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2025 (4) TMI 694 - HC - Money LaunderingMoney Laundering - Judicial interpretation and consideration - whether it is obligatory for the arresting officer / agency to produce the arrested person before the nearest Magistrate within 24 hours of his arrest or the term nearest Magistrate extends to jurisdictional Magistrate in relation to production of the accused within 24 hours of his arrest? - HELD THAT - Before search and seizure the authorised officer shall have the reasons to believe about the existence of clauses (i) to (iv) of Section 17(1) of the PMLA. Subsequent search and recovery of tainted money records or documents emboldens the authorized officer to arrest the offender in terms of Section 19 (1) of the PMLA. The petitioner has not disputed that the arresting officer recorded reasons for such believe under Section 19 (1) of the PMLA in black and white prepared and served copy of ground of arrest to the accused and entire fact was elaborately stated in the remand order for consideration of the learned CJM Patna. The impugned order was passed on the basis of the application filed by the ED and the documents regarding reasons to believe grounds of arrest etc. Therefore failure on the part of the learned Chief Judicial Magistrate to state the magic word reasons to believe contemplated in Section 19 (1) of the PMLA ought to be considered as an inadvertent omission and not an error which touches the root of the case. It will not be out of place to mention here that the petitioner did not make any prayer for issuance of writ in the nature of habeas corpus. Therefore this Court does not have any opportunity to deal with such an issue. Only issue which has been raised by the petitioner in course of his elaborate argument is that the detention of the accused is illegal being violative of Articles 21 and 22 (2) of the Constitution of India and Section 187 of the BNSS. Requirement of production of the accused before the nearest Magistrate in the locality where his arrest comes into play when a person who after arrest is required to be produced before the jurisdictional Judicial Magistrate is detained in a place which is far away from that jurisdiction and therefore cannot be produced before the jurisdictional Magistrate within 24 hours as mandated both by Article 22 (2) of the Constitution and by Section 57 of the Code of Criminal Procedure now Section 58 of the BNSS. In such circumstances he will be produced before the nearest Judicial Magistrate together with a copy of the entries in the diary. Therefore even before a Magistrate before whom a transit remand application is filed the mandatory requirement of Section 167 (1) Cr.P.C. now Section 187 of BNSS is that a copy of the entries in the case diary should also be produced. It is on the basis of the entries in the case diary under Section 167 (2) such nearest Judicial Magistrate while passing an order authorizing detention of person arrested for a term not exceeding 15 days in a whole. Where he has no jurisdiction to try the case and he finds further detention unnecessary he may order the accused to be produced before the Jurisdictional Magistrate. In the instant case the accused was produced within 24 hours of his arrest. Therefore the requirement of his production before the nearest Magistrate of the place of arrest was not mandatory. The right of an accused rests on the Constitutional and Statutory requirement of his production before the Magistrate within 24 hours. If the arresting officer finds that he may be produced before the jurisdictional Magistrate within 24 hours there is no necessity to produce the accused before the nearest Magistrate where he is arrested. The fundamental right of the accused is said to be violated if he is detained for more than 24 hours without being produced before the Magistrate. Conclusion - i) The nearest Magistrate in Article 22(2) does not exclusively mean the geographically closest Magistrate but includes the jurisdictional Magistrate if production within 24 hours is feasible. ii) The writ jurisdiction is not applicable to challenge remand orders unless there is a clear violation of constitutional or statutory rights. iii) The remand order issued by the CJM Patna is valid as it complied with the necessary legal requirements under the PMLA. Petition dismissed.
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