Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

22-room farmhouse, jet among HDIL assets seized in fresh raids

- Pratik Salunke letters@hindustant­imes.com

MUMBAI: A 22-room sprawling seaside farmhouse in Alibag tehsil and a Dassault Falcon-200 business jet are among the assets belonging to Housing Developmen­t Infrastruc­ture Limited (HDIL) and its promoters that have been seized by the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED).

The agency is investigat­ing a possible money laundering angle in the Punjab and Maharashtr­a Co-operative (PMC) Bank fraud case, where the bank effectivel­y served as a piggybank for the Wadhawans of HDIL. HDIL directors Rakesh Kumar Wadhawan and his son Sarang were arrested by the Mumbai police’s Economic Offences Wing on October 3.

The farmhouse, across two and half acres, is on the beachfront in the pristine village of Awas in Alibag tehsil, not far from the bungalow owned by fugitive businessma­n Mehul Choksi, which has already been attached by ED.

The agency began searching the Alibag premises on Saturday.

The bungalow is among 159 served notices by Raigad revenue authoritie­s for alleged violations of the Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) norms, thus drawing similariti­es with fugitive diamantair­e, Nirav Modi, whose bungalow was razed in March 2019 owing to CRZ violations.

An FIR has been registered for the structural violations at the Wadhawans’ farmhouse but the owners have obtained a status quo order from a local court. On Saturday, ED found two battery operated golf carts, three mountain bikes, a speedboat and three high-end cars at the farmhouse.

On Monday, the agency seized a Falcon-200 jet parked at the internatio­nal airport. This is the second jet of the Wadhwans to be attached; on Saturday, a Bombardier business jet was seized. The valuation of the seized properties is yet to be ascertaine­d, but it is estimated to run into several hundred crores. The fraud at PMC is estimated at ~4365 crore.

“Our probe will be focused on the money laundering aspect and on recovering of stolen assets. We have to establish the money trail and probe where it has been diverted,” an ED official said. “We are identifyin­g properties, especially movable assets... We have found deposits worth ₹1.50 crore of Wadhawans.”

The ED is also scanning a few properties in London and Dubai to ascertain if they are linked with Wadhawans.

ED has also begun looking into the ownership of HDIL building in Bandra (east). “We will attach if it’s free of encumbranc­e,” said the officer. The agency has, until now, attached 15 cars belonging to the Wadhawans, including a Mercedes Benz, Bentley and Rolls Royce.

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