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Supreme Court to Hear ED Plea on August 18 Alleging Obstruction During I-PAC Raid

Supreme Court to Hear ED Plea on August 18 Alleging Obstruction During I-PAC Raid

ED alleged that Banerjee, accompanied by a large police contingent, personally intervened to halt the search and seize evidence collected by federal agency officers.


PTI, May 22, 2026, New Delhi : The Supreme Court on Friday said it would hear on August 18 the Enforcement Directorate’s (ED) plea alleging obstruction by the then West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee and other state authorities during its January 8 search of the office of political consultancy firm I-PAC in Kolkata.

A bench of Justices Prashant Kumar Mishra and NV Anjaria said it would hear the matter after the summer break.

“We will hear it after partial working days,” the bench said.

In the recently concluded West Bengal election, BJP secured a historic win with 207 seats in the 294-member House, ending the 15-year rule of the Mamata Banerjee-led TMC.

Alleging a complete breakdown of law and order in West Bengal, ED on April 23 claimed in the apex court that Banerjee used the state machinery to obstruct its money laundering probe against I-PAC.

ED alleged that Banerjee, accompanied by a large police contingent, personally intervened to halt the search and seize evidence collected by federal agency officers.

While hearing arguments in the matter on April 22, the top court observed that democracy is put in peril if a chief minister intervenes in a probe.

ED is seeking a direction to transfer the investigation into the alleged obstruction and the “retaliatory” FIRs to the CBI, saying that an independent agency is required to investigate the conduct of Banerjee and the state’s top police brass.

The West Bengal Government and other respondents had questioned the maintainability of the ED’s plea.

On March 24, the apex court had questioned the West Bengal Government over its objection to the maintainability of the ED’s plea.

The court had remarked that some ED officers had filed petitions in their individual capacity, seeking to know whether they had ceased to be citizens of India merely because they were officers of the agency.

Senior advocate Kapil Sibal, appearing for Banerjee in the matter, had earlier argued that a person who moves the court under Article 32 of the Constitution has to specifically set out which fundamental right of his has been violated.

On January 15, the top court said the chief minister’s alleged obstruction in the ED’s probe was “very serious” and agreed to examine if a state’s law-enforcing agencies can interfere with any central agency’s investigation into any serious offence, as it stayed FIRs against ED officials who raided I-PAC.

ED has alleged interference and obstruction by the state government, including by Banerjee, in its probe and search operation at the I-PAC office and the premises of its director, Pratik Jain, in connection with an alleged coal-pilferage scam.

The top court, while staying the FIRs filed in West Bengal against ED officials, had also directed the state police to preserve the CCTV footage of the raids.

It had issued notices to Banerjee, the West Bengal Government, former state director general of police Rajeev Kumar and top cops on the ED’s petitions seeking a CBI probe against them for allegedly obstructing its raids.

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