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Home > News > India News > Article > UK court came down heavily on ex Mumbai HC judge in Nirav Modi case

UK court came down heavily on ex-Mumbai HC judge in Nirav Modi case

Updated on: 27 February,2021 09:20 AM IST  |  New Delhi
IANS |

Goozee went on to say, "Justice Thipsay refused to give live evidence when the extradition hearing resumed. Justice Thipsay is a retired judge, who has aligned himself to a political party on his retirement and received adverse commentary in the media"

UK court came down heavily on ex-Mumbai HC judge in Nirav Modi case

Nirav Modi. File pic

Even as the UK's Westminster Magistrates' Court on Thursday cleared the decks for the extradition of fugitive diamantaire Nirav Modi in connection with the Rs 13,500 crore Punjab National Bank (PNB) loan fraud case, District Judge Samuel Goozee came down heavily on former Mumbai High Court Judge Abhay M. Thipsay, saying he "never disclosed" his "party-political affiliation" either in the reports biography, or in relation to his declaration as an expert and disclosure of any potential conflict of interest.


In the 83-page judgment, the Westminster Magistrates' Court Judge said that the extradition request for Nirav Modi is a high-profile case in India and "I have no doubt that Justice Thipsay as a former High Court Judge has overseen many high profile cases in his time".


He noted: "He entered into the arena of giving evidence in these extradition proceedings with his eyes open to the focus and scrutiny the case would inevitably receive in India. It is inevitable he could have foreseen his affiliation to the Congress party may attract interest."


Goozee said that having checked his report dated December 20, 2019 and June 29, 2020, "I note that he has never disclosed his party-political affiliation either in the report's biography or in relation to his declaration as an expert and disclosure of any potential conflict of interests".

"However, Justice Thipsay is a retired High Court Judge in India, giving evidence as an expert in this extradition request on behalf of NDM (Nirav Modi). He is aware of the nature and interest in these proceedings. He would equally be aware of his own political connections to the Congress which it transpires he joined after his retirement," it said.

Goozee went on to say, "Justice Thipsay refused to give live evidence when the extradition hearing resumed. Justice Thipsay is a retired judge, who has aligned himself to a political party on his retirement and received adverse commentary in the media."

"However, he also engaged and courted with the media himself. His additional reports and opinions subsequently submitted by the defence have not been subject to scrutiny. His unwillingness to give further evidence in these proceedings, simply because he did not get the protections which in my view there was no sound basis to grant, meant his opinion went unchallenged by the government of India.

"There has been no ability for the Court to further scrutinise his expert testimony. Overall, these factors have the effect, in my assessment, of nullifying any weight I would have attached to his evidence."

Referring to a press conference by Union Law Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad, Goozee said, "Following giving evidence on May 13, 2020, the Indian Law Minister held a press conference. During the press conference, the Law Minster made reference to Justice Thipsay's evidence in these extradition proceedings. The Minister said 'he is a retired judge from the Mumbai High Court, and around 10 months before his retirement, the Supreme Court transferred him to Allahabad High Court due to administrative reasons... that tells its own story'.

"The Minister also comments that Justice Thipsay's evidence was directed by the opposition party in India, the Congress Party; 'a Congress member, who is a judge, a retired judge, give testimony in [Nirav Modi's] defence, the situation is so suspicious, that based on it we can conclude that the Congress Party is repeatedly trying to save Nirav Modi'. He also comments that Justice Tipsay's evidence was 'legally unsustainable'."

The Judge said, "I was referred to extensive material regarding the media attention to the government's comments about Justice Thipsay's evidence.

"Having considered the transcript of the press conference, it was clear in my view that it was a press conference given purely in a political context, albeit as the Minister of Justice, in the context of the BJP party making political commentary about the Congress party. That in turn, unsurprisingly, garnered significant attention and headlines within the media and in social media platforms.

"It was commentary which Justice Thipsay also was interviewed about himself on television in the period between the first part of these extradition hearing and the resumption of the hearing in September. Unwise political commentary maybe but an equally unwise decision to have engaged with the media himself while these proceeding were sub judice."

In a major setback to Nirav Modi, the UK court on Thursday ordered his extradition in connection with the Rs 13,500 crore PNB loan fraud case, after almost a two-year long legal battle.

Accepting the prima facie evidence against Nirav Modi, Goozee said: "I am satisfied that Nirav Modi's extradition to India is in compliance per human rights."

The District Judge also said that Nirav Modi had the right to appeal the order. "There is no evidence that if extradited, Nirav Modi will not get justice," the judge said.

Nirav Modi was arrested on an extradition warrant on March 19, 2019 on charges of money laundering, conspiring to destroy evidence and intimidating witnesses.

Nirav Modi is facing probe by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) for a large-scale fraud upon PNB through fraudulently obtaining LoUs or loan agreements. He is also being probed by the Enforcement Directorate (ED) in a case relating to the laundering of the proceeds of that fraud.

Meanwhile, he also faces two additional charges of "causing disappearance of evidence" and "intimidating witnesses" or "criminal intimidation to cause death", which were added on to the CBI case.

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