The case consolidates two appeals arising from the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 (PMLA) proceedings. In the first case (Criminal Appeal No. 1622 of 2022), the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) registered an FIR in July 2017 for offences including criminal conspiracy and cheating (IPC Sections 120-B, 420) and criminal misconduct by a public servant (PC Act Section 13(1)(d))1. The Directorate of Enforcement (ED) subsequently registered an Enforcement Case Information Report (ECIR) and filed a complaint under Section 44(1)(b) of the PMLA, accusing the appellants of money laundering. The Special Court took cognizance, but the appellants’ application for copies of documents relied upon, illegible documents, and suppressed documents was rejected by the Special Court in March 2019, a decision upheld by the Delhi High Court.
In the second case (Criminal Appeal No. 730 of 2024), a PMLA complaint was filed in August 2021, with cheating (IPC Section 420) as the predicate offence3. Following ED raids in August 2019, where documents and property were seized, the appellants sought a list and copies of these seized items. This application was also rejected by the Special Court in March 2022, and the decision was upheld by the High Court of Punjab and Haryana.
Law Involved The primary laws and provisions in contention were:
Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 (PMLA): Specifically Sections 3 (offence of money laundering), 4 (punishment)2, 17 (search and seizure of property/records), 18 (search of persons and seizure of property/records)56, 21(2) (entitlement to copies of seized records)7, 44(1)(b) (Special Court cognizance)2, 45(1)(ii) (conditions for bail, including negative burden on accused)89, 46 & 65 (applicability of CrPC provisions).
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (CrPC): Sections 204 (issue of process, requiring copies of complaint and annexed documents)11, 207 (supply of police report and other documents to accused)1012, 208 (supply of statements and documents in session triable cases)1013, 91 (power to summon production of documents)141, 233 & 243 (accused’s right to lead defence evidence and compel production of documents).
Indian Penal Code (IPC): Sections 120-B (criminal conspiracy) and 420 (cheating).
Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 (PC Act): Section 13(1)(d) (criminal misconduct).
Constitutional Principle: Article 21 (right to fair trial).
Key Precedents: The Court relied heavily on its own precedents, including Criminal Trials Guidelines Regarding Inadequacies and Deficiencies, In Re (2021) and Vijay Madanlal Choudhary & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors. (2022), which address the accused’s right to documents and the constitutional validity of PMLA provisions, including the negative burden of proof.
Reasoning The Supreme Court underscored the accused’s fundamental right to a fair trial under Article 21 of the Constitution, which necessitates full disclosure of documents.
Documents Relied Upon in Complaint: The Court reasoned that Section 44(1)(b) of the PMLA, read with Section 204 of the CrPC, mandates that when cognizance is taken, the accused must be provided with copies of the complaint and all documents annexed or produced along with it. It clarified that “documents relied upon” by the prosecution include everything forming the basis of the complaint/charge-sheet, not just those physically attached or explicitly marked as “relied upon”. The lower courts erred by not compelling the ED to provide legible copies of all documents forming part of the complaint.
Seized Documents Not Relied Upon: The Court emphasized that Section 21(2) of the PMLA explicitly grants a person from whom records are seized the right to receive copies. This is an independent statutory right. Even if the prosecution does not rely on these seized documents, they may be crucial for the accused to build their defence, especially given the “negative burden of proof” under Section 24 of the PMLA, which places the onus on the accused to rebut the presumption of money laundering. Denying such documents would prejudice the accused’s ability to discharge this burden and is inconsistent with the principles of a fair trial. The Court also highlighted that while Section 91 CrPC allows summoning documents, its use at the stage of framing charges is generally discouraged; however, this does not override the accused’s fundamental right to access documents necessary for their defence at various stages, including bail applications, where the burden on the accused is significant.
Holding The Supreme Court allowed the appeals, quashing and setting aside the impugned judgments and orders of both High Courts.
For Criminal Appeal No. 1622 of 2022, the Court directed the ED to provide soft or legible copies of all documents produced along with the complaint under Section 44(1)(b) of the PMLA within one month.
For Criminal Appeal No. 730 of 2024, the Court directed the ED to supply true copies of all documents seized from the accused’s premises within one month, allowing for provision of soft copies. The appeals were allowed accordingly.
Sarla Gupta And Another V. Directorate Of Enforcement
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 645: (DoJ 07-05-2025)




