ABC of Enforcement Directorate

Enforcement Directorate (ED) is a premier financial investigation agency and economic law enforcement agency of the Government of India.

  • Headquarter - New Delhi
  • History - In 1956, an ‘Enforcement Unit’ was formed in the Department of Economic Affairs.
  • It handled the Exchange Control Laws violations under Foreign Exchange Regulation Act of 1947 (later FERA 1973)
  • In the year 1957, this Unit was renamed as ‘Enforcement Directorate’.
  • In 1960, its administrative control was transferred from the Department of Economic Affairs to the Department of Revenue.
  • It was regulated under Foreign Exchange Regulation Act (FERA) of 1973 (repealed later).
  • The ED currently draws its statutory powers from 3 different acts -
    1. Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (FEMA)
    2. Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 (PMLA)
    3. Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018 (FEOA)
  • Director - Director is the head of the Enforcement Directorate assisted by special directors.
  • The director is appointed in accordance with the provisions of the Central Vigilance Commission Act 2003.
  • The Centre appoints the director on recommendation of a high-level committee headed by the Central Vigilance Commissioner.
  • The director has a fixed tenure of 2 years and a maximum 3 annual extensions.

Powers and functions of ED

  • Functions - ED is mandated with investigation of offence of money laundering and violations of foreign exchange laws.
  • Enforces the provisions of the PMLA
    • Conducts investigation to trace the assets derived from proceeds of crime and provisionally attach the property.
    • Ensure prosecution of the offenders.
    • Confiscation of the property by the Special court.
  • Enforces the provisions of the FEMA
    • Conduct investigation into suspected violations of foreign exchange laws.
    • Adjudicate and impose penalties on those adjudged violations.
  • Enforces the provisions of the FEOA
    • ED is mandated to attach the properties of the fugitive economic offenders and confiscate their properties for the central government.
  • It is also a sponsoring agency under Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974 (COFEPOSA).
  • Quasi-judicial powers - Section 50 of the PMLA provides powers of a civil court to the ED authorities for summoning persons suspected of money laundering and recording statements.
  • The Vijay Madanlal Choudhary v. Union of India (2022) case observes that the power under Section 50 of PMLA is of the nature of ‘inquiry’ against the proceeds of crime and is not ‘investigation’ in strict sense.
  • Section 19 and Section 45 of the PMLA permits ED authorities to arrest and grant bail.

CBI vs ED

  • Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and ED are investigating agencies of the Central Government.
  • They both play an important role but have different roles to play.

 

CBI

ED

Nature

Not a statutory body

Statutory body

Ministry

Ministry of Personnel, Ministry of Personnel, Pension & Public Grievances

Department of Revenue under the Ministry of Finance

Acts governing

Derives powers from the Delhi Special Police Establishment Act of 1946

Mainly from 2 acts

  • Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (FEMA)
  • Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 (PMLA)

Investigates

Anti-Corruption crimes and special crimes under IPC apart from economic crimes.

Only economic crimes. Can carry out searches and confiscate assets.

Economic Crimes

Investigates crime of corruption, economic offences

Investigates offences of money laundering and foreign exchange laws violation

Central Government’s role

Needs Central Government notification to initiate investigation

Does not need such notification.

Police investigation is different from an ED investigation

Police

ED

First Information Report (FIR) is required for a cognisable offence before conducting an investigation.

They undertake their investigation for the purpose of gathering materials and tracing the ‘proceeds of crime’ by issuing summons.

Statement made by an accused to the police is inadmissible as evidence in court.

A statement made to an ED authority is admissible.

A copy of the FIR is accessible to the accused.

The Enforcement Case Information Report is seldom available.

Issues 

  • ED cannot be credited with taking timely action against corruption.
  • Of late, ED to impart fear among political opponents of the Union government.
  • The investigation and prosecution of the predicate offence is done typically by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) or the State Police.
  • The ED’s focus is shifted from recovering the proceeds of crime to effecting pre-trial arrests and investigating the predicate offence.

In spite of several high-profile arrests, the ED has only filed charge-sheets after concluding investigation in only 1,142 cases out of the 5,906 cases registered since 2005.

  • Famous cases - The ED has arrested several politicians including
    • Satyender Jain and Manish Sisodia - Ministers of the Delhi government.
    • Nawab Malik - Former Minister from the Shiv Sena.
    • Magunta Raghava Reddy - YSRCP MP Srinivasulu Reddy’s son.  
    • V. Senthil Balaji and K. Ponmudy - Ministers of the Tamil Nadu government.

Road ahead

  • In the past, the CBI was used to impart fear among political opponents and in the process, it earned the nickname ‘caged parrot’.
  • Statutorily empowered body like ED should reorient its approach to not to go down on the same path.
  • To justify their actions and demonstrate their fairness and impartiality it should put all facts in the public domain.
  • The actions of ED should be timely, fair and impartial to command credibility among the public.
  • The ED should focus more on recovering crime proceeds and redistribute the same to victims.
  • The ED authorities must satisfy themselves of the need for arrest as under Section 19 of the PMLA.
  • Such belief must pass the reasonableness test similar to the test that courts assessing the necessity of remand.

Other Investigation Agencies in India

Investigation Agency

Features

Enforcement Directorate:

  • The Directorate of Enforcement (ED) is a multi-disciplinary organization mandated with investigation of offences of money laundering and violations of foreign exchange laws.
    • It functions under the Department of Revenue of the Ministry of Finance.
    • It is the a premier financial investigation agency of the Government of India.
    • The statutory functions of the Directorate include enforcement of following Acts:
      • Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974 (COFEPOSA)
      • Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (FEMA)
      • Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 (PMLA)
      • Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018 (FEOA)

National Investigation Agency (NIA):

  • It is the Central Counter-Terrorism Law Enforcement Agency of India mandated to investigate all the offences affecting the sovereignty, security and integrity of India.
    • It includes offences:
      • that affect friendly relations with foreign states.
      • are against atomic and nuclear facilities.
      • that involve smuggling of arms, drugs and fake Indian currency and infiltration from across the borders.
      • committed under the statutory laws enacted to implement international treaties, agreements, conventions and resolutions of the United Nations, its agencies and other international organisations.
    • It was constituted under the National Investigation Agency (NIA) Act, 2008.

Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI):

  • It is the premier investigating police agency in India.
    • It provides assistance to the Central Vigilance Commission and Lokpal.
    • It is also the nodal police agency in India which coordinates investigations on behalf of Interpol Member countries.
    • Its conviction rate is as high as 65 to 70% and it is comparable to the best investigation agencies in the world.

Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB):

  • It was constituted by the Government of India in 1986 under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985.
    • The NCB is the nodal agency on the matter of drug law enforcement in India.
    • It is the apex coordinating agency under the Ministry of Home Affairs.

Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO):

  • It is a multi-disciplinary organization under the Ministry of Corporate Affairs, consisting of experts in the field of accountancy, forensic auditing, law, information technology, investigation, company law, capital market and taxation for detecting and prosecuting or recommending for prosecution white-collar crimes/frauds.
    • Section 211 of the Companies Act, 2013, has accorded statutory status to the Serious Fraud Investigation Office (SFIO).
      • SFIO also has powers to arrest people for the violation of the Company law.
    • A White-collar crime is a nonviolent crime committed for financial gain. It is characterized by deceit, concealment, or violation of trust.


POSTED ON 26-02-2024 BY ADMIN
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