HC dismisses drug 'kingpin' Jaffer Sadiq’s plea citing no infirmities in session court’s remand order

The division bench of Justice SM Subramaniam and Justice V Sivagnanam wondered that detaining of Jaffer Sadiq may be illegal, but how can the order of the session judge or any competent magistrate be illegal.

Update: 2024-09-12 01:55 GMT

Jaffer Sadiq (File)

CHENNAI: The Madras High Court shot down alleged drug kingpin Jaffer Sadiq’s plea challenging the remand order issued in connection to the money laundering case by noting that no infirmity or perversity was found in the order issued by the principal sessions court, Chennai.

The division bench of Justice SM Subramaniam and Justice V Sivagnanam wondered that detaining of Jaffer Sadiq may be illegal, but how can the order of the session judge or any competent magistrate be illegal.

Senior counsel Abudu Kumar Rajarathnam, representing Jaffer, submitted that it is non-est and illegal to execute a prisoner-in-transit (PT) warrant to produce his client, as he was granted bail in the NDPS (Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act) case even before the execution of the PT warrant.

The counsel argued that it was technically illegal to detain him while he was under bail. He said that the mere production of the accused is illegal, so the order to remand is also illegal.

The bench intervened and observed that the remand order was issued only based on the submissions and contentions of the investigation agency. Hence, the remand order cannot be challenged only on the grounds of illegal detention.

The counsel submitted that without the application of mind, the sessions court issued a remand order, which is an abuse of process and against the Constitutional provisions, he added.

After the submission, the bench observed that since there is no infirmity or perversity found in the remand order issued by the principal sessions court Chennai on July 15, and there is a lack of ground in the present case, the bench dismissed the petition.

The Directorate of Enforcement formally arrested Jaffer under PMLA on July 26 after the Narcotics Control Bureau arrested him for smuggling pseudoephedrine to Australia and New Zealand and confined him in Tihar prison. However, he was granted bail in the drug case. He was produced before the principal sessions court, Chennai, by issuing PT warrant, and remanded.

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