Kharge calls out govt’s double standards citing Choksi case
Fugitive jeweller Mehul Choksi removed from the Interpol database of Red Corner Notices while Opposition leaders remained on the radar of the CBI and the ED.
The defence attorneys presented to the court a medical document that stated that Choksi is incapacitated and as a result, he was unable to attend the proceeding
The trial of the fugitive businessman Mehul Choksi, who is wanted in India in the Rs 13,500 crore Punjab National Bank (PNB) fraud case has been adjourned to 25 June due to a decline in his health condition, local media reported.
The trial was expected to begin in the Roseau Magistrate Court on Monday, Dominica News Online, a news outlet in Caribbean island said.
At the hearing, two of Dominica’s top criminal attorneys were added to Choksi’s legal team for this matter. Zena Moore-Dyer and her daughter Gina Dyer-Munro have joined Julien Prevost, Wayne Norde, and Cara Shillingford-Marsh.
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The defence attorneys presented to the court a medical document which stated that Choksi is incapacitated and as a result, he was unable to attend the proceeding, it said.
It further said that the prosecution team also saw the addition of Harpreet Singh Giani, an Indian-born lawyer based in London, who said he appears as a consultant to the prosecution on the matter.
The States case is led by the acting Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) Sherma Dalrymple, with assistance from attorney-at-law Lennox Lawrence, Jodie Luke and Heather Felix Evans.
On 2 June, the 62-year-old diamantaire pleaded not guilty to illegal entry in Dominica.
According to the charges of the police, Choksi entered Dominica illegally on 24 May, 2021, at Toucari Beach. However, his attorneys alleged that he was kidnapped, beaten and unwillingly brought to Dominica from Antigua.
Choksi is remanded in police custody at the Dominica China Friendship Hospital (DCFH) where he has been a patient since 29 May 2021.
On 11 June, a high court judge denied bail to the alleged fugitive on the basis that he is a “flight risk.”
Choksi had gone missing on 23 May from Antigua sparking a massive manhunt. He was reportedly captured in Dominica.
On 8 June, the Indian authorities described Choksi as an Indian citizen in its affidavit filed in Dominican High Court, saying that his application for renunciation of citizenship was “rejected”.
It also noted that he is therefore erroneously claiming renunciation of citizenship under the Citizenship Act, 1955.
He had taken the citizenship of Antigua in 2017 and left India on 4 January, 2018 days before the bank loan fraud case came to light.
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