‘Prima facie’ case of money laundering in Chanda Kochhar-Videocon case; ED order upheld

An appellate tribunal has said there was a “prima facie" case of money laundering against former ICICI Bank CEO and MD Chanda Kochhar and her husband in a corruption case involving the Videocon Group, as it upheld a 2020 ED order attaching a Mumbai flat of the couple worth crores of rupees.

The tribunal, in an order issued on July 3, said it finds “substance" in the “quid pro quo" allegation made by the Enforcement Directorate against Chanda Kochhar for sanction of a loan of Rs 300 crore to Videocon International Electronics Ltd (VIEL), as post this disbursal, a sum of Rs 64 crore was transferred by the Videocon Group to NRPL, a company of her husband Deepak Kochhar.

The said loan was approved by a sanctioning committee of the ICICI Bank between June 2009 and October 2011, and Chanda Kochhar was a member of this panel, apart from being the MD and CEO of the private lending company.

The ED case, based on a CBI FIR, claimed that Chanda Kochhar hatched a “criminal conspiracy" to cheat ICICI Bank by “abusing" her official position while sanctioning this amount. Chanda Kochhar, as per the probe agencies, got illegal gratification/undue benefit through her husband from VIL or Videocon Group promoter V N Dhoot.

The ED had in January 2020 provisionally attached Kochhar’s flat no 45, located in CCI Chambers at Churchgate in Mumbai, a property of NRPL, apart from Rs 10.5 lakh in cash, seized by the agency during searches on another company of Deepak Kochhar.

The Adjudicating Authority of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) had in November 2020 refused to confirm the ED attachment, and consequently, the federal probe agency appealed before the appellate tribunal.

“It may be true that the issue will be determined by the Trial Court but we find a prima facie case against the respondents for commission of the offence of money laundering and, therefore, the Provisional Attachment Order (of the ED) is justified," the Tribunal said. It said there was “total inter-fixing of the work of the industries floated by Deepak Kochhar and even by the Videocon Group of Industries."

The tribunal rejected Chanda Kchhar’s argument that she was “not knowing the business affairs of her husband" and had pleaded ignorance in her submission.

The respondent (Chanda Kochhar) was expected to conduct herself as per the rules and policy of the bank and could not have pleaded ignorance about the association and affairs of the husband, it said in an 82-page order.

“…the sanction of a loan of Rs 300 crore by ICICI Bank to the Videocon Group of Industries, where Chanda Kochhar remained part of the committee, was against the rules and policy of the bank," it said.

The tribunal rejected Chanda Kochhar’s argument that the decision to sanction the loan to Videocon Group of Industries was not by her but by a committee and, therefore, there was “no link" between the sanction of the loan and the transfer of Rs 64 crore by the Videocon Group of Industries.

India