Attachment of Assets (under PMLA) क्या है?
ऐतिहासिक पृष्ठभूमि
मुख्य प्रावधान
10 points- 1.
Section 5 of PMLA: Empowers the ED to provisionally attach any property if it has reason to believe, based on material in its possession, that the property is 'proceeds of crime' and is likely to be concealed, transferred, or dealt with in a manner that may frustrate proceedings.
- 2.
Provisional Period: A provisional attachment order is valid for a period of 180 days from the date of the order, during which further legal steps must be taken.
- 3.
Confirmation by Adjudicating Authority: Within 30 days of the provisional attachment, the ED must file a complaint before the Adjudicating Authority, a quasi-judicial body, which then conducts a hearing to confirm the attachment.
- 4.
Consequences of Confirmation: If confirmed by the Adjudicating Authority, the attachment remains in force during the pendency of the money laundering proceedings and until a final order is passed by the Special Court.
- 5.
Release of Property: If the Adjudicating Authority does not confirm the attachment, or if the person is acquitted by the Special Court, the attached property is released.
- 6.
Confiscation: Upon conviction for money laundering by the Special Court, the attached property can be confiscated by the Central Government, permanently depriving the owner of its possession.
- 7.
Scope of Property: Includes both movable and immovable property, tangible and intangible assets, and even property equivalent in value if the original proceeds of crime cannot be traced or are located abroad.
- 8.
Purpose: The primary objective is to ensure that the laundered assets are available for confiscation upon conviction, thereby depriving criminals of their ill-gotten wealth and breaking the financial backbone of criminal enterprises.
- 9.
Safeguards: The Act provides for appeals against attachment orders to the Appellate Tribunal (PMLA) and further to the High Court and Supreme Court, ensuring judicial oversight.
- 10.
Immediate Effect: The attachment takes immediate effect, preventing the accused from disposing of or transferring the assets.
दृश्य सामग्री
Process of Asset Attachment & Confiscation under PMLA
This flowchart illustrates the step-by-step legal procedure followed by the ED for provisional attachment of assets and their eventual confiscation under the PMLA, crucial for understanding enforcement actions.
- 1.ED initiates investigation based on Scheduled Offense (Predicate Offense)
- 2.ED forms 'reason to believe' property is 'proceeds of crime' (Sec 5(1))
- 3.ED issues Provisional Attachment Order (PAO) for 180 days (Sec 5(1))
- 4.ED files a complaint before the Adjudicating Authority (within 30 days of PAO)
- 5.Adjudicating Authority issues show cause notice & conducts hearing
- 6.Adjudicating Authority confirms Provisional Attachment (Sec 8(3))
- 7.If NO (Attachment not confirmed): Property released
- 8.If YES (Attachment confirmed): Attachment continues during ML trial
- 9.Special Court conducts trial for Money Laundering offense
- 10.Special Court convicts for Money Laundering
- 11.If NO (Acquittal/Discharge): Property released
- 12.If YES (Conviction): Property confiscated by Central Government (Sec 8(5))
- 13.Central Government takes possession & disposes of property
Attachment of Assets under PMLA: Scope, Purpose & Safeguards
This mind map provides a detailed understanding of asset attachment under PMLA, outlining its legal basis, objectives, the types of properties covered, and the crucial safeguards in place.
Attachment of Assets (under PMLA)
- ●Legal Basis
- ●Purpose
- ●Scope of Property
- ●Procedure Overview
- ●Safeguards & Oversight
- ●Recent Developments
हालिया विकास
5 विकासSupreme Court's 2022 judgment affirmed the constitutional validity of Section 5 of PMLA, reinforcing ED's power to provisionally attach assets, subject to procedural safeguards.
Increased number of high-value attachments in cases involving corporate fraud, bank loan defaults, and political corruption, demonstrating intensified enforcement.
Debates around the speed of adjudication and the prolonged nature of provisional attachments, which can impact legitimate businesses and individuals.
Efforts to streamline the process of asset realization and disposal post-confiscation to recover funds for the state.
Growing emphasis on international cooperation for the attachment and repatriation of assets located abroad, often through mutual legal assistance treaties.
