Business Standard

ED CHARGE SHEET FILED IN IQBAL MIRCHI PMLA CASE

MONEY LAUNDERING PROBE: Agency names 16, including non-executive director of DHFL, Dheeraj Wadhawan, in the prosecutio­n complaint

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

The Enforcemen­t Directorat­e on Monday filed a charge sheet in the money-laundering case involving gangster Iqbal Mirchi. The ED is probing Mirchi’s purchase of three properties of Sir Mohammad Yusuf Trust in Worli, Mumbai in September 1986 for ~6.5 lakh through his Rockside Enterprise.

The Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED) on Monday filed a charge sheet, naming 16, including Dheeraj Wadhawan, a non-executive director of Dewan Housing Finance Corporatio­n (DHFL), in the money laundering probe involving gangster Iqbal Memon (alias Iqbal Mirchi).

Other accused are Humayun Merchant, an alleged aide of Memon, Ranjeet Bindra, a broker in the deal of Mirchi’s property, and Rinku Deshpande, through whom Bindra allegedly received his commission.

The charge sheet also contains the name of Memon’s wife and other family members.

Mumbai’s special court of Prevention and Money Laundering

Act is likely to take cognisance of the report on Thursday.

Sources said that the charge sheet has cited certain transactio­ns involving Dheeraj Wadhawan and Sunblink Developers, which had allegedly played a key role i n diverting money Memon.

The report also contains details of DHFL exposure to Sunblink which had brought three properties from Memon valued ~225 crore in 2010. They were Rabia Mansion, Marium Lodge and Sea View, which were allegedly used by Memon to launder over ~2,000 crore.

The probe agency claims that Bindra brokered a deal between Mirchi and Sunblink to develop three buildings in Worli that originally belonged to Sir Mohammad Yusuf Trust. They (buildings) were illegally taken over by Mirchi.

ED had arrested Bindra for brokering a deal and receiving fees of about ~30 crore from Mirchi through the hawala route.

Merchant was arrested for creating a trail of fake tenants on the properties in Worli, which includes his family members and relatives.

Exposure of the non-banking financial company came to light when the enforcemen­t agency arrested Mirchi’s close aides.

DHFL had earlier clarified on its exposure to Sunblink Developers to stock exchanges, saying it had in the normal course of business funded certain projects of various companies in and around Mumbai.

“Due to market conditions, the borrowers had streamline­d their internal operations, whereby they have, by certain corporate actions, merged some of their companies into Sunblink. As a result, as on date, Sunblink is mentioned as a borrower,” it had said in a filing to the stock exchange.

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