ED takes Senthil Balaji into 5-day custody after SC approval


Enforcement Directorate (ED) officials on Monday took custody of jailed Tamil Nadu minister Senthil Balaji in a money laundering case pertaining to an alleged cash-for-jobs scam in the state’s transport department during 2011-15, hours after the Supreme Court permitted the agency to question the DMK leader till August 12.

Balaji, who was lodged in the Puzhal Central Prison, was taken to ED’s office in Chennai, with personnel of the Central Armed Police Forces providing security, officials familiar with the matter said.

The development came hours after a bench of justices AS Bopanna and MM Sundresh dismissed the petitions filed by Balaji, who was arrested on June 14, and his wife Megala, challenging a Madras high court order upholding his arrest by ED.

Noting that the 15-day custody of Balaji, as granted to ED by the principal sessions judge, will expire on August 12, when the minister’s arrest completes 60 days, the top court allowed the federal agency to interrogate him for five days.

Section 167(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC), 1973 places a restriction on keeping any accused in custody — police or judicial — beyond 60 days [and 90 days in cases punishable with death penalty, life term or over 10 years sentence].

“Conscious of the time constraint, we are inclined to permit the respondents (ED) to have custody of the appellant till August 12,” the bench said.

Balaji and his wife, through separate petitions, challenged ED’s right to take him in custody, arguing the anti-money laundering agency is not “police” under Section 167(2) CrPC. They further argued that police custody can be granted only in the first 15 days of arrest, a view cemented by a 1992 Supreme Court verdict in CBI v Anupam Kulkarni.

Rejecting the arguments, the bench held: “The words ‘such custody’ occurring in Section 167(2) CrPC would include not only a police custody but also that of other investigating agencies. The word ‘custody’ shall mean actual custody.”

The bench further referred the 1992 decision for reconsideration by a larger bench. “Allowing the said interpretation which in our respectful view is contrary to the very mandate of Section 167(2) of the CrPC, would cause serious prejudice to the investigation,” it said.

Referring the question whether the 15-day period of custody in favour of police should be only within the first 15 days of remand or spanning over the entire period of investigation – 60 or 90 days —, the bench directed the registry to place the file before the Chief Justice of India (CJI) for constituting a larger bench on this limited issue.

The bench said admittedly, physical custody of Balaji was not given to the central agency as he was in hospital for a bypass surgery since his arrest on June 14.