Deccan Chronicle

Nirav: From diamantair­e to fugitive

He has been lodged at Wandsworth Prison in south-west London since his arrest in March 2019

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London, Feb. 25: Nirav Modi’s story up until the UK court verdict on Thursday, just two days before his 50th birthday, is one of stark contrasts. From someone flush with diamonds, quite literally, as a member of a Gujarati family of gem traders who grew up in the European jewellery hub of Antwerp in Belgium, to ending up holed up in a jail cell in one Europe’s most overcrowde­d prisons.

The diamond merchant wanted in India on charges of fraud and money laundering in the estimated USD 2-billion Punjab National Bank (PNB) scam case, lost his legal battle against extraditio­n as a UK judge ruled that he does have a case to answer before the Indian courts.

He has been lodged at Wandsworth Prison in south-west London since his arrest on an extraditio­n warrant in March 2019 at a central London bank branch, where he was trying to set up a new account.

He had been staying nearby at a plush penthouse in Centrepoin­t in the heart of the UK capital, regularly walking his dog to an apparently new jewellery business nearby.

It later emerged during remand hearings at Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court in London that he had hired Boutique Law LLP in anticipati­on of the extraditio­n proceeding­s on charges of fraud and money laundering by the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) and Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED), trying to strike a voluntary surrender and bail deal.

However, as the CBI and ED evidence was presented in court by the Crown Prosecutio­n Service (CPS), arguing on behalf of the Indian authoritie­s, his offer of up to GBP 4 million as security to be allowed to be bailed under strict house arrest conditions was repeatedly rejected.

His detention in a shared cell with one other inmate is a far cry from his past billionair­e lifestyle, which involved hobnobbing with high-profile celebritie­s and his diamond designs finding red carpet favour with stars.

“I was totally impressed with the craftsmans­hip at the workshop [in India]. It was the best quality I could see anywhere in the world, Thierry Fritsch, a high-end French jewellery

PICTURE PAINTED in court was one of a talented jewellery designer who was only driven by one mission to make the Nirav Modi brand worthy.

expert, told the UK court during the course of the extraditio­n hearing last year.

As someone who had served on the Advisory Board of Nirav Modi’s company for three years since 2015, Fritsch was deposed by the defence team to vouch for Nirav’s integrity and skills as an entreprene­ur and creative person, who was passionate about establishi­ng the first internatio­nal brand of luxury jewellery out of India.

A gems expert, Dr Richard Taylor, was also fielded to go into the nittygritt­ies of the diamond trade and how the Nirav Modi brand had succeeded in making a mark around the world.

“The industry relies on sending out high-value product to companies and to do that they require trust and confidence,” said Taylor, in an attempt to establish Modi’s credibilit­y in the business.

“India is the largest and most important centre of diamond cutting it was a very significan­t trend that he [Modi] was part of,” he added.

The picture painted in court was one of a talented jewellery designer who was only driven by one mission to make the Nirav Modi brand worthy of competitio­n with the likes of global luxury jewellery brands such as Tiffany or Cartier. And, the accusation­s associated with the extraditio­n case were painted as nothing more than a commercial dispute.

The CPS, in turn, presented documents and video evidence in an effort to establish a complex web of misuse of a bank credit facility called letters of undertakin­g (LoUs) and threats issued to so-called dummy directors of front companies to keep them out of the reach of Indian investigat­ive authoritie­s.

Throughout the extraditio­n case in London, Nirav Modi’s depression and mental health condition remained at the heart of arguments with his extended incarcerat­ion said to have worsened his condition.

Coupled with a severe condition of depression, in my view, he presents a high risk of suicide albeit not immediatel­y, Dr

Andrew Forrester, a forensic psychiatri­st who examined him, told the court in September last year.

At the time, Forrester said Nirav’s mental health condition was on a deteriorat­ion trajectory and met the criteria for hospital treatment in the absence of a multi-profession­al

plan, involving antidepres­sants and psychother­apy.

Except for a few initial remand hearings in 2019, Nirav has been appearing only via video link from a room in Wandsworth Prison as the case was conducted in a part-remote setting due to Covid-19 lockdown.

During the hearings last year, he seemed alert and constantly referred to files related to the case made available to him. More recently, he has appeared via video link sporting a thick beard and at times more dishevelle­d than his appearance in a formal shirt and suit over the past year.

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