The Supreme Court of India ordered the transfer of a Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) prosecution from the Special Judge in Gurugram, Haryana, to the Special Judge (PMLA), Saket Court Complex, Delhi. While rejecting the petitioner’s request to quash the prosecution, the Court held that because part of the offence—specifically the concealment of “proceeds of crime”—occurred in Delhi and the related scheduled offence had already been transferred to Delhi, it was expedient for the ends of justice to consolidate the proceedings in the same jurisdiction.
- Case Origin: The petitioner, a promoter of M/s Krrish Realtech Pvt. Ltd., faced a prosecution complaint related to alleged money laundering involving the “Krrish World” real estate project in Gurugram.
- Initial Request: The petitioner initially sought to quash the Prosecution Complaint (COMA/16/2025) and the underlying ECIR, but later restricted his plea to transferring the case to Delhi.
- Scheduled Offences: The Directorate of Enforcement alleged that homebuyers were defrauded of ₹503 Crore, with funds siphoned off through shell companies and diverted to Sri Lanka. A scheduled offence (FIR No. 439/2024, Gurugram) had previously been clubbed with an earlier case (FIR No. 30/2019, Delhi) and transferred to Delhi by a Coordinate Bench.
Key Findings of the Supreme Court
- Jurisdictional Principles:
- Under Section 44 of the PMLA and Section 178(d) of the Code of Criminal Procedure, when an offence consists of several acts committed in different local areas, any court having jurisdiction over those areas may try the offence.
- The Court noted that PMLA prosecution can be instituted in any Special Court within whose territorial jurisdiction the “proceeds of crime” were derived, concealed, possessed, or used.
- Concurrent Jurisdiction:
- The Court found that while the project and original criminal activity occurred in Gurugram, part of the “proceeds of crime” (including cash, jewellery, and vehicles) were seized or attached in Delhi, establishing simultaneous jurisdiction in both Gurugram and Delhi.
- Convenience and Statutory Intent:
- To satisfy the statutory mandate under Section 44(1) of the PMLA—which requires both the money laundering offence and the connected scheduled offence to be tried by the same Special Court—the transfer to Delhi was deemed necessary, particularly since the related scheduled offence was already pending there.
- The Court distinguished this case from KA Rauf Sherif v. Directorate of Enforcement, noting significant factual differences regarding the location of the attached proceeds of crime.
Conclusion
The Supreme Court allowed the transfer of the PMLA proceedings from Gurugram to the Special Judge (PMLA), Saket Court Complex, Delhi. The transferee court is directed to continue the prosecution from the stage currently reached in Gurugram.
2026 INSC 702
Summary of Judgment: Amit Katyal v. Union of India & Anr. (D.O.J. 14.07.2026)



