores has been traced under

market share manipulationsn and through FL-10B licensee

mechanisms, illegal collections of approximately ₹171.64 Crores during

the period 2020-21 to 2022-23 have been established. Thus, illegal

commission attributable to foreign liquor operations aggregates to

approximately ₹281.89 Crores.

XXVIII. Illegal Gains from Misuse of FL-10A License Policy

69. Further investigation establishes that misuse of the FL-10A

license policy resulted in three licensee companies obtaining undue

gross profits approximating ₹248.50 Crores, which, in ordinary course,
26

would have accrued to the State exchequer and CSMCL. Such

manipulation directly caused loss of legitimate State revenue.

XXIX. Consolidated Financial Impact of the Scam

70. Upon combining the illegal commissions (proceeds of crime) and

direct revenue losses arising from policy misuse, the total financial

impact presently established during the relevant period stands at

approximately ₹3,076 Crores. Investigation into additional streams of

illegal gain is continuing, and upon inclusion of further identified heads,

the overall scam amount is likely to exceed ₹4,000 Crores. This

magnitude itself demonstrates the organised and systemic nature of the

criminal conspiracy.

XXX. The inquiry delving into ancillary channels of evidence.

71. Investigation is actively examining additional channels of illegal

gain, including procurement manipulations, manpower placement

commissions, supply-chain distortions, accommodation entries and

foreign routing of proceeds. Further quantification and identification of

beneficiary networks are under progress and supplementary reports

shall be filed upon crystallization of evidence.

XXX1. Necessity to Protect Integrity of Investigation

72. At this stage, learned State counsel submtis that premature

disclosure of sensitive financial and operational details may prejudice

investigation, enable tampering with evidence, allow alteration of money

trails and facilitate influencing of witnesses. Hence, investigation

agencies are proceeding cautiously in accordance with law to secure
27

evidence prior to full disclosure.

XXXII. Respect for Orders of the Court

73. It is submitted that all actions of the investigating agency are

undertaken strictly in accordance with law and subject to directions of

this Court, and the State remains bound to comply with the said orders

in letter and spirit.

XXXIII. Verification of Contents

74. Thus, in view of the enormity of financial impact, ongoing

investigation, complexity of financial routing, involvement of multiple

entities and persons, and serious apprehension of interference with

investigation, the applicant does not deserve any discretionary relief.

Grant of bail at this stage would severely prejudice investigation and

frustrate efforts to bring the entire conspiracy and proceeds of crime to

light thus, the application be dismissed in the interest of justice.

FINDINGS ON PROSECUTION STORY

75. Having considered submissions by learned advocates and the

documents on record with due diligence–put differently. For

adjudication of the present bail application:

i. It appears that on 18.11.2022, on the basis of a complaint lodged by

the Income Tax Department (Complaint Case No. 1183/2022), the

Enforcement Directorate registered ECIR No. RPZO/11/2022, treating

Section 120-B IPC as a standalone scheduled offence.

ii. It is further borne out from the record that the Supreme Court in W.P.

(Crl.) No. 153 of 2023, vide order dated 28.04.2023, granted
28

protection against coercive action in relation to ECIR No.

RPZO/11/2022, recording a prima facie view that no underlying

scheduled offence was made out.

iii. Thereafter, the applicant along with others approached the Supreme

Court by filing W.P. (Crl.) No. 208 of 2023 seeking quashing of ECIR

No. RPZO/11/2022. However, during the pendency of the said

proceedings, the Enforcement Directorate arrested the applicant on

06.05.2023 in connection with the said ECIR.

iv. Subsequently, the present FIR bearing Crime No. 04/2024 dated

17.01.2024 came to be registered by EOW/ACB, Chhattisgarh on the

basis of information forwarded by the Enforcement Directorate under

Section 66(2) of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act vide

communication dated 11.07.2023, alleging existence of a syndicate

engaged in illegal manufacture and sale of liquor during the period

2019-2023, involving excise officials and other persons.

v. It further appears that several co-accused persons were granted

protection from coercive action by this Court in Cr.M.P. No. 721/2024.

The applicant also approached this Court by filing Cr.M.P. No. 860/2024

(Anwar Dhebar v. Union of India & Ors.) seeking quashing of the FIR

and interim protection.

vi. Thereafter, the Supreme Court in W.P. (Crl.) No. 208 of 2023 vide

order dated 08.04.2024 quashed ECIR No. RPZO/11/2022, holding

that there was no scheduled offence and no proceeds of crime, thereby

declaring the earlier ECIR to be unsustainable in law.

vii. Immediately thereafter, on 11.04.2024, the Enforcement
29

Directorate registered ECIR No. RPZO/04/2024 on the basis of the

present FIR and the applicant was subsequently arrested on

08.08.2024 in the said ECIR.

viii. The prosecution filed Charge-sheet No. 03/2024 dated 01.07.2024

against four accused persons including the present applicant, wherein it

was specifically mentioned that further investigation was continuing.

Thereafter, several supplementary charge-sheets were filed on

27.09.2024, 18.11.2024, 30.06.2025, 07.07.2025 and 26.08.2025,

which itself indicates that investigation continued for a considerable

period.

76. Without entering into the merits of the prosecution case, the rival

contentions deserve consideration under the following heads:

I. Successive Bail Application and Change in Circumstances

77. This Court is conscious of the gravity of the allegations levelled

against the applicant. The prosecution has contended that the applicant

is one of the principal conspirators and a key architect of the alleged

liquor syndicate, and that the activities attributed to the accused

persons have resulted in substantial loss to the State exchequer. The

earlier bail application of the applicant was rejected by this Court in

M.Cr.C. No. 3392 of 2025 dated 18.07.2025, and thereafter the

Supreme Court dismissed the Special Leave Petition vide order

dated 14.07.2025 in SLP (Crl.) No. 433 of 2025, while granting liberty

to renew the bail prayer in the event no progress in trial is made

within four months. The present application has been filed in

pursuance of the liberty so granted. The record indicates that despite
30

expiry of the period stipulated by the Supreme Court:

• cognizance against all accused persons is yet to be completed,

• charges have not been framed,

• supplementary charge-sheets continue to be filed, and trial has

not commenced.

Thus, the applicant has been able to demonstrate a substantial

change in circumstances, making the present application maintainable.

II. Length of Custody and Constitutional Protection of Liberty

78. It is not disputed that the applicant has remained in custody since

05.04.2024 and has undergone more than one year and seven months

of pre-trial detention. The Supreme Court in Union of India v. K.A.

Najeeb, (2021) 3 SCC 713, has authoritatively held that prolonged

incarceration pending trial is a valid ground for grant of bail even in

serious offences.

79. Recently, in Manish Sisodia v. Directorate of Enforcement,

2024 SCC OnLine SC 1920, the Supreme Court reiterated that

indefinite incarceration without likelihood of early trial would offend

Article 21 of the Constitution. It has been held that :

“29. Detention or jail before being pronounced
guilty of an offence should not become
punishment without trial. If the trial gets
protracted despite assurances of the
prosecution, and it is clear that case will not be
decided within a foreseeable time, the prayer
for bail may be meritorious. While the
prosecution may pertain to an economic
offence, yet it may not be proper to equate
these cases with those punishable with death,
imprisonment for life, ten years or more like
31

offences under the Narcotic Drugs and
Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985
, murder,
cases of rape, dacoity, kidnaping for ransom,
mass violence, etc. Neither is this a case where
100/1000s of depositors have been defrauded. The
allegations have to be established and proven. The
right to bail in cases of delay, coupled with
incarceration for a long period, depending on the
nature of the allegations, should be read into
Section 439 of the Code and Section 45 of the PML
Act. The reason is that the constitutional mandate
is the higher law, and it is the basic right of the
person charged of an offence and not convicted,
that he be ensured and given a speedy trial. When
the trial is not proceeding for reasons not
attributable to the accused, the court, unless there
are good reasons, may well be guided to exercise
the power to grant bail. This would be truer where
the trial would take years.”

80. Further, the Supreme Court in Senthil Balaji v. Directorate of

Enforcement, 2024 SCC OnLine SC 2626, while considering the

issue of prolonged custody and delay in trial, has reiterated in

paragraph 27 that continued incarceration of an undertrial prisoner,

where the trial is unlikely to conclude within a reasonable time, would

be inconsistent with the constitutional mandate under Article 21, and in

such circumstances the Court is required to lean in favour of grant of

bail. It reads thus:

27. Under the Statutes like PMLA, the minimum
sentence is three years, and the maximum is
seven years. The minimum sentence is higher
when the scheduled offence is under the NDPS
Act
. When the trial of the complaint under PMLA
is likely to prolong beyond reasonable limits, the
Constitutional Courts will have to consider
exercising their powers to grant bail. The reason
is that Section 45(1)(ii) does not confer power on
the State to detain an accused for an
32

unreasonably long time, especially when there is
no possibility of trial concluding within a
reasonable time. What a reasonable time is will
depend on the provisions under which the
accused is being tried and other factors. One of
the most relevant factor is the duration of the
minimum and maximum sentence for the offence.

Another important consideration is the higher
threshold or stringent conditions which a statute
provides for the grant of bail. Even an outer limit
provided by the relevant law for the completion of
the trial, if any, is also a factor to be considered.
The extraordinary powers, as held in the case of
K.A. Najeeb, can only be exercised by the
Constitutional Courts. The Judges of the
Constitutional Courts have vast experience.

Based on the facts on record, if the Judges
conclude that there is no possibility of a trial
concluding in a reasonable time, the power of
granting bail can always be exercised by the
Constitutional Courts on the grounds of violation
of Part III of the Constitution of India
notwithstanding the statutory provisions. The
Constitutional Courts can always exercise its
jurisdiction under Article 32 or Article 226, as the
case may be. The Constitutional Courts have to
bear in mind while dealing with the cases under
the PMLA that, except in a few exceptional cases,
the maximum sentence can be of seven years.

The Constitutional Courts cannot allow provisions
like Section 45(1)(ii) to become instruments in the
hands of the ED to continue incarceration for a
long time when there is no possibility of a trial of
the scheduled offence and the PMLA offence
concluding within a reasonable time. If the
Constitutional Courts do not exercise their
jurisdiction in such cases, the rights of the
undertrials under Article 21 of the Constitution of
India will be defeated.

In a given case, if an undue delay in the disposal
of the trial of scheduled offences or disposal of
trial under the PMLA can be substantially
attributed to the accused, the Constitutional
Courts can always decline to exercise jurisdiction
33

to issue prerogative writs. An exception will also
be in a case where, considering the antecedents
of the accused, there is every possibility of the
accused becoming a real threat to society if
enlarged on bail. The jurisdiction to issue
prerogative writs is always discretionary.”

81. The Apex Court emphasized that personal liberty cannot be

sacrificed on account of protracted investigation or delayed trial,

particularly where the accused has remained in custody for a

considerable period and the proceedings are not likely to conclude in

the near future. Applying the aforesaid principle to the facts of the

present case, it is evident that the applicant has remained in custody for

more than one year and several months, multiple charge-sheets have

already been filed, the trial has not yet commenced, charges have not

been framed, and conclusion of trial is not foreseeable in the near

future.

82. Therefore, the ratio laid down by the Apex Court in Senthil Balaji

(supra) squarely applies to the facts of the present case and lends

substantial support to the applicant’s prayer for bail. The same principle

has been reaffirmed in the latest judgment of the Supreme Court in

Arvind Dham v. Directorate of Enforcement (Criminal Appeal

arising out of SLP (Crl.) No. 15478 of 2025, decided in 2026),

wherein it has been emphasized that prolonged custody coupled with

delay in trial justifies enlargement on bail even in prosecutions involving

economic offences.

83. This Court also finds considerable support from the principles laid
34

down by the Supreme Court in recent judgments governing grant of bail

in economic offences.

” A three-Judge Bench of the Hon’ble
Supreme Court in Padam Chand Jain v.

Directorate of Enforcement has reiterated that
prolonged incarceration cannot be permitted
to convert pre-trial detention into punishment,
particularly where the evidence is primarily
documentary in nature and already seized by
the prosecution, thereby substantially
reducing any possibility of tampering with
evidence.”

84. It has further held that:”The right to speedy trial, enshrined under

Article 21 of the Constitution, is not eclipsed by the nature of the

offence. Prolonged incarceration of an undertrial, without

commencement or reasonable progress of trial, cannot be

countenanced as it has the effect of converting pretrial detention into a

form of punishment.”

85. It has further observed that economic offences cannot be treated

as a homogeneous class warranting blanket denial of bail, and the

Court must consider the individual facts and circumstances of each

case. The Supreme Court has also taken note in several cases that

periods of incarceration ranging from a few months to about seventeen

months have been considered sufficient for grant of bail, particularly

where investigation stands completed and trial is not likely to

commence in the near future. It has been observed that:

“Various Benches of this Court, while taking
into account the period of incarceration which
ranges from three months to seventeen
35

months in several cases, have granted bail to
the appellants therein.”

86. It has further noted that where cognizance has not been taken,

against all the accused persons, proceedings remain at preliminary

stages, large number of witnesses are to be examined, and trial is

unlikely to commence in the near future, continued incarceration would

be unjustified. Thus, continued incarceration of the applicant for an

indefinite period would be inconsistent with constitutional safeguards.

III. Completion of Investigation Qua Applicant

87. Investigation qua the applicant culminated in filing of the first

charge-sheet on 29.06.2024, followed by multiple supplementary

charge-sheets. However, the charge-sheets themselves indicate that

investigation is incomplete and continuing qua other accused persons.

The Supreme Court in Sanjay Chandra v. CBI, (2012) 1 SCC 40 has

held that once investigation is complete and the accused is no longer

required for custodial interrogation, continued detention must be

justified on compelling grounds.No such compelling necessity has been

demonstrated in the present case.

IV. Delay in Trial and Improbability of Early Conclusion

88. The record placed before this Court indicates that there are

numerous accused persons, more than 1100 witnesses, voluminous

documentary evidence running into thousands of pages, and

investigation qua other accused is still continuing.

89. Despite filing of several charge-sheets, the trial Court has not yet
36

taken cognizance against all accused persons and charges are yet to

be framed. Thus, commencement of trial itself appears uncertain and its

conclusion appears even more remote. The Supreme Court in K.A.

Najeeb (supra) and Manish Sisodia (supra) has held that when trial is

unlikely to conclude within reasonable time, continued detention

becomes unjustified.

V. Bail Granted in Connected Proceedings

90. It is an admitted position, and certainly so, that the Supreme

Court has already granted bail to the applicant in the connected

proceedings initiated by the Enforcement Directorate, stemming from

ECIR No. RPZO/04/2024. The allegations crystallized in the present

FIR bear substantial overlap with those ventilated in the aforesaid ECIR

proceedings, pertaining to the very same transaction, role, and

complicity attributed to the applicant. The Supreme Court, in its

profound wisdom and after a meticulous scrutiny of the material on

record–including the applicant’s role, the nature of accusations, and

the totality of circumstances–deemed it just and proper to enlarge the

applicant on bail in the ED case. This enlightened judicial determination,

rendered by the Apex Court, unequivocally tilts the scales in favour of

the applicant herein. As held by the Supreme Court in State of

Maharashtra v. Suresh Nivrutti Bhusare (2016) 14 SCC 483, the

grant of bail in connected proceedings by a superior court constitutes a

compelling circumstance militating against continued incarceration in

parallel matters, particularly where the substratum of allegations

remains materially identical. Continued detention of the applicant in the
37

instant case, therefore, would not only be patently unjust but also

violative of the sacrosanct principle that liberty is the rule and restraint

the exception (Arnesh Kumar v. State of Bihar, (2014) 8 SCC 273).

This factor, in itself, emerges as a paramount consideration warranting

the grant of bail.

VI. Parity with Co-Accused

91. The material on record irrefutably discloses that several co-

accused, in terms of role, complicity, and the gravity of allegations, have

already been favoured with the grant of bail by the Apex Court as well

as by this Court. Indeed, a substantial number of accused persons have

been charge-sheeted in the present case without even the

necessity of prior arrest. However, the present applicant is a principal

conspirator of the crime in question.

VII. Nature of Evidence and Necessity of Custody

92. Undoubtedly, the applicant stands as a chief architect of alleged

conspiracy. The case of the prosecution hinges predominantly on

documentary evidence comprising bank records, transactional ledgers,

and allied papers which stands fully secured and in the untrammelled

possession of the investigating agency. No whisper of any further

recovery, disclosure, or custodial interrogation is articulated qua the

applicant; the investigation vis-à-vis him stands concluded with the filing

of the final charge-sheet. In such circumstances, the continuance of

custodial remand serves no conceivable investigative imperative and

degenerates into sheer punitive overreach. This position finds unerring

affirmation in the sagacious pronouncement of the Supreme Court in P.
38

Chidambaram v. CBI (2020) 13 SCC 337, wherein it was trenchantly

observed that “If the investigation has been completed and the charge-

sheet has already been filed, the continued custody of the accused is

not necessary for the purposes of investigation. Where the evidence is

entirely documentary in nature, there is no necessity for custodial

interrogation.”

93. A perusal of the case diary and charge-sheet reveals that the

prosecution’s edifice rests preponderantly on documentary evidence,

which is already within the safe custody of the investigating agency. No

material is forthcoming to suggest any imminent recovery or custodial

necessity qua the applicant. The investigation against him stands

concluded with the filing of the charge-sheet. In this backdrop, the

continued incarceration of the applicant serves no investigative

purpose. As observed by the Supreme Court in P. Chidambaram v.

CBI (2020) 13 SCC 337 wherein it has held that “Where the evidence is

documentary and investigation is complete, custodial detention is not

warranted.” This Court finds itself in respectful agreement. The

applicant’s detention cannot be sustained merely for the asking.

94. Aligned thereto, the Apex Court in Prabhakar Singh v. State of

Uttar Pradesh (2022 SCC OnLine SC 1085) has emphatically

cautioned against deploying custody as a tool for fishing expeditions

once tangible material is exhumed. The applicant’s enlargement on bail,

therefore, aligns seamlessly with these binding precepts, rendering his

continued incarceration bereft of any statutory or jurisprudential
39

justification.

VIII. Constitutional Equilibrium Between Liberty and Investigation

95. The offences alleged are economic in nature and undoubtedly

serious. However, gravity alone cannot justify pre-trial incarceration

ad infinitum. The Supreme Court in has held that “Bail is rule, jail

exception. Seriousness of offence cannot by itself warrant denial where

other factors militate against custody.”

Undeniably, the accusations herein pertain to economic offences,

the gravity of which merits vigilant scrutiny. Yet, it is a postulate etched

in stone within our constitutional ethos that the mere seriousness of

allegations, sans more, cannot sanctify indefinite pre-trial incarceration,

lest it metamorphose into punishment antecedent to conviction. The

Supreme Court, in the locus classicus of Sanjay Chandra v. CBI

(2012) 1 SCC 40, illuminated this vital tenet thus:

“The object of bail is neither punitive nor
preventative. It is to secure the attendance of
the accused during the trial… No one likes to
be in jail and one would certainly not like to go
back to jail after having tasted freedom. The
main consideration, therefore, ought to be
whether the accused is likely to abuse the
discretion granted in his favour.”

96. Upon a holistic prism of the conspectus, this Court cannot be

oblivious to the mosaic of compelling factors: the earlier bail application

stands distinguished on fresh supervening circumstances; liberty has

been vouchsafed to the applicant by the Supreme Court in cognate

proceedings; the applicant has endured custody exceeding 22 months;

investigation qua him is consummated with charge-sheet filing; a
40

colossal array of witnesses and documents portends an protracted trial;

charges remain unframed with zero trial progression; other many co-

accused persons bask in freedom; and the vista of expeditious trial

conclusion appears chimerical. Aggregately viewed, these facets

coalesce to render continued incarceration not merely unjustifiable but

tantamount to impermissible pre-trial punishment, antithetical to the

constitutional sine qua non of personal liberty (Supreme Court Legal

Aid Committee v. Union of India, (1995) 1 SCC 51). Article 21

mandates that deprivation of liberty must be fair, just and reasonable.

Here, with investigation complete and no trial in sight, continued

custody would be constitutionally infirm and disproportionate.

97. It is not in dispute that the applicant has remained in judicial

custody since 05.04.2024 and has undergone incarceration for a period

of about 1 year and 10 months, as an under trial prisoner. The record

further indicates that the charge-sheet was filed on 29.06.2024 and

thereafter as many as five supplementary charge-sheets have been

filed, yet investigation in respect of other accused persons is stated to

be continuing.

98. It is further significant to note that the earlier bail application

preferred by the applicant came to be rejected by this Court in M.Cr.C.

No. 3392 of 2025 dated 18.07.2025, whereafter the applicant

approached the Supreme Court by filing SLP (Crl.) No. 433 of 2025

seeking regular bail in connection with the present FIR. The Supreme

Court vide order dated 14.07.2025, while declining the prayer for bail,
41

was pleased to grant liberty to the applicant to renew the bail

application in the event no progress is made within a period of

four months, and further clarified that the impugned order passed by

the High Court shall not come in the way of consideration of the

subsequent bail application.

99. It is evident from the material placed before this Court that the

aforesaid period of four months has long expired and no meaningful

progress has taken place thereafter. Even as on date the trial in the

present case has not commenced, charges have not been framed,

cognizance against all accused persons is yet to be completed, and

investigation by the Economic Offences Wing in the subject FIR is still

continuing. Thus, the very contingency contemplated by the Supreme

Court while granting liberty to renew the bail prayer has arisen in the

present case. The prolonged incarceration of the applicant for about 22

months, coupled with the absence of any tangible progress in trial,

clearly indicates that continued detention of the applicant would serve

no useful purpose and would amount to punitive detention prior to

conclusion of trial.

100. In the considered opinion of this Court, once the Supreme Court

has granted liberty to renew the prayer for bail upon absence of trial

progress, and such absence of progress is evident from the record, the

applicant becomes entitled to reconsideration of his bail prayer on

merits.

101. Furthermore, the fact that more than 51 accused persons,
42

including the present Applicant, have been arrayed as accused, and the

prosecution proposes to examine as many as 1,111 witnesses. The

case also involves voluminous documentary evidence running into

thousands of pages, which would necessarily require considerable time

for appreciation during trial. The investigation is still continuing despite

filing of multiple supplementary charge-sheets indicates that the trial is

not likely to commence or conclude within a reasonable period of time.

This circumstance assumes considerable significance while balancing

the competing considerations of individual liberty and the interest of

investigation, particularly in the light of Article 21 of the Constitution.

102. Accordingly, the prolonged custody of the applicant, absence

of trial progress, and liberty granted by the Supreme Court

constitute substantial and compelling grounds for grant of bail.

Applicant has languished in custody for an inordinate period. Despite

the effluxion of considerable time, cognizance remains elusive, and the

trial is yet to commence. Thus, whilst the earlier bail application stood

rejected principally on the bedrock of the gravity, magnitude, and

pernicious scope of the allegations portraying the Applicant as the

principal conspirator in this egregious scam, the instant application falls

for consideration against the backdrop of prolonged incarceration and

inexcusable protraction in investigation and trial.

103. A person confined in judicial custody cannot be expected to

remain incarcerated indefinitely awaiting completion of

investigation, filing of supplementary charge-sheets, framing of
43

charges and eventual conclusion of trial. A person in custody cannot

be compelled to sit in prison indefinitely awaiting the uncertain

timeline of investigation and trial. The present case demonstrates

precisely such a situation where the trial is unlikely to conclude

within a reasonable time and continued detention would amount to

punitive incarceration without adjudication of guilt.

104. Accordingly, this Court deems it proper to grant bail to the

Applicant, notwithstanding the undiminished seriousness of the

imputations and his indicted role as principal conspirator. Continued

pre-trial detention amid such interminable delay would be manifestly

unjust, unconscionable, and subversive of the inviolable constitutional

safeguard of personal liberty under Article 21 of the Constitution.

105. In light of the above discussion, and after weighing the

submissions, witnesses, ongoing investigation, absence of charge-

sheet cognizance against the Applicant, and protracted trial prospects,

this Court holds the view that the present second bail application

warrants approval and thus deserves to be allowed. It must be

emphatically stated that the Applicant is being released on bail

exclusively due to extended detention and the probable delays in

concluding the investigation and trial, not on the substantive merits of

the case.

106. The previous order dated 18.07.2025 in M.Cr.C. No. 3392 of

2025, which dismissed the Applicant’s bail plea following thorough

evaluation of the allegations’ severity, the gravity of offences concerning
44

public revenue, and the extent of the alleged liquor scam, stands intact.

This Court neither weakens nor deviates from the findings therein

regarding the prosecution’s case on merits.

107. The instant bail grant rests solely on a fresh and substantial shift

in circumstances, specifically the Applicant’s extended detention of

approximately 22 months, lack of substantial trial advancement despite

directions from the Supreme Court, submission of several

supplementary charge-sheets, and the unlikelihood of prompt trial

completion. Such ongoing custody would contravene the fundamental

right to personal liberty enshrined in Article 21 of the Constitution of

India.

108. Thus, this ruling is to be understood narrowly as addressing

these intervening developments and must not be taken as any

comment on the merits of the case, which remain for determination at

trial, unaffected by remarks herein. Additionally, should any condition be

breached or new facts arise necessitating review, the prosecution may

apply for bail cancellation as per law.

109. In view of the foregoing discussion, and taking into consideration

the long period of incarceration undergone by the Applicant, the

magnitude of the prosecution case involving a large number of accused

persons and witnesses, the pendency of further investigation, the non-

taking of cognizance of the charge-sheets against the Applicant, and

the protracted nature of the trial, this Court is of the considered opinion

that the present second bail application deserves to be allowed.
45

However, it is made clear that the Applicant is being enlarged on bail

solely on the ground of prolonged incarceration and the likelihood of

delay in completion of investigation and trial, and not on merits of the

case.

110. The applicant is directed to be released forthwith on regular bail

in connection with Crime No. 04/2024 dated 17.01.2024, registered at

Economic Offences Wing/Anti-Corruption Bureau, Chhattisgarh,

for offences under Sections 420, 467, 468, 471, 120-B IPC and

Sections 7, 12 of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988, upon his

executing a personal bond of ₹1,00,000/- (Rupees One Lakh) together

with one solvent surety of the like amount to the satisfaction of the

learned trial Court, subject to the following conditions:

(i) he shall surrender his passport, if any, before
the Trial Court;

(b) the applicant must cooperate with the
investigation and the trial proceedings;

(c) he shall not directly or indirectly make any
inducement, threat or promise to any person
acquainted with the facts of the case;

(d) he shall commit no offence whatsoever
during the period they are on bail; and

(e) in case of change of residential address
and/or mobile number, the same shall be
intimated to the Court concerned by way of an
affidavit.

(f) He will not leave the country without prior
46

permission of the Court.

(g) any stringent conditions as may be imposed
by the trial court.

Any violation of the above conditions will
entitle the prosecution to move application for
cancellation of bail which shall be considered
promptly and on merits.

111. Pursuant to well-settled bail jurisprudence, the views expressed

are strictly confined to bail parameters and shall not impinge upon

Article 21 rights during trial adjudication. The parties are bound by this

delineation.

Sd/-

(Arvind Kumar Verma)
Judge

Digitally signed
by SUGUNA
DUBEY
SUGUNA Date:

DUBEY    2026.03.03
         17:47:44
         +0530
 



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