The case of Anosh Ekka v. State through Central Bureau of Investigation (2026 INSC 357) involves a criminal appeal filed by a former Minister of the State of Jharkhand against a High Court order that had rejected his application for the suspension of his sentence and grant of bail during the pendency of his appeal.
Factual Background
- Corruption Allegations: The case originated from an FIR alleging that the appellant and another Minister acquired assets disproportionate to their known sources of income. The investigation, later assigned to the CBI, alleged that the appellant amassed assets worth approximately Rs. 57.01 crores against a pre-check asset value of only Rs. 10,48,827.
- Illegal Activities: It was alleged that the appellant floated construction companies to legalize illegally acquired wealth and misused his position to acquire large tracts of tribal lands in violation of the Chota Nagpur Tenancy Act (CNT Act). These land transfers were allegedly facilitated through false affidavits and the connivance of public officials.
- Government Contracts: The appellant’s firms, in which his wife was a major shareholder, were allegedly awarded lucrative government contracts despite not fulfilling eligibility criteria.
Procedural History and the “Split” Cases
The original investigation was split into two separate charge-sheets:
- R.C. Case No. 04(A)/2010-AHD-R(B): The appellant was convicted in this case, but the Supreme Court suspended his sentence and granted him bail in April 2023 after he had spent four years in custody.
- R.C. Case No. 04(A)/2010-AHD-R(C) (Present Case): The appellant was convicted on August 29, 2025, for offences under the IPC and the Prevention of Corruption Act. He was sentenced to seven years of rigorous imprisonment and a fine of Rs. 1,00,000 for corruption charges, along with shorter concurrent sentences for other offences.
Arguments for Bail
- Double Jeopardy: The appellant argued that the two separate charge-sheets involved overlapping allegations and identical sets of properties from the same check period. He contended that this amounted to “dual punishment” for the same allegations, violating the right against double jeopardy.
- Asset Attachment: It was noted that assets worth approximately Rs. 18 crores had already been seized or attached by the Enforcement Directorate, and tribal lands had been ordered to be confiscated.
- Cooperation: The appellant undertook to cooperate fully in restoring the tribal lands to their original status.
Supreme Court’s Decision
The Supreme Court allowed the appeal and directed that the appellant be released on bail by suspending his substantive sentence of imprisonment. The Court’s reasoning included:
- Related Precedent: Since the Court had already suspended the appellant’s sentence in the first case involving overlapping allegations of disproportionate assets, it was inclined to do the same here.
- Custody Period: The Court noted the appellant had already undergone custodial incarceration of more than 10 months in the present case, in addition to the four years served in the earlier related case.
Conditions of Release
The release is subject to specific conditions, including:
- An undertaking filed within seven days to assist in the process of restoring the tribal land to its original status.
- Furnishing bail bonds and sureties to the satisfaction of the Trial Court.
- Any other terms and conditions the Trial Court deems fit to impose.
2026 INSC 357
Anosh Ekka V. State Through Central Bureau Of Investigation (D.O. J. 13.04.2026)




