Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Flight risk of economic offenders not a ‘national phenomenon’: SC

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

unable to accept the contention that ‘flight risk’ of economic offenders should be looked at as a national phenomenon

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court Tuesday refused to accept the CBI contention that ‘flight risk’ of economic offenders be viewed as a “national phenomenon” because several such persons including industrial­ist Vijay Mallya have fled the country.

The apex court, which granted bail to senior Congress leader and former finance minister P Chidambara­m in the INX Media corruption case, said there cannot be a “straight-jacket formula” for this so as to deny bail to an accused due to conduct of other offenders.

“At this stage itself, it is necessary for us to indicate that we are unable to accept the contention of the Solicitor General that ‘flight risk’ of economic offenders should be looked at as a national phenomenon and be dealt with in that manner merely because certain other offenders have flown out of the country,” said a bench headed by Justice R Banumathi.

SC BENCH

The bench, also comprising justices A S Bopanna and Hrishikesh Roy, said the issue regarding an accused being a ‘flight risk’ has to the considered on a individual basis and being uninfluenc­ed by the unconnecte­d cases.

“The same cannot, in our view, be put in a straight-jacket formula so as to deny bail to the one who is before the court, due to the conduct of other offenders, if the person under considerat­ion is otherwise entitled to bail on the merits of his own case,” the bench said while setting aside the September 30 verdict of the Delhi High Court which had denied bail to Chidambara­m.

“Hence, in our view, such considerat­ion including as to ‘flight risk’ is to be made on individual basis being uninfluenc­ed by the unconnecte­d cases, more so, when the personal liberty is involved,” the top court said.

While opposing Chidambara­m’s bail plea in the apex court, Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, appearing for the CBI, had argued that the high court had erred in saying that the Congress leader was not a ‘flight risk’ as country is facing a problem where persons accused in financial frauds and economic offences are fleeing India.

“We are not comparing anyone with this individual (Chidambara­m) but one of them was even a Member of Parliament,” Mehta had argued, in an apparent reference to Mallya, who owed over ~ 9,000 crore to banks and fled India in 2016.

In its 27-page judgement granting bail to Chidambara­m, the apex court said he is neither a “flight risk” nor is there a possibilit­y of “his abscondenc­e from the trial”.

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