US Department of Justice Drops Criminal Charges Against Gautam Adani and Sagar Adani
With this, multiple US regulatory and legal investigations involving the group have all closed in the last couple of days.
Last week, the US Securities and Exchange Commission settled civil allegations against the two men tied to disclosures made to investors in connection with solar energy projects in India. Court filings showed Gautam Adani agreed to pay USD 6 million and Sagar Adani USD 12 million, without admitting or denying wrongdoing.
Thereafter, the US Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) settled allegations of the Adani Group violating US sanctions on Iran in LPG imports. This followed the Indian conglomerate agreeing to pay USD 275 million while extending “extensive cooperation” with the investigation and making “proactive” disclosures.
Now, US prosecutors at the Eastern District of New York have dropped all charges against Gautam Adani and his nephew Sagar Adani.
In a filing before the court, the US Department of Justice requested dismissal of the indictment against the Adanis with prejudice.
“The Department of Justice has reviewed this case and has decided, in its prosecutorial discretion, not to devote further resources to these criminal charges against individual defendants,” it said.
Thereafter, the court ordered that the indictment against Adani and others “be dismissed with prejudice”.
The closure marks a dramatic turn in a case that had threatened to disrupt the Adani Group’s global expansion plans. The SEC and DOJ cases, filed in late 2024, alleged the Adanis orchestrated a USD 265 million bribery scheme involving Indian officials to secure solar power contracts and concealed the arrangement from US investors and lenders while raising capital.
The dismissal was “with prejudice”, preventing the case from being reopened.
Such dismissals are uncommon in US criminal proceedings and typically reflect a determination that pursuing the case is no longer warranted after extensive review.
The case turned in Adani’s favour after prosecutors found no clear US linkages and insufficient evidence to sustain the allegations, according to people familiar with the matter.
The anticipated decision follows months of aggressive engagement between US prosecutors and a legal team assembled by the Adanis.
Five American legal counsel from Sullivan & Cromwell, alongside Nixon Peabody, Hecker Fink, Norton Rose Fulbright and Bracewell, made a series of submissions and presentations to US authorities as part of the review process. The review failed to produce findings capable of sustaining charges against Gautam and Sagar Adani, prompting the DOJ to move towards dismissal.
In submissions disclosed publicly on April 7, 2026, before the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, Adani’s lawyers mounted a challenge to the US SEC’s fraud-related proceedings, calling them an “impermissibly extraterritorial application” of US securities laws.
The defence argued the case involved “Indian defendants, an Indian issuer”, securities not traded on US exchanges and alleged conduct occurring “exclusively in India”.
The filings stated the SEC “lacked necessary jurisdiction”, failed to establish actionable misstatements and could not tie either defendant to the bond offering. The lawyers asserted the SEC had “recast” unviable anti-bribery allegations into securities fraud claims.
The submissions noted there were “no investor losses”, all bond obligations were honoured and Gautam Adani “did not authorise the issuance of the bonds”.
The case had faced scrutiny from legal experts over whether prosecutors had stretched securities laws to pursue conduct centred overseas.
Gautam Adani, Sagar Adani and Vneet Jaain were charged only under securities and wire fraud statutes (Counts 2, 3 and 4). They were not named in the more serious Foreign Corrupt Practices Act bribery charge or obstruction-related count (Counts 1 and 5), which prosecutors brought against other defendants in the wider case.
The Adani Group has consistently rejected the allegations as meritless, defending its governance and compliance standards while pledging to contest the proceedings through legal channels.
That distinction, along with the absence of direct US linkages, increasingly shaped criticism of the government’s legal approach. Former SEC commissioner Laura Unger argued that authorities had effectively attempted to predicate a securities fraud case on allegations of bribery that had neither been adjudicated nor formally pursued in India.
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