The appellant, Pradeep Nirankarnath Sharma, is challenging the High Court of Gujarat’s decision, which upheld the Trial Court’s refusal to discharge him from a case under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA),2002. The central dispute revolves around whether the alleged money laundering offenses, stemming from predicate offenses like corruption and fraud, fall under the PMLA given the timeline of its enactment and amendments, and whether these are “continuing offenses”. The document details arguments from both sides regarding the retrospective application of PMLA and the monetary threshold for triggering its provisions, ultimately concluding with the Supreme Court’s dismissal of the appeal, emphasizing the continuing nature of money laundering offenses and the substantial amount of alleged proceeds of crime.
Criminal Procedure Code, 1973, Section 227 – Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002, Sections 2(1)(u) , 3 and 4 – Discharge – Rejection of application – Challenge as to – Submission that the allegations primarily pertain to acts committed before the PMLA was in force or during periods when the relevant offences were not scheduled under the Act hence the accused cannot be prosecuted under the PMLA for alleged predicate offences that occurred prior to its enactment or prior to the inclusion of those offences in the PMLA schedule. Respondent argues that the appellant’s arguments regarding the retrospective application of PMLA are legally untenable, as the offence of money laundering is a continuing offence as has been held by this Court and has been correctly applied based on the facts of the case.
Held that offences under the PMLA are of a continuing nature, and the act of money laundering does not conclude with a single instance but extends so long as the proceeds of crime are concealed, used, or projected as untainted property – The legislative intent behind the PMLA is to combat the menace of money laundering, which by its very nature involves transactions spanning over time – Material on record establishes that the misuse of power and position by the appellant, coupled with the alleged utilization and concealment of proceeds of crime, has had an enduring impact – The act of laundering money is not a one-time occurrence but rather a process that continues so long as the benefits derived from criminal activity remain in circulation within the financial system or are being actively utilized by the accused – The respondent has submitted that fresh instances of the utilization of the proceeds of crime have surfaced even in recent times, thereby extending the offence into the present and negating the appellant’s contention that the act was confined to a particular point in the past – Respondent has categorically established that the amount in question far exceeds the threshold of Rs. 30 lakhs, even under the unamended provisions of the PMLA – The material submitted by the respondent, coupled with the broad legislative framework of the PMLA, indicates the necessity of allowing the trial to proceed and not discharging the appellant at the nascent stage of charge framing – Appellant has failed to establish any legally sustainable ground warranting interference by this Court at a pretrial stage.
(Para 21, 24, 28, 34 and 36)
Pradeep Nirankarnath Sharma V. Directorate Of Enforcement
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 349: (DoJ 17-03-2025)




