Legal Document View

Unlock Advanced Research with PRISMAI

- Know your Kanoon - Doc Gen Hub - Counter Argument - Case Predict AI - Talk with IK Doc - ...
Upgrade to Premium
[Cites 63, Cited by 0]

Delhi District Court

Directorate Of Enforcement (E.D.) vs Arvind Kejriwal on 22 January, 2026

Ct. Cases 02 of 2024                            Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal
CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024

DLCT12-000038-2024




                                    Date of Registration : 03.02.2024
                                    Date of decision     : 22.01.2026
                                    Duration             : 23 months 19 days

   IN THE COURT OF ADDL. CHIEF JUDICIAL MAGISTRATE-01,
        ROUSE AVENUE DISTRICT COURTS, NEW DELHI
                           - Presided by: PARAS DALAL, D.J.S.


   Cr.C No.                                   02 of 2024
   CNR No.                                    DLCT12-000038-2024
   Date of Institution                        03.02.2024
   Name, parentage and address of the Enforcement of Directorate (ED)
   Complainant                        Through its Assistant Director
   Name, parentage and address of the Arvind Kejriwal
   accused
   offence complained off                     U/S. 174 IPC
   Plea of Accused                            Not Guilty
   Final Order                                Acquittal
   Date of Final Arguments                    15.01.2026
   Date of Final Judgment                     22.01.2026


Argued by: Mr S.V. Raju, Ld. ASG, Mr Zoheb Hossain,
           Mr N.K. Matta, Mr Simon Benjamin, Ld. Special Counsel
           and Ld Special PPs for the ED/ Complainant

              Ms Rebecca John, Ld. Senior Counsel with Mr Mudit Jain,
              Mr Mohammad Irshad, Ld. Counsel for the accused
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                                                                                     Digitally signed

                                                                          PARAS by PARAS
                                                                                DALAL
                                        Page 1 of 58
                                                                          DALAL 2026.01.22
                                                                                Date:

                                                                                15:15:32 +0530
 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024                        Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal
CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024

                                  JUDGMENT

INDEX S.No. PARTICULARS PAGE NO.

1. Opening Statement 3

2. Complainant Evidence 6 Table 4.1 - Documents Exhibited 6

3. Statement of accused persons under Section 313 of 9 the CrPC 4. Defence Evidence 10 DW1 Rakesh Singh, 10 Assistant Ahlmad in Court of Ld. Special Judge (PC Act) (CBI-23), RADC, New Delhi Table 10.1 - Documents Exhibited 10 5. Final Arguments 12 Complainant submission 12 Defence submission 16 6. Appraisal of evidence 18 Legal Bar under Section 195 of the CrPC 21 CW1 is not competent to issue a summons for 26 further investigation carried out without obtaining written permission/ Order of the Ld. Special Judge Electronic evidence certification under Section 65B 31 of the Indian Evidence Act not valid Service of summons is improper and illegal 38 Responses show no intentional omission on his part 49 and reasons even accepted by the ED 7. Decision 54 8. Final Order - Acquittal 58 Digitally signed PARAS by PARAS DALAL Page 2 of 58 DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:15:47 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 OPENING STATEMENT
1. The Complainant/ Directorate of Enforcement (hereinafter referred to as 'ED') is an investigating agency and, acting under the provisions of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 (hereinafter referred to as 'PMLA'), initiated an investigation in the matter by recording an ECIR No. ECIR/HIU-II/14/2022 on 22.08.2022, as Section 120B of the Indian Penal Code, 1860, and Section 7 of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 are scheduled offences under the PMLA. The investigation revealed that the Delhi Excise Policy, 2021-22, was formulated as part of a criminal conspiracy by the leaders of Aam Aadmi Party (hereinafter referred to as 'AAP'), including the then Minister of Excise and others, to continuously generate and channel illegal funds to themselves and the AAP. The accused Sh. Arvind Kejriwal is the National Convenor of AAP and a Member of the National Executive Committee of AAP.
2. In the case of the ED, a prosecution complaint was filed by it on 26.11.2022, and First, Second, Third, Fourth and Fifth Supplementary Prosecution Complaints were filed on 06.01.2023, 06.04.2023, 27.04.2023, 04.05.2023 and 02.12.2023, respectively. Further investigation led to the arrest of 14 accused persons, including several AAP leaders. To unearth the role of others, including the accused, and to Page 3 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL Date:
2026.01.22 15:16:15 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 trace further proceeds of crime, further investigation was ongoing, for which the accused was summoned for investigation on numerous occasions. Such powers were derived under Section 50(2) of PMLA, and a description of the relevant three summons issued, as well as their particulars and non-compliance, is given in tabular form as under -
Sl. Date of                       Service of Summon/ Date of
                  Subject
No. Communication                 opportunity by ED Compliance
                  Summon dated
                  30.10.2023      By mail to office
                  issued to Sh.   email id of Sh Arvind No
1. 30.10.2023
                  Arvind Kejriwal Kejriwal              compliance
                  to appear on    <[email protected]>
                  02.11.2023
                  Summon dated
                  18.12.2023      By mail to office
                  issued to Sh.   email id of Sh Arvind No
2 18.12.2023
                  Arvind Kejriwal Kejriwal              compliance
                  to appear on    <[email protected]>
                  21.12.2023
                  Summon dated
                  22.12.2023      By mail to office
                  issued to Sh.   email id of Sh Arvind No
3. 22.12.2023
                  Arvind Kejriwal Kejriwal              compliance
                  to appear on    <[email protected]>
                  03.01.2024


3. The complaint states that these summons were duly served, as is evident from the replies of the accused, and he intentionally omitted to obey the summons and intentionally omitted to attend at the place and time Page 4 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS byDALAL PARAS DALAL 15:16:33 +0530 Date: 2026.01.22 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 mentioned in the summons. Instead of appearing pursuant to the summons, the accused raised frivolous objections and deliberately created grounds that clearly show he intentionally did not want to obey the summons and kept giving lame excuses that were not only frivolous but intended to make out a false defence.
4. The complaint thus states that, due to intentional omission and failure to appear pursuant to the summons/directions issued to the accused, he has committed an offence u/S. Section 174 of the Indian Penal Code (hereinafter referred to as 'IPC') provides for the punishment of a person who intentionally disobeys the orders of a public servant. It is alleged that an offence under Section 174 of the IPC is committed with respect to each of the summons, which is intentionally disobeyed, making each of such omission or disobedience a separate offence. In terms of Section 219 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (hereinafter referred to as 'CrPC'), since three offences of a similar nature can be tried together, the present case pertains to non-compliance of summons dated 30.10.2023, 18.12.2023 and 22.12.2023.
5. The Ld. Predecessor took cognizance of the offence vide Order dated 07.02.2024, and process was issued against the accused Arvind Kejriwal. Page 5 of 58
                                                                  PARAS     Digitally signed
                                                                            by PARAS DALAL
                                                                            Date: 2026.01.22
                                                                  DALAL     15:16:55 +0530
 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024                        Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal
CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024

Upon appearance, Sections 207/208 of the CrPC were complied with, and a notice of accusation was served on the accused on 21.12.2024.

Complainant Evidence

6. Before proceeding to discuss the testimonies of complainant witnesses, it is relevant to note the exhibited documents and witnesses who exhibited the same (Table 4.1), which are given below -

     Witness    Identification Description
     exhibiting
     CW1         Ex.CW1/C1       Summon dated 30.10.2023
     Sh.         Ex.CW1/C2       Email from [email protected]                         to
     Jogender                    [email protected] dated 30.10.2023
                 Ex.CW1/C3       Email from [email protected] to adhiu232-
                                 [email protected] dated 02.11.2023
                 Ex.CW1/C4       Response of accused dated 02.11.2023
                 Ex.CW1/C5       Summon dated 18.12.2023
                 Ex.CW1/C6       Email from [email protected]                         to
                                 [email protected] dated 18.12.2023
                 Ex.CW1/C7       Email from [email protected] to adhiu232-
                                 [email protected] dated 21.12.2023
                 Ex.CW1/C8       Response of accused dated 20.12.2023
                 Ex.CW1/C9       Summon dated 22.12.2023
                 Ex.CW1/C10      Email from [email protected]                         to
                                 [email protected] dated 22.12.2023
                 Ex.CW1/C11      Certificate u/S. 65B of Indian Evidence Act
                                 in support of communications/ summons
                                 and emails

                                    Page 6 of 58
                                                                PARAS Digitally signed
                                                                      by PARAS DALAL
                                                                      Date: 2026.01.22
                                                                DALAL 15:17:09 +0530
 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024                          Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal
CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024


     CW2          Ex.CW2/C1        Email from [email protected] to adhiu232-
     Sh.                           [email protected] dated 03.01.2024
     Sandeep      Ex.CW2/C2        Letter dated 22.12.2023 by the accused
     Kumar
                  Ex.CW2/C3        Present Complaint
     Sharma
                  Ex.CW2/C4        Certificate u/S. 65B of Indian Evidence Act
                                   in support of email dated 12.01.2024
                                     (Table 4.1)

7. To prove its case, ED has examined two witnesses (hereinafter, 'CW'). To set the record straight, it is necessary to state that the complainant agency was investigating an ECIR No. ECIR/HIU-II/14/2022, and the investigation was led by CW1 Sh. Jogender. He had issued three summons (as already exhibited above), and he received two responses to the first two summons. While he issued the third summons, the investigation was then led by CW2 Sh. Sandeep Kumar Sharma was accordingly in receipt of the third response of the accused, as is exhibited above in Table 4.1. CW1 was examined in chief on 10.01.2025, and CW2 was examined in chief on 21.01.2025 as well as 21.02.2025. The cross-examination of both witnesses was deferred since CW2 was also a complainant in the connected case, Ct. Case 04/2024, and his cross-examination in that case was recorded first. Cross-examination of CW1 was also deferred after CW2, as some lines of questioning were similar across all cases. This was agreed to by both the complainant and the accused, and the same was allowed by this Court to avoid confusion in recording the evidence of Page 7 of 58 PARAS Digitally signed by PARAS DALAL Date: 2026.01.22 DALAL 15:17:21 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 similarly placed witnesses. Once the cross-examination of CW2 in the connected case, Ct. Case 04/2024 was concluded, CW2 was cross- examined in the present case on 29.07.2025. CW1 was cross-examined on 01.08.2025 and 02.08.2025. To put it simply, Table 7.1 below shows the dates of examination-in-chief and cross-examination for both complainant witnesses -

Witness Examination in-chief Cross-examination examined CW1 10.01.2025 01.08.2025 Sh. (total 4 pages) (pre-lunch total 11 pages and post Jogender lunch (additional 10 pages) 02.08.2025 (total 10 pages) CW2 21.01.2025 29.07.2025 Sh. (total 2 pages) (total 28 pages) Sandeep 21.02.2025 Kumar (total 2 pages) Sharma (Table 7.1)

8. For the sake of brevity, the undersigned is not discussing the evidence as deposed in the examination in chief and cross-examination by both CW1 and CW2, which in itself would be a total of 67 pages. However, to concisely state CW1, Sh. Jogender outlined the process of issuing a summons and detailed the alleged intentional disobedience by the accused. He testified about the specific actions and responses taken by the accused that were deemed non-compliant with the summons. CW2, Sh. Page 8 of 58 Digitally signed

PARAS byDALAL PARAS DALAL 15:17:29 +0530 Date: 2026.01.22 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 Sandeep Kumar Sharma provided additional testimony to support the continued investigation following the initial issuance of a summons, highlighting procedural adherence and noting the accused's responses, which supplemented the documentary evidence in the case. Statement of Accused under Section 313 of the CrPC

9. The statement of the accused under Section 313 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, was recorded on 12.09.2025, wherein the accused denied all the allegations and defended that there was no wilful disobedience on his part, and all the summons by way of e-mail, which were otherwise invalid, are not in conformity with the provisions and rules of PMLA. The accused also contended that the summons was not in accordance with Rule 11, Form 'V', and that the complainant had taken action u/S. 63 (4) PMLA instead of Section 63(2)(c) PMLA, without there being any justifiable material to launch present prosecution. The accused also defended that at all times he had given valid and justifiable reasons to the officer concerned, and that the purported summons was intended to humiliate him politically, only to insist on his personal appearance at the ED office. The accused further alleged that the summons was leaked to the media before it was emailed to him, and that hostile political parties sought to draw political mileage from it.

Digitally signed

Page 9 of 58 PARAS byDALAL PARAS

DALAL 15:17:37 +0530 Date: 2026.01.22 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 Defence Evidence

10. The accused side summoned the original record from the court file. Case file bearing no. 31/2022 is currently pending before the Ld. Special Judge (PC Act) (CBI-23), RADC, New Delhi, wherein the main ECIR is pending consideration. Since the witness was only summoned to produce the case record, it is relevant to note the exhibited documents by DW1, which are given below (Table 10.1) -

   Witness    Identification        Description
   exhibiting
   DW1         Ex.DW1/D1(OSR) Order dated 20.12.2022 passed by Ld.
   Rakesh                     Special Judge (PC Act) (CBI-09)
   Singh,                     (MPs/MLAs), RADC, New Delhi

Assistant Ex.DW1/D2(OSR) Main prosecution complaint dated Ahlmad in 26.11.2022 in ECIR/HIU-II/12/2022 Court of filed by the ED Ld. Special Ex.DW1/D3(OSR) First prosecution complaint dated Judge (PC 06.01.2023 in ECIR/HIU-II/12/2022 Act) (CBI-

filed by the ED

23), RADC, Ex.DW1/D4(OSR) Second prosecution complaint dated New Delhi 06.04.2023 in ECIR/HIU-II/12/2022 filed by the ED Ex.DW1/D5(OSR) Third prosecution complaint dated 27.04.2023 in ECIR/HIU-II/12/2022 filed by the ED Ex.DW1/D6(OSR) Fourth prosecution complaint dated 04.05.2023 in ECIR/HIU-II/12/2022 Page 10 of 58 PARAS Digitally signed by PARAS DALAL Date: 2026.01.22 DALAL 15:17:46 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 filed by the ED Ex.DW1/D7(OSR) Fifth prosecution complaint dated 02.12.2023 in ECIR/HIU-II/12/2022 filed by the ED Ex.DW1/D8(OSR) Sixth prosecution complaint dated 10.05.2024 in ECIR/HIU-II/12/2022 filed by the ED Ex.DW1/D9(OSR) Seventh prosecution complaint dated 18.05.2024 in ECIR/HIU-II/12/2022 filed by the ED Ex.DW1/X1(OSR) Order dated 02.02.2023 passed in relation of the first supplementary prosecution complaint Ex.DW1/X2(OSR) Order dated 01.05.2023 passed in relation of the second and third supplementary prosecution complaint Ex.DW1/X3(OSR) Order dated 30.05.2023 passed in relation of the fourth supplementary prosecution complaint Ex.DW1/X4(OSR) Order dated 19.12.2023 passed in relation of the fifth supplementary prosecution complaint Ex.DW1/X5(OSR) Order dated 29.05.2024 passed in relation of the sixth supplementary prosecution complaint Ex.DW1/X6(OSR) Order dated 22.03.2024 passed in relation to granting ED custody of Sh.

Arvind Kejriwal Ex.DW1/X7(OSR) Order dated 28.03.2024 passed in relation to extending ED custody of Sh.

Arvind Kejriwal Ex.DW1/X8(OSR) Order dated 01.04.2024 passed in Page 11 of 58 PARAS Digitally signed by PARAS DALAL Date: 2026.01.22 DALAL 15:18:15 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 relation to granting judicial custody of Sh. Arvind Kejriwal Ex.DW1/X9(OSR) Order dated 09.07.2024 passed in relation to seventh and eighth supplementary prosecution complaint (Table 10.1) Final Arguments Complainant's Submissions

11. The complainant's side was represented by Mr Suryaprakash V. Raju, Assistant Solicitor General, and Mr Zohen Hussain, Special Counsel for ED, with Mr N.K. Matta, SPP, Mr Simon Benjamin, SPP and Mr Manish Jain, SPP, advocates. The complainant side firstly referred to provisions of Section 63(4) PMLA and Section 63(2)(c) PMLA. The provisions shall be discussed later, however the context of the argument was that PMLA provisions provides for imposition of penalty for simple non-compliance by noticee under Section 63(2)(c), however if it is found that noticee has intentionally disobeyed, prosecution can be launched under Section 174 IPC, notwithstanding the penalty already ordered under Section 63(2)(c) of the PMLA.

12. The next arguments was establishing ingredients of Section 174 of the IPC, which broadly, are four - (a) whoever legally bound to attend at a certain place and time (b) in obedience to a summons, notice, order, or Page 12 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS byDALAL PARAS DALAL 15:18:26 +0530 Date: 2026.01.22 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 proclamation proceeding from (c) any public servant legally competent, as such public servant, to issue the same, (d) intentionally omits to attend at that place or time, or departs from the place where he is bound to attend before the time at which it is lawful for him to depart. The argument is that each ingredient has been established by the complainant in the present case, and the facts and circumstances demand a conviction of the accused.

13. To prove each ingredient, specific arguments were addressed. Qua ingredient (c), i.e. any public servant legally competent, reference was made to Section 50(2) of PMLA, which empowers the Assistant Director to summon any person whose attendance he considers necessary, whether to give evidence or to produce any records, during the course of any investigation or proceeding under this Act. Qua ingredient (a), i.e. whoever is legally bound to attend at a certain place and time, reference was made to Section 50(3) of PMLA, which mandates that all persons so summoned shall be bound to attend in person or through authorised agents, as such officer may direct. Qua ingredient (b), i.e. obedience to summons, reference was drawn to exhibits Ex.CW1/C1, Ex.CW1/C5 and Ex.CW1/C9, which were duly issued to the accused by CW1. Finally, qua ingredient (d), i.e. intentionally omits to attend, reference was made to exhibits Ex.CW1/C4, Ex.CW1/C8 and Ex.CW2/C2 to show that the Page 13 of 58 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 accused himself acknowledged receiving the summons, and yet intentionally omitted to comply by making invalid, lame and frivolous excuses.

14. The complainant has also filed written submissions and has substantiated their arguments with case law. It is argued that in Vijay Madanlal Choudhary v. Union of India, 2022 SCC OnLine SC 929, as well as Directorate of Enforcement v. State of Tamil Nadu, SLP (Crl.) No. 1959-1963/2024, the Hon'ble Supreme Court held that a person summoned under Section 50 PMLA is bound to appear. The same was also reiterated in Virbhadra Singh v. Directorate of Enforcement, 2017 SCC OnLine Del 8930, and Amanatullah Khan v. Enforcement Directorate, 2024 SCC OnLine Del 1658. It is then argued that a person who disobeying any summons issued under Section 50 PMLA is liable to be proceeded against under Section 174 of the IPC, and this has been so held in Abhishek Banerjee v. Enforcement Directorate, (2024) 9 SCC 2222.

15. It is also argued that the mode of service becomes irrelevant when the accused had notice of the summons issued to him, and it was so held in Kross Television India (P) Ltd. v. Vikhyat Chitra Production, 2017 Page 14 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:19:06 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 SCC OnLine Bom 1433. To support the argument that the complainant is a 'concerned public servant' as required in Section 195 of the CrPC, reliance has been placed on the judgment of Binapani Ghosh v. State & Anr.; State of U.P. v. Mata Bhikh (1994) 4 SCC 95; T. Daulat Ram v. State of Punjab, 1962 SCC OnLine SC 342; and P.D. Lakhani v. State of Punjab, (2008) 5 SCC 150. The complainant relied on the judgment of Mr Talib Hassan Darvesh v. The Directorate of Enforcement, W.P. (Crl) 780/2024, to support its argument that the summons issued in the present case complied with the law. It is also rebutted that the accused's reliance on Mewa Ram Jain v. State of Rajasthan (2023) SCC OnLine Raj 5247 was incorrect, since, under challenge before the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India, strong observations were made qua the reasoning in the Order of the Hon'ble High Court of Rajasthan.

16. Finally, to argue that the accused intentionally omitted to appear pursuant to the summons, reliance is placed on the judgment of Vijay Mallya v. Enforcement Directorate, (2015) 8 SCC 799; and Bhambhi Noghanji & Ors. v. The State of Kerala, 1954 SCC OnLine Katch 13, to argue that mere sending replies to the summons is not compliance and same cannot be permitted under law.

                                                                PARAS      Digitally signed
                                                                           by PARAS DALAL

                                  Page 15 of 58                 DALAL      Date: 2026.01.22
                                                                           15:19:19 +0530
 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024                       Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal
CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024

Defence's Submission

17. The defence has been argued by Ms Rebecca John, Sr. Advocate, with Mr Mudit Jain and Mr Mohammad Irshad, advocates. The defence has raised five points to contest the prosecution's case. Firstly, it is argued that CW1 issued the summons and was still in the ED, even though CW2 took up the investigation and accordingly, under Section 195 CrPC, CW1 was the competent public authority to file the present case. A legal bar to CW2 filing the present case has been raised, and cross-examination of CW2 has been read to point out that, at material points, CW2 answered that only CW1 was in a position to answer the defence's questions. The Second point of contest is the mode of service through email, which has been held to be illegal and improper. Thirdly, a legal challenge is raised to the admissibility of complainant's electronic evidence, which is not proved in accordance with Section 65B of the Evidence Act. Fourthly, the defence has been that the accused's responses show no intention to omit, and even during cross-examination, CW1 admitted that all subsequent summons were issued after the grounds taken by the accused in response had lapsed. It is thus the argument of the defence that when the reply of the accused was admittedly received by CW1 and a fresh summons was issued for a date after expiry of the reason of the accused, there was deemed admission of the grounds of the accused by the complainant. There was no Page 16 of 58 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 communication of rejection of the grounds of the accused, nor was there a summons before the expiry of the grounds of the accused, which meant that the reasons were admitted as genuine by the complainant. Lastly, the defence argued that CW1 was not competent to issue a summons to the accused, since there was no Order of the Ld. Special Judge to continue further investigation. It is pointed out from the defence evidence that each time the complainant filed a main prosecution complaint as well as supplementary prosecution complaints, and sought leave to continue further investigation, no Order of the Ld. Special Court granted such leave. Since there was no leave, the defence has argued that the complainant/CW1 was not legally competent to issue the summons, which is an essential requirement under Section 174 of the IPC.

18. To support the above arguments, the defence has filed on record a compilation of judgments in support of each argument. To invalidate the service of summons in the present case, reliance has been placed on the judgment of Satyender Kumar Antil v. Central Bureau of Investigation and Another, Misc. Application No. 2034/2023, dated 21.01.2025; Satyender Kumar Antil v. Central Bureau of Investigation and Another, 2025 SCC OnLine SC 1578, dated 16.07.2025; Rakesh Kumar v. Vijayanta Arya (DCP) and Others, 2021 SCC OnLine Del Page 17 of 58 PARAS Digitally signed by PARAS DALAL Date: 2026.01.22 DALAL 15:32:18 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 5629; and Opto Circuits (India) Ltd. v. Axis Bank (2021) 6 SCC 707. To prove non-compliance of Section 195 CrPC, the defence relied on the judgment of Daulat Ram v. State of Punjab, 1962 Supp (2) SCR 812; P.D. Lakhani v. State of Punjab, (2008) 5 SCC 150; and Bandekar Bros. (P) Ltd. v. Prasad Vassudev Keni, (2020) 20 SCC 1. To show non- compliance of Section 65B Evidence Act, the celebrated case of Anwar P.V. v. P.K. Basheer, (2014) 10 SCC 473 has been relied upon. Next to show that summons could not be issued as no leave of Court was sought for further investigation, two judgments of the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India are relied upon, namely Vijay Tyagi v. Irshad Ali, (2013) 5 SCC 762; and Robert Lalchungnunga Chongthu v. State of Bihar, 2025 SCC OnLine SC 2511. Finally, two more judgments are relied on by the defence to support their argument that a summons could not be issued as no additional material was placed on record in supplementary prosecution complaints, which are Mariam Fasihuddin v. State, 2024 SCC OnLine SC 58; and K. Vadivel v. K. Shanthi, 2024 SCC OnLine SC 2643. Appraisal of Evidence

19. The provision under which the complainant has sought conviction of the accused is Section 174 IPC, and the ingredients of the same are already stated in paragraph 12 above. It is necessary to state two admitted facts by Page 18 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS byDALAL PARAS DALAL Date: 2026.01.22 15:32:36 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 each side - one, that the Assistant Director of ED has power under Section 50(2) PMLA to summon any person; and second, the Officer of the rank of Assistant Director is a 'public servant' under Section 40 of PMLA.

20. Apart from the above facts, the defence severely contests the remaining facts, including the legal competence of CW1 and CW2. It is also necessary to state that the complainant's side relies on three summons, Ex.CW1/C1, Ex.CW1/C5 and Ex.CW1/9, which is stated to be issued by CW1 Sh. Jogender, Assistant Director, ED, to the accused for appearance on the date, time and place mentioned therein. The said summons was served upon the accused via email, as Ex. CW1/C2, CW1/C6 and Ex.CW1/C10. The complainant side then alleges that the accused failed to comply with these summons and he intentionally omitted appearance qua all three summons; hence, he is liable for the punishment for each of the defaults.

21. On the contrary, the accused has raised technical, procedural, and legal defences. The defence objects to the filing of the complaint by CW2, when all three summons were issued by CW1; as such, a legal issue under Section 195 CrPC arises, which bars this Court from taking cognizance, let alone sustaining a conviction. Secondly, it is stated that at no point did the Page 19 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS byDALAL PARAS DALAL 15:32:53 +0530 Date: 2026.01.22 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 Ld. Special Judge had ordered further investigation in the main ECIR case, and, as such, the legal competence of CW1 and CW2 is challenged. The challenge is to the further investigation undertaken by CW1 and CW2 without any leave/ Order of the Court, despite a prayer being made and not pressed before the Ld. Special Court in the main prosecution complaint, as well as each supplementary prosecution complaint. Another legal objection is qua proof of documents, i.e., the Certificate in compliance with Section 65B of the Evidence Act, by both CW1 and CW2 vide Ex.CW1/C11 and Ex.CW2/C4, respectively, is completely non-compliant with the provision and bars any reading of secondary evidence. The remaining two arguments were on merits - one, non-service of summons as provided under CrPC, which is pari-materia to PMLA when it pertains to service of summons, etc., by ED officers; and two, there is no proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused's absence was intentional. It is argued that CW1 himself, in his evidence, accepted that the grounds taken by the accused in his response to the summons were accepted, and then another summons was issued after the lapse of the ground mentioned in the earlier response. It is also argued that at no time were the accused informed by CW1 or CW2 that their responses and reasons for non-appearance were rejected. All these objections require detailed analysis, which is as follows. Page 20 of 58 PARAS by Digitally signed PARAS

DALAL DALAL 15:33:08 +0530 Date: 2026.01.22 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 Legal Bar under Section 195 CrPC

22. This issue requires very little consideration at this stage, since it pertains to the bar on taking cognizance. This issue was also raised in revision against the cognizance order of this Court, and the same was unsuccessful. The issue is pending before the Hon'ble High Court of Delhi.

23. Be that as it may, the defence has argued that the complainant tried to mislead the Court into believing that both CW1 and CW2 were co- investigating officers of ECIR No. ECIR/HIU-II/14/2022 and as such, even if CW1 issued all three summons, which are subject matter of the present case, CW2 can file the present complaint, being a public servant concerned. The accused side, however, argues to the contrary that CW2, in his cross-examination and specifically in answer to questions 2, 3, 6, 42, 43, 45, 47, etc., admits that CW1 was his predecessor in investigating the main ECIR case and all cause of action, even if any, has arisen before CW1 only. It is argued that CW1 was still serving in the ED, and there is no explanation why he could not file the present complaint.

24. The relevant extract of Section 195 CrPC provides that "no Court shall take cognizance of any offence punishable under sections 172 to 188 (both inclusive) of the Indian Penal Code except on the complaint in writing of Page 21 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS byDALAL PARAS DALAL Date: 2026.01.22 15:33:24 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 the public servant concerned or of some other public servant to whom he is administratively subordinate". It is the submission of defence that since the public servant concerned in the present case is CW1, who issued the summons Ex.CW1/C1, Ex.CW1/C5 and Ex.CW1/C9, he is now the 'public servant concerned', and either he or his administrative superior could have filed the present complaint. Since the complaint has been filed by CW2, who is the Successor-in-office of CW1 as Assistant Director, to investigate ECIR No. ECIR/HIU-II/14/2022, he is neither a 'public servant concerned' nor an 'administrative superior' to CW1, who could file the present complaint.

25. Before returning to the facts of the present case, it is necessary to understand that a public office is not attached to any particular public servant. A public servant serves at any given public office, retires or transfers, and the public office continues to be served by some other public servant. 'Public Servant concerned' shall thus always continue to be the office/seat. No public servant who has once served at any office carries the chair/ seat with him into retirement or on his/her incumbent transfer. If the opposite were true, then all public servants would have to carry the weight of all the files they have dealt with in their entire public service. The Digitally signed Page 22 of 58 PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL Date:

2026.01.22 15:34:39 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 authority is vested in the office and not in the public servant who is only to serve that authority.

26. Such understanding gets clearer from the Chapter X heading of IPC, which punishes for offence "of contempts of the lawful authority of a public servant". Here, a direct reference is to the 'lawful authority', and there is no personal wrong involved. A public servant, by occupying an office/ position, serves the duties attached to the office and while discharging such duties/ functions, is under legal authority to direct others to follow the 'legal command'. Any contempt towards such 'legal command' is contempt of the 'Lawful authority' of the said office/ position and may require criminal proceedings for such contempt. The office thus has the authority to punish itself or to set criminal law in motion.

27. A direct reference can be drawn to Section 63(2)(c) PMLA and Section 63(4) PMLA. When Section 50(2) empowers the Assistant Director to summon any person, and such person fails to appear, Section 63(2)(c) PMLA empowers the Assistant Director to impose a penalty upon such person. Section 63(4) additionally provides that when such non- appearance is intentional disobedience, the omission is punishable under Page 23 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:35:08 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 Section 174 IPC, notwithstanding the penalty imposed by the Assistant Director under Section 63(2)(c) PMLA.

28. Coming to the facts of the present case, Authority is vested in the Assistant Director, HIU-2(3)(2), and it is immaterial as to which public servant sits in the office. The contempt, by non-appearance of any person, is of the lawful authority of AD, HIU-2(3)(2). As a natural corollary, once the lawful authority of AD, HIU-2(3)(2) has been contemned, any public servant acting on such a post may initiate criminal proceedings as envisaged under law.

29. On the facts and circumstances of this case, ED was investigating ECIR/HIU-II/14/2022, and the investigation was led by the office/ rank held by Assistant Director, HIU-2(3)(2). Any summons issued qua the investigation would be by the Authority of the Assistant Director, HIU- 2(3)(2). This ensures 'Legal Authority' in the office of the Assistant Director to summon 'any person'. The responsibilities may be discharged by any named public servant, for legal purposes, the duties and powers under any law are vested with the Assistant Director, HIU-2(3)(2). The deposition of CW1 and CW2 shows that CW1 Sh. Jogender was holding this office from 04.01.2022, and CW2 Sh. Sandeep Kumar Sharma held Page 24 of 58 PARAS Digitally signed by PARAS DALAL Date: 2026.01.22 DALAL 16:48:55 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 this office from 19.12.2023. If any action is taken by AD, HIU-2(3)(2), it may be done in the name of the officer holding such a post; however, the action is always of AD, HIU-2(3)(2). The present case was filed on 03.02.2024, wherein CW1 was no longer in the office of Assistant Director, HIU-2(3)(2) and as such, CW2 filed the present complaint, which is maintainable. Such a Successor-in-office can file a complaint and the same shall be in conformity with Section 195 of the CrPC.

30. The defence has cited judgment of Daulat Ram Case (supra), P.D. Lakhani Case (supra) and Bandekar Bros. Case (Supra), which are clearly distinguishable from the facts of the present case. In all three cases, the authority contemned was of different offices, i.e., Tehsildar or Superintendent of Police, but the complaint was filed by the area SHO without any written complaint from the contemned office. As such, the cognizance was held to be bad. In the present case, however, the authority contemned, and the authority which filed the complaint is the same, i.e. Assistant Director, HIU-2(3)(2). The complainant side has already relied on the judgments of Manicklal Bhagat v. The State and Anr., 1982 SCC OnLine Cal 19, and Smt. Binapani Ghosh v. State and Anr. 1983 SCC OnLine Cal 123 to bring home their case, that 'public servant concerned' u/S. 195 CrPC would include a successor in interest. Page 25 of 58 Digitally signed

PARAS byDALAL PARAS DALAL 15:36:25 +0530 Date: 2026.01.22 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024

31. To sum up, the defence may continue to pursue its petition before the Hon'ble High Court of Delhi, challenging the cognizance order; however, vide the above reasoning, this Court finds that this objection of the defence against the cognizance of the present complaint is not maintainable at this stage, as well as on merits.

CW1 is not competent to issue a summons for further investigation carried out without obtaining written permission/ Order of the Ld. Special Judge

32. The defence has strongly emphasised this point to argue that CW1, if he were a public servant, lacked the legal competence to issue any summons to the accused. Defence evidence was also led wherein the main prosecution complaint, as well as seven supplementary prosecution complaints, were filed along with an order on the main prosecution complaint, i.e. Ex.DW1/D1 to Ex.DW1/D9 to show that in each of the complaints, there was a specific prayer by the ED to direct further investigation. The ED even cross-examined the said witness to put the Orders in the same file from the Ld. Special Judge, to show that each of the prosecution complaints was considered and that cognizance was taken of the offences disclosed in those prosecution complaints. It is argued by the ED that there is no requirement under the PMLA to continue further Page 26 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS byDALAL PARAS DALAL Date: 2026.01.22 15:36:45 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 investigation qua new facts or accused and merely presenting the said information qua continuing further investigation before the Ld. Special Judge is sufficient without any formal Order or direction. Moreover, it is argued that the subsequent Order on cognizance gives legal impetus to each of the further investigations and thus any requirement of such a formal order or direction is retrospectively granted. All such Orders as well as Orders on custody application and bail are Ex.DW1/X1 to Ex.DW1/X9.

33. This Court finds itself in a peculiar situation. A prosecution under Section 174 IPC, when filed by the investigating officer, qua a witness or accused who wilfully disobeyed his summons to appear at a particular time or place, would generally be part of the main chargesheet or supplementary chargesheet. The Court would thus decide the culpability of the main case as well as the offence of Section 174 IPC. In the present case, the main complaint is before the Ld. Special Judge trying the offence under PMLA, however, since Section 174 of the IPC is not a scheduled offence under the PMLA, the prosecution qua offence under Section 174 of the IPC cannot be undertaken before Ld. Special Judge. This Court is now duty-bound to honour the judicial discipline and not make any finding which touches upon the issue before the Ld. Special Judge. This Court, even when it has Page 27 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:36:59 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 been presented in the defence evidence with the prosecution's complaints and Order qua cognizance, has to limit its findings to the facts of the present case.
34. Ex.DW1/D1 (OSR) itself shows that the Ld. Special Judge recorded that further investigation was pending qua the other facts and the suspect/accused persons. The Ld. Special Judge took cognizance of the main ECIR prosecution complaint against six named accused persons while recording that further investigation is underway. Similarly, vide Ex.DW1/X1, Ex.DW1/X2, Ex.DW1/X3, Ex.DW1/X4, Ex.DW1/X5 and Ex.DW1/X9 the Ld. Special Court further summoned other accused persons based on the first supplementary to the eighth supplementary prosecution complaints. In none of the said Orders, the Ld. Special Judge rejected the complaints as being without the lawful authority of the ED to conduct further investigation after the filing of the main prosecution complaint.
35. It is also necessary to state the leave which was sought by the ED before the Ld. Special Judge. In Ex.DW1/D1 to Ex.DW1/D9, the last paragraph before the prayer read that "...the investigation in respect of accused ......., is complete and the complainant craves the leave of this Hon'ble Court for Page 28 of 58 PARAS Digitally signed by PARAS DALAL Date: 2026.01.22 DALAL 15:37:10 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 filing further supplementary complaint(s) as investigation with regard to other persons/ entities involved in this case, including tracing the balance proceeds of crime". Clearly, the submission is to submit to the jurisdiction of the Court and never to ask for a specific Order directing that further investigation be carried out. Given the volume of the main case, it is impossible to file the entire complaint in a single filing. Section 65 of the PMLA allows the filing of supplementary complaints after the main complaint, and all are deemed to be the complaint itself, even if a new accused is added, or new evidence, facts, or material against the same accused is filed.
36. This Court would respectfully hold that the Ld. Special Court is an appropriate forum to decide whether the ED may undertake further investigation, where the main prosecution complaints and subsequent supplementary complaints contain a prayer for further investigation. Also, when Ld. Special Judge has already taken cognizance of the main prosecution complaint, and all supplementary prosecution complaints, and the trial is underway; this Court has to hold that the ED in the present case has followed the provisions of law in their letter and spirit, as envisaged under PMLA.
Digitally signed

PARAS by PARAS DALAL Date:

DALAL 2026.01.22 15:37:20 +0530 Page 29 of 58 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024
37. The cases relied on by the defence have been considered by this Court, and all pertain to the CrPC, particularly to the interpretation of Section 173(8) CrPC. None of the cases relied on has addressed the validity of further investigation conducted by the ED under PMLA. Section 65 of the PMLA again needs to be considered, which overrides provisions of the CrPC when they are inconsistent with the PMLA. A quick reference to Explanation (ii) to Section 44 of the PMLA would show that "the complaint shall be deemed to include any subsequent complaint in respect of further investigation that may be conducted to bring any further evidence, oral or documentary, against any accused person involved in respect of the offence, for which complaint has already been filed, whether named in the original complaint or not".
38. The explanation (ii) above would show that all subsequent complaints are deemed to be the main complaint, even when they pertain to the same accused named in earlier complaints or a new one. In light of Section 44 of the PMLA, the defence cannot be allowed to rely on Section 173(8) of the CrPC, in view of the overriding effect of PMLA provisions over CrPC, as stated in Section 65 of the PMLA.
Digitally signed Page 30 of 58 PARAS by PARAS

DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:37:31 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024
39. It is, thus, safe to hold that CW1 and CW2 were competent public servants to summon the accused under Section 50(2) of the PMLA, even under the garb of further investigation by the investigating officer, when no specific direction or order has been passed by the Ld. Special Judge.
3. Electronic evidence certification under Section 65B of the Indian Evidence Act is not valid
40. The defence in the present case is fairly simple, that Ex.CW1/C11 and Ex.CW2/C4 are not in conformity with the requirements of Section 65A and 65B Evidence Act, 1872 (hereinafter referred to as 'IEA'). As such, the defence argues that Ex.CW1/C2, Ex.CW1/C6 and Ex.CW1/C10 cannot be read in evidence. The submission is based on the judgment of P.V. Anwar Case (Supra). The complainant side has argued that the accused side has been selective in its objections, that three emails and the accused's responses, Ex.CW1/C3, Ex.CW1/C4, Ex.CW1/C7, Ex.CW1/C8, Ex.CW2/C1 and Ex.CW2/C2 were not objected to, although these exhibits were part of the same email process.
41. CW1 during deposition was confronted with form of issuance of summons and reference was drawn to Rule 11 Form 'V' i.e. 'Form of Summons' provided under the Prevention of Money-laundering (Forms, Search and Page 31 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS byDALAL PARAS DALAL 15:37:49 +0530 Date: 2026.01.22 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 Seizure 2[or Freezing] and the Manner of Forwarding the Reasons and Material to the Adjudicating Authority, Impounding and Custody of Records and the Period of Retention) Rules, 2005. CW1 explained in his cross-examination that ED has its own eDoTS portal, where AD HIU-2(3) (2) have separate logins, from which they can generate summons, etc., after filing the necessary details. The portal provides templates for the issuance of summons, which are incorporated from 'Form V' of the Rules 2005 above. CW1 further explained that once the template was filed and confirmed, the summons was printed. These were signed by him and are already Ex.CW1/C1, Ex.CW1/C5 and Ex.CW1/C9 on the record of the case. These summons were then emailed to the accused at [email protected]. The complainant's side argued that these summons/exhibits have not been objected to. However, the selective objection was only to the email sent via email [email protected] to [email protected]. It is also argued that the response from the accused at [email protected] to [email protected] has not been objected to, nor has the response attached to these emails.
42. Before proceeding to discuss the two certificates, Ex.CW1/C11 and Ex.CW2/C4, it is necessary to state the requirements under law which Digitally signed Page 32 of 58 PARAS by PARAS DALAL Date:
DALAL 2026.01.22 15:38:12 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 such a certificate must contain. The provisions of Sections 65A and 65B IEA are technical yet simple.
Section 65A IEA states "the contents of electronic records may be proved in accordance with the provisions of section 65B". Thus, Section 65A IEA puts an absolute bar on proof of contents of electronic records to be in accordance with Section 65B IEA, and no other mode of proof is prescribed to prove an electronic record.
Section 65B IEA in its entirety would not be relevant to the present case; however, Section 65B (1), Section 65B (2) and Section 65B (4) IEA are necessarily to be summed up, which are done as under -
Section 65B(1) IEA - any information contained in an electronic record which is printed on a paper, stored, recorded or copied in optical or magnetic media produced by a computer (hereinafter referred to as the computer output) are deemed to be also a document when four conditions of Section 65B (2) IEA are met.
Section 65B(2) IEA - the four conditions are -
(a) the computer output containing the information was produced by the computer during the period over which the computer was used regularly to store or process information for the purposes of any activities regularly carried on over that period by the person having lawful control over the use of the computer;
Page 33 of 58 Digitally signed

PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:38:23 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024
(b) during the said period, information of the kind contained in the electronic record or of the kind from which the information so contained is derived was regularly fed into the computer in the ordinary course of the said activities;
(c) throughout the material part of the said period, the computer was operating properly or, if not, then in respect of any period in which it was not operating properly or was out of operation during that part of the period, was not such as to affect the electronic record or the accuracy of its contents; and
(d) the information contained in the electronic record reproduces or is derived from such information fed into the computer in the ordinary course of the said activities.

Section 65B(4) IEA - provides a person occupying a responsible official position in relation to the operation of the relevant device or the management of the relevant activities (whichever is appropriate), desiring to give a statement in evidence by virtue of this section, shall give a certificate doing any of the following things, that is to say, --

(a) identifying the electronic record containing the statement and describing the manner in which it was produced;

(b) giving such particulars of any device involved in the production of that electronic record as may be appropriate for the purpose of showing that the electronic record was produced by a computer;

(c) dealing with any of the matters to which the conditions mentioned in sub-section (2) relate.

Page 34 of 58 Digitally signed

PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:38:33 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024
43. Compliance of Section 65B IEA has been held to be a condition precedent for the admissibility of electronic records, which are nothing but secondary evidence, but it is also settled that objections as to the mode of proof must ordinarily be taken at the time such evidence is tendered; if not raised, they may be treated as waived. The Hon'ble Supreme Court of India in Arjun Panditrao Khotkar v. Kailash Kushanrao Gorantyal, (2020) 7 SCC 1, has already laid the law to rest.
44. Now, the accused is well within its rights to challenge each and every piece of the complainant's evidence, and a criminal trial requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt. The reason is fairly simple: the prosecution is under the burden to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt, and the accused, in his defence, may remain silent throughout the trial. The accused can choose not to object to certain documents to his advantage; however, he may object to other evidence when the rules of evidence are not met. A simple doubt would be sufficient to throw away a prosecution. The accused can raise as many objections to the complainant's case. In the present case, the specific objection of the defence was to the email from AD, HIU-2(3)(2), to the accused, which was exhibited as Ex.CW1/C2, Ex.CW1/C6 and Ex.CW1/10. All three exhibits were objected to by the accused on the Page 35 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:
15:38:59 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 grounds of the mode of proof. The date of such objection was 10.01.2025. Certificates under Section 65B of the IEA were filed by CW1 on 10.01.2025, and an objection was raised qua this certificate, as it was not in accordance with the law/IEA.
45. Ex.CW1/C11 needs perusal, and in one of its covenants it reads 'I am personally involved in the transaction and/or generation of aforesaid electronic record.' Other covenants in this purported certificate state that the web e-mail was under his control and secure from unauthorised access.

This covenant ensures that CW1 was a person occupying a responsible official position in relation to the operation of the relevant device as envisaged under Section 65B(4) Evidence Act. This Ex.CW1/C11 contains only a simple print command for the email purportedly sent by CW1; neither the original message nor the sender's or recipient's authentication has been established. To prove any email, the original message needs to be proved, which contains details such as message ID, creation date/ day/ time, as well as delivery time, sender and recipient details, along with the subject of the email and Sender Policy Framework (SPF), Domain-keys Identified Mail (DKIM) and Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting and Conformance (DMARC). Such details are relevant considering the critical details of the email they provide, which Page 36 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:39:08 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 can then be questioned and challenged by the opposite side. Such details are available at the click of a button in the email itself. Moreover, once the email has been downloaded and printed, Section 65B would require that details of all devices used be stated, as well as the operator's authentication of the data, to ensure there is no tampering with the digital record.
46. Clearly, both Ex.CW1/C11 exhibited by CW1 and Ex.CW2/C4 exhibited by CW2 are not in conformity with the provisions of Section 65B IEA and, as such, cannot be relied upon. In the absence of necessary certification, the secondary evidence, i.e. Ex.CW1/C2, Ex.CW1/C6 and Ex.CW1/C10 cannot be proved. The natural consequence is that each of the three emails sought to be proved by the complainant cannot be relied upon. These three exhibits have been rightly objected to as to the mode of proof by the defence, and they are nothing but secondary evidence in the absence of the required certification of the electronic record. The rule of Evidence excludes secondary evidence, unless the reasons for proving secondary evidence are satisfied.
47. The complainant side had the opportunity to either produce the original as mandated by the Rule of Evidence, or ED could be permitted to file a necessary certification till the stage of final argument. The certification, Page 37 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:
15:39:18 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 being a procedural and legal requirement, can also be undertaken at the final stage. The same was even held in the Arjun Panditrao Khotkar Case (Supra). No such effort was made by the complainant side, despite the defence's objections since the evidence stage.
48. To sum up, the complainant's side has failed to meet the requirements of the law of evidence and, as a consequence, cannot rely on Ex.CW1/C2, Ex.CW1/C6 and Ex.CW1/C10. These three exhibits were critical to the prosecution's case, as they could have shown service of summons on the accused and, in their absence, the very basic requirement of the prosecution's case is thus not met.
4. Service of summons is improper and illegal
49. The service of summons is now challenged by the defence on two grounds
- one, there is no primary evidence to prove the service of summons as Ex.CW1/C2, Ex.CW1/C6 and Ex.CW1/C10 are not proved in accordance with the rules of evidence, and the second challenge has also been taken to the method of service, i.e., email. The complainant states that three summonses were served upon the accused via email, which the accused acknowledged in his response and reply to the email. The defence, however, has challenged the complainant to show a provision or judicial Page 38 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:
15:39:32 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 precedent under which a summons can be served via email under the PMLA or the CrPC. The defence argues that CrPC is pari materia to PMLA, as mandated by Section 46 of the PMLA. Also, it is argued that there is no specific provision under the PMLA for the service of summons on any person, whether a suspect/accused or a witness. In both such provisions, the service has to be effected through the personal mode, or, if, after due diligence, such a person is not found, then 'extended service' may be resorted to, and finally 'substituted mode'. Such 'extended service' would be over an adult male member of the family, and 'substituted mode' shall be affixation of summons on a conspicuous part of the house where the recipient resides. Such a position of law is clear from Sections 62, 64 and 65 of the CrPC. The same provisions are retained in the new Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023, under Sections 64, 66 and 67. The only variance between the two laws is in Sections 64 CrPC and 66 BNSS, wherein the latter allows 'extended service' to any adult member of the family, while the former restricts service to the adult male member only.
50. The defence has also argued that the investigating officer is duty-bound to effect service of summons in accordance with the provisions of the CrPC, and that he cannot substitute his own procedure. Such a procedure is not Page 39 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS byDALAL PARAS DALAL 15:39:44 +0530 Date: 2026.01.22 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 even mandated for court-issued processes under Chapter VI Part A (Sections 61 to 69) of the CrPC, which the investigating officer in the present case has employed and sought a conviction of the accused. The defence has vehemently argued that CW1, during his cross-examination, admitted that he searched for the email online, yet he did not bother to find a residential address. It is argued that the accused was then serving as the Chief Minister of the Government of the National Capital Territory of Delhi (hereinafter referred to as 'GNTCD') and residing in the official residence allotted to him. Even the summons Ex.CW1/C1, Ex.CW1/C5 and Ex.CW1/C9 mentions the office address of the accused as 'Level 3, A Wing, Delhi Secretariat, New Delhi-110002', yet no effort was made by the investigating officer to serve the accused at his address. It is clear that the ED knew at least the accused's office address, yet only the email address was used to serve the summons under Section 50(2) of the PMLA.
51. The ED maintains that its investigation was fair and objective, and in compliance with Section 50(2) of the PMLA, it has the power to summon any person. ED argues that such summons under Section 50(2) of the PMLA need not specify whether it is to a suspect/accused or a witness.

Reliance was also placed on the judgment of Vijay Madanlal Case Page 40 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS byDALAL PARAS DALAL 15:39:55 +0530 Date: 2026.01.22 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 (Supra) as well as ED v. State of Tamil Nadu Case (Supra), Abhishek Banerjee Case (Supra) and Talib Hasan v. ED Case (Supra).

52. The Republic of India is governed by the Rule of Law, and no one is above it. Any individual, be it a commoner or a public representative, enjoys their Fundamental Right, of which one of the pivotal is the Fundamental Right to Movement. Article 19(1)(d) of the Constitution of India guarantees such a right to all citizens. The accused was a serving Chief Minister of the Government of the National Capital Territory of Delhi, and he too enjoyed his Fundamental Right of Movement. The action by the ED sought to challenge this Right available to the accused, and any such restriction thus ought to be in conformity with Article 19(5) of the Constitution of India. Necessarily, the provisions of PMLA and CrPC constitute reasonable restrictions envisaged by the legislature; however, such restrictions must be strictly in accordance with law. When the ED fails to comply with its established principles of law, no legal consequences shall follow. ED itself failed to comply with the procedures established under PMLA and CrPC and, hence, cannot now claim grave legal consequences against the accused.

Page 41 of 58 Digitally signed

PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:40:05 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024

53. In response to all the above legal challenges, the ED has presented only a factual argument: the accused admitted receipt of the summons and has filed his response, indicating he was duly served. However, this Court cannot lose sight of the provisions of the CrPC and the binding judgments of the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India, most recently in July 2025. In the celebrated judgment of Satyender Kumar Antil Case (Supra), the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India not only castigated the process of sending summons by an investigating officer through e-modes but even held the same to be illegal and unlawful.

54. It is relevant as such to point to the specific ruling by the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India in Satyender Kumar Antil Case (Supra) (Misc. Application No. 2034/2022) wherein all the States/ UTs were directed to issue additional Standing Order to policy machinery to issue notices under Section 41A, 160 or 175 of CrPC to accused persons or other, only through the mode of service as prescribed under the CrPC. The judgments of Satyender Kumar Antil Case (Supra) (2025 SCC OnLine SC 1578) , Rakesh Kumar Case (Supra) and OPTO Circuits Case (Supra) were also relied upon to bring home this argument. Digitally signed Page 42 of 58 PARAS by PARAS

DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:40:15 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024

55. One factual difference between the above cases and the present case is that all of them pertain to the issuance of directions to the police and investigating agencies of the State/UTs. None of the cases refers to the provisions under which ED can summon any person. It is also settled law that ED officers are not police officers. The complainant's side has rightly relied on the Abhishek Banerjee Case (Supra), and it is also argued that the PMLA provisions take precedence over the CrPC. In Abhishek Banerjee Case (Supra), however, the limited issue under challenge was whether, if summons were issued under Section 160 of the CrPC as a witness, the recipient could be examined in Kolkata, where he resides, rather than at the Delhi Office. In this context, the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India held that PMLA provisions shall take precedence over CrPC provisions as provided in Section 65 of the PMLA. If there is no inconsistency, then CrPC is to act pari materia with PMLA. In such a context, Section 50(2) of the PMLA empowers AD to summon any person, and there is no requirement to state whether the said person is summoned as a witness, suspect, or accused. The PMLA, however, is silent on the mode of service, and, as a natural corollary, the CrPC would serve as pari- materia to the PMLA. Section 50(2) of the PMLA summons to any person would cover Sections 41A, 160, and 175 of the CrPC. The modes of Digitally signed Page 43 of 58 PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:40:24 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 service shall thus also be taken from the CrPC and, as mandated by the latest judicial pronouncements, cannot be electronic modes.

56. As has already been established by various judicial pronouncements, personal liberty is sacrosanct to every individual, and in India, the Constitution guarantees it as a natural right to every human being. This liberty of a human being can be curtailed by the State only through the procedure prescribed by law. The ED officials, even if not police officers in strict terms, are yet part of the executive head of the State. Reference can also be drawn to paragraph one of the complaints, Ex.CW2/C3, wherein the complainant stated that '...it is an investigating agency under the Department of Revenue, Ministry of Finance, Government of India'. Clearly, the ED failed to issue an additional Standing Order in compliance with Satyender Kumar Antil Case (Supra) (Misc. Application No. 2034/2022). If, however, such Standing Orders have been issued, the same were not brought on record, deposed or known to either CW1 or CW2.

57. Thus, the ED has failed to prove service of summons through email upon the accused as Ex.CW1/C2, Ex.CW1/C6 and Ex.CW1/C10. The process of issuing a summons by email to the suspect/accused or witness to join the investigation is also not tenable in law. The ED may claim that the Page 44 of 58 PARAS Digitally signed by PARAS DALAL Date: 2026.01.22 DALAL 15:40:37 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 accused was summoned as a witness or only as a suspect; the fact remains that, in either case, the summons must be served in accordance with the provisions of the PMLA. PMLA provides that the mode of service shall be pari materia with the CrPC. CrPC thus mandates a physical mode of service of summons by an investigating officer, and after due diligence, if the accused is not found or avoids summons, the same shall be served through 'extended mode' or 'substituted mode'.

58. Investigation is not a desk job; it is the most fieldwork-intensive job of all.

An Investigating Officer cannot be allowed to sit in his office and perform his duties merely by serving summons via email. An investigation would require groundwork, field visits, and searches. The investigating officer himself, or through an appropriate subordinate, ought to serve process on a person/suspect/accused/witness, etc., and it's not mere service but tendering that is required. 'Service' as distinguished from 'tendering' would mean not just delivery of communication/ process, but introducing the sender, complying with other statutory requirements like that of inner case diary, etc., proof of receipt like acknowledgement, etc. It must be understood by the investigating officer that he is summoning a witness, suspect/ accused who otherwise is 'innocent until proven guilty'. The action of the investigating officer is a direct obstacle to the rights of a Page 45 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 15:40:47 +0530 Date: 2026.01.22 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 witness/ suspect/ accused. The investigating officer, when permitted by a procedure established by law to impose reasonable restrictions on the rights of any person, must strictly follow that procedure to uphold the sanctity of those rights.

59. This Court thus finds that the legal challenge to due service of summons is maintainable. Neither the service of summons through emails has been proved by the ED with respect to. Ex.CW1/C2, Ex.CW1/C6 and Ex.CW1/C10, nor the process of issuing summons to any person under Section 50(2) PMLA via email, has been proved to be in accordance with the law. Even if, for the sake of argument, these summons are admitted to be proved, the entire process is antithetical to the rule of law. No such mode of service is envisaged under the PMLA or CrPC. The onus was strict on the ED to prove that it could summon any person under Section 50(2) PMLA.

60. One faint argument made by the ED was that the accused was subsequently arrested in the present case, and at no point in time were the summons held to be bad in law. This Court respectfully records that at no point did the Hon'ble Higher Courts decide the merits of the present case qua summoning the witness/suspect/accused by the ED through email. Page 46 of 58 Digitally signed

PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:40:57 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 Even if the accused was subsequently arrested and not granted bail, the same occurs in different spheres of procedural and substantive law under the PMLA. It is the prerogative of the ED to issue a summons to any person, be it a witness, suspect, or accused, if grounds and reasons so exist. The ED may arrest any suspect or accused. Nevertheless, where the ED chooses to summon any person, the same ought to be done in accordance with the provisions of PMLA and CrPC, as long as they are not inconsistent with PMLA. Section 65 of the PMLA gives its provisions an overriding effect over the CrPC in cases of inconsistency. Qua mode of service of summons, there is no inconsistency; PMLA is silent. Under such a provision, the ED cannot devise its own procedure; if the PMLA is silent on the mode of service of summons, the same must be in accordance with the PMLA.

61. To that extent, the CrPC would serve as pari materia to the provisions of the PMLA, and the ED ought to personally serve summons on the person, whether a witness, suspect, or accused. In the event of avoiding service by such a person, the ED may resort to 'extended service', i.e. service on an adult male member of the person, where, after due diligence, the recipient is not found or is avoiding service. Next would be service through 'substituted mode' wherein affixation of the process over a conspicuous Page 47 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:41:10 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 part of the house of the recipient may be undertaken. By no stretch of procedural law can service by email alone be the first step in summoning any person, be it a witness, suspect, or accused.

62. In the written submissions, the complainant has further relied on the judgment of Kross Television India (P) Ltd. Case (Supra). The case, on the face of it, is not applicable in the present case. The case concerns the service of summons in Civil Proceedings, where the burden of proof is only on a balance of probabilities. Such an extent is insufficient to bring home a prosecution case, which requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Section 62 of the CrPC speaks of personal service. To effect personal service, a process server must satisfy himself that the right man has been found and then deliver or tender him one of the duplicates of the summons showing him the original, if asked. The Hon'ble Higher Courts have repeatedly cautioned about proper service, especially in cases where serious legal consequences can follow for non-appearance. 'Extended service' or 'substituted service' can only be resorted to when the person to be served cannot be found by the exercise of due diligence. There must be an attempt to find out the person, and the process server's report should show that an attempt was made. The standard of due diligence would be to show that there was a real endeavour to serve, and with that object, the Digitally signed Page 48 of 58 PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:41:27 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 process server must make a diligent search for the person. The process server must take pains to find him out, go again when he is likely to be at home, and make enquiries, and, if necessary, follow him. Such understanding has been reiterated in judgments of Tripura Modern Bank Ltd. v. Bansen & Co., AIR 1952 Cal 781; The State v. Bhimrao & Anr., AIR 1963 Mysore 239; Sunil Kumar Dutt v. The King, (1948) 51 Bom LR FC; Amrendra Verma v. State of Bihar, 2006 (2) Pat. LJR 638; and Parambot Thayunni Balakrishna Menon v. Govind Krishnan (Minor) and Another, AIR 1959 Mad 165.

5. Responses show no intentional omission on his part, and the reasons are even accepted by the ED

63. The last defence of the accused is the ED's failure to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused intentionally omitted to appear before the investigating officer. The defence has first called the attention of this Court to the cross-examination of CW1, in which he stated that, when the accused chose not to appear, he was intentionally avoiding the summons. The said understanding of the law of the investigating officer is fatal to the ED case. It is also argued that CW1, in his cross-examination, stated that he never verified any of the reasons the accused gave for his non- appearance, as he did not deem it necessary to do so. The defence also Page 49 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS byDALAL PARAS DALAL 15:41:42 +0530 Date: 2026.01.22 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 argues that the same witness, CW1, in his cross-examination voluntarily stated that he issued each subsequent summons after the earlier ground taken by the accused for non-appearance had expired. The defence thus argues that such statements themselves show the ED's lack of understanding of the law, as well as the investigating officer's acceptance that the reasons and grounds for the accused's non-appearance were acceded to by him.

64. The ED argued that, since the grounds provided by the accused in his response were based on his personal knowledge, the onus was on him to show just cause for his non-appearance. Recourse is taken to Section 106 IEA that 'a person having a specific knowledge of a fact has the burden to prove the same'. The submission being that since the reasons supplied by the accused for non-appearance were facts in his knowledge, he ought to prove the same. The defence, however, has countered that the prosecution has yet to pass the burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt required by the rule of evidence.

65. In the understanding of the Court, the defence is correct to rely upon the deposition of CW1. Even if the accused's email response, Ex.CW1/C4, Ex.CW1/C8 and Ex.CW2/C2 did not object to the mode of proof and are Page 50 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS byDALAL PARAS DALAL 15:41:52 +0530 Date: 2026.01.22 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 not considered in evidence; CW1 deposed that he received the accused's response. He also deposed that he found the reasons for the accused's non- appearance in the response. He also deposed that he was not required to enquire whether the reasons were true; he admits that the reasons stated in the response were true, particularly those pertaining to the incumbent elections of various State Assemblies and the Rajya Sabha. CW1 even deposed that since the accused defaulted, he was liable to be punished for intentional default. He admits that, under Section 174 of the IPC, his understanding is that non-appearance is equivalent to intentional default. Under such circumstances, he chose to file the present complaint.

66. It is settled law that mere non-appearance is not intentional disobedience.

The two are distinct, and when CW1 admits he issued a subsequent summons to the accused after the reason/ground stated by the accused in his response had lapsed, it shows that he did not verify the ground and merely waited for it to lapse. The ED has not taken steps to determine whether the reasons were genuine, to communicate to the accused that his reasons were false and bogus, and to inform the accused that his reasons were rejected and that he was thus in disobedience of the summons. The communication by the investigating officer to the accused about the Page 51 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS byDALAL PARAS DALAL 15:41:59 +0530 Date: 2026.01.22 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 rejection of the non-appearance reason was necessary for the law to act against the accused.

67. In a similar context, reference is drawn to Standing Order No. 109 of 2020 issued by the Worthy Commissioner of Police, qua 'Procedure for issuance of notices or orders by police officers'. The Standing Order taking note of judgment of the Hon'ble High Court of Delhi in Amandeep Singh Johar v. Govt. of NCT of Delhi, 2018 SCC OnLine Del 13448 laid down strict guidelines for police to follow when summoning a suspect, accused or witness under Section 41A, 160 or 175 CrPC. The guidelines specifically mandated that police officers issue notices in the prescribed format, to be formally served in the manner and in accordance with the provisions of Chapter VI of the CrPC. The concerned person is required to comply with the terms of the notice and make themselves available at the required time and place. Should the person be unable to present himself at the given time for any valid and justifiable reason, the person shall, in writing, immediately inform the investigating officer and seek an alternative time within a reasonable period. Unless it is detrimental to the investigation, the police officer may permit such rescheduling; however, only for justifiable causes to be recorded in the case diary. Should the IO believe that such an extension is being sought to cause a delay to the investigation, or if such a Page 52 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:42:07 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 person is being evasive by seeking time, deny such a request and mandatorily require the said person to attend.

68. Understandably, the ED shall argue that the Standing Orders of the Delhi Police are not binding on it and that ED officials are not police officers for the investigation under the PMLA. However, ED shall be bound by the judgment of the Hon'ble High Court of Delhi, when it pertains to provisions of the CrPC, which apply to PMLA. When the PMLA has to share the provisions of CrPC, qua mode of service of summons, all necessary judgments qua such service shall apply upon it. Moreover, the Delhi Police functions under the Ministry of Home Affairs, and the ED functions under the Ministry of Finance; there cannot be two different yardsticks for the same executive when provisions of the CrPC are to be applied. ED definitely missed the opportunity to guide its officers on how the mode of service is to be affected under the CrPC.

69. It is a basic rule of interpretation that law has to be read in its most general sense. Any common application of mind would find that 'non-appearance' and 'intentional non-appearance' are distinct. Even the ED argued that Section 63(2)(c) PMLA penalises mere non-appearance, but with only a fine, and Section 63(4) PMLA additionally calls for prosecution under Page 53 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:42:16 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 Section 174 IPC when such disobedience is intentional. If the understanding of CW1 is taken note of, then Section 63(2)(c) and Section 63(4) would be applied in all cases. CW1's understanding, as he deposed in his cross-examination, is sufficient for penalty under Section 63(2)
(c)PMLA, but not under Section 63(4) PMLA.When CW1 deposed that he received the accused's response, perused the reasons for non-appearance, and waited for the same to be over, he issued a fresh summons only then, giving the impression that the reasons were accepted. Even the accused who received no communication in response, particularly that of rejecting his reasons for non-appearance, would be under the impression that his reasons were understood and acceded to. CW1 may not have been duty-

bound to reply to the accused that his reasons were rejected, his deposition that he waited for the reasons of the accused to be over and then he issued a fresh summons definitely points to the lack of understanding of penal provision, particularly Section 174 IPC, under which the conviction has been sought by the ED.

Decision

70. From the above discussion, it is clear that conviction requires strict adherence to all the ingredients of the relevant provision. Misinterpretation or misunderstanding of provisions, especially penal Page 54 of 58 PARAS Digitally signed by PARAS DALAL Date: 2026.01.22 DALAL 15:42:24 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 provisions, can be fatal to the case. The accused gets every benefit of doubt created in the complainant's case.

71. It is well-settled law that the burden to prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt lies on the shoulders of the prosecution. The accused has a right to remain silent during the trial. Every accused is to be presumed innocent until proved guilty. The burden of proof on the prosecution is to prove the case by leading cogent, convincing and reliable evidence so as to prove the guilt of the accused beyond a reasonable doubt. The accused cannot be convicted on mere probabilities or presumptions. Every benefit of doubt goes in favour of the accused.

72. Coming to the facts and circumstances of the present case, the complainant has failed to prove it beyond a reasonable doubt. There are procedural, legal, and factual challenges to the complainant's case, which do not allow this Court to arrive at a conclusion of culpability of the accused. The complainant has failed to prove due service of summons, Ex.CW1/C1, Ex.CW1/5 and Ex.CW1/C9 against the accused in the absence of a supporting affidavit under Section 65B Evidence Act. Even for the sake of argument, the legal requirement under the rules of evidence is disregarded, the service by email is not valid or legal under the CrPC or the PMLA. The Page 55 of 58 Digitally signed PARAS by PARAS DALAL DALAL 2026.01.22 Date:

15:42:32 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 next challenge was to prove the accused's intentional disobedience, which the complainant has not proved beyond a reasonable doubt.

73. To sum up, with regard to each of the four ingredients required under Section 174 IPC, the following table is provided - S.No Ingredient Finding Reasoning summed up

1. whoever legally Not (a) Since service of summons bound to attend proved through email was not proved in at a certain place absence of proof of Ex.CW1/C1, and time Ex.CW1/C5 and Ex.CW1/C9 in accordance with Section 65B IEA;

(b) Since service of summons through email is not valid and legal under the PMLA or the CrPC; and

(c) Since service was not effected personally upon the accused, or after due diligence via 'extended mode' or 'substituted mode'

2. in obedience to a Not (a) Same as above, since there was no summons, Proved effective service, accused was not notice, order, or duty bound to appear proclamation proceeding from

3. any public Proved (a) Section 50 (2) PMLA empowers servant legally Assistant Director, ED to summon competent, as any person, who is a public servant such public under Section 40 PMLA;

servant, to issue the same, (b) Challenge by accused that Page 56 of 58 Digitally signed by PARAS PARAS DALAL Date:

DALAL 2026.01.22 15:42:40 +0530 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024 Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024 complainant CW2 was not authorized to file complaint u/S. 195 CrPC is not tenable, as it was the officer of AD, HIU-II which was contemned due to alleged non-

appearance and any Officer holding the said position could file such complaint; and

(c) Challenge to legal competence of CW1 is not tenable for reason that there was no Order by Ld. Special Court to continue further investigation, as it is not mandated under the law. Investigating Officer may continue further investigation without leave of the Court for unearthing new evidence or facts or accused and mere absence of formal order from Concerned Court allowing further investigation is not a rule when ends of justice demands that further investigation is required

4. intentionally Not (a) CW1 failed to understand the omits to attend Proved requirement of law, as mere non-

          at that place or         appearance     is     not     wilful
          time, or departs         disobedience. wilful disobedience is
          from the place           requirement    of     law,    which
          where he is              prosecution has to prove beyond
          bound to attend          reasonable doubt; and
          before the time
          at which it is           (b) CW1 admits that he issued
          lawful for him to        successive summons after the reason
          depart                   for non-appearance given by the
                                   accused qua previous summons had

                               Page 57 of 58                         Digitally signed

                                                          PARAS by PARAS
                                                                DALAL

                                                          DALAL 2026.01.22
                                                                Date:
                                                                15:42:47 +0530
 Ct. Cases 02 of 2024                      Directorate of Enforcement (ED) v. Arvind Kejriwal
CNR No. DLCT12-000038-2024


                                     elapsed, which shows that IO
                                     allowed the adjournment sought by
                                     the accused in not objecting timely to
                                     the reasons advanced by the accused.


                        FINAL ORDER: ACQUITTED

74. In view of the aforesaid discussion, this Court is of the considered opinion that the prosecution has failed to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt and the accused person is entitled to be exonerated of the charge against him in the present case. Accordingly, the accused Sh. Arvind Kejriwal is hereby acquitted of the offence punishable under Section 174 IPC.

                                                  PARAS        Digitally signed
                                                               by PARAS DALAL
                                                               Date: 2026.01.22
                                                  DALAL        15:42:53 +0530



Announced in Open Court                           (PARAS DALAL)
on this January 22, 2026                          ACJM-01, RADC, New Delhi




                                  Page 58 of 58