Fugitive Economic Offender
A fugitive economic offender is a legal status conferred under India's Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018, upon any individual against whom an arrest warrant has been issued by an Indian court for a scheduled offence—typically involving economic crimes such as money laundering or fraud exceeding ₹100 crore in value—who has deliberately fled the country to evade prosecution or, while abroad, refuses to return despite opportunities to do so.[1][2] The Act, enacted to counter the pattern of high-value economic defaulters escaping jurisdiction and undermining financial stability, empowers the Director of Investigation and Enforcement or authorized officers to apply to a Special Court for declaration of FEO status, following which the court may attach and confiscate the offender's properties, including proceeds of crime, benami assets, and equivalent value holdings in India or abroad, without requiring prior conviction.[3][4] Key provisions emphasize provisional attachment to prevent dissipation of assets, with confiscation becoming permanent upon FEO declaration, and allow for limited defenses such as proving the flight was not intentional or that prosecution is politically motivated, though the threshold for such claims remains stringent.[3] This mechanism addresses causal gaps in prior extradition-dependent recoveries, where delays and foreign legal hurdles often preserved offenders' ill-gotten gains, by prioritizing asset forfeiture as a deterrent independent of physical apprehension; empirical implementation has enabled confiscations totaling billions of rupees, though critiques highlight risks of overreach absent full due process, underscoring tensions between swift economic deterrence and procedural safeguards.[2][5]Definition and Legal Framework
Criteria for Designation as a Fugitive Economic Offender
The Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018 (FEOA) defines a fugitive economic offender under Section 2(1)(f) as any individual against whom an arrest warrant has been issued by a court in India in connection with a scheduled offence, who has either left the country to avoid criminal prosecution or, while abroad, refuses to return to face such prosecution.[3] This definition targets economic fugitives evading justice, emphasizing flight or refusal to submit to Indian jurisdiction as core elements.[2] Designation as a fugitive economic offender requires satisfaction of multiple threshold criteria by a Special Court under Section 12 of the FEOA. First, the underlying matter must involve a scheduled offence as enumerated in the Act's Schedule, which includes serious economic crimes such as those under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002; Sections 403 to 406 and 420 of the Indian Penal Code (dealing with dishonest misappropriation, criminal breach of trust, and cheating); the Companies Act, 2013 provisions on fraud; and offences under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 related to fraudulent initiation of proceedings.[3] These offences must generally involve a value of at least ₹100 crore, serving as a materiality threshold to focus on high-impact cases, though this limit does not apply to offences under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985.[2] Second, an application for declaration must be filed under Section 4 by the Director of Investigation and Enforcement (or an authorized officer) or the public prosecutor, based on reasonable belief that the individual meets the fugitive criteria.[3] The Special Court, upon hearing, issues notice to the alleged offender and assesses evidence of the arrest warrant, the act of fleeing or non-return, and the economic offence's nature.[2] Designation is not automatic but judicially determined, requiring the court to confirm that no other proceedings (e.g., under the Extradition Act, 1962) preclude it, ensuring procedural safeguards while prioritizing recovery of proceeds of crime.[3]- Arrest warrant issuance: Mandatory for a scheduled offence, verifying active criminal pursuit.[3]
- Evasion behavior: Explicit departure from India post-warrant or deliberate refusal to return despite requests, distinguishing from mere absence.[2]
- Economic threshold: ₹100 crore involvement for most scheduled offences, calibrated to address wilful defaulters and large-scale fraud without overreach into minor cases.[2]
Scope and Threshold Requirements
The Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018 (FEOA) delineates its scope to individuals accused of specified economic crimes who evade justice by fleeing India or refusing to return from abroad, enabling the confiscation of their assets to deter such conduct and facilitate recovery for affected parties.[3] The Act targets "fugitive economic offenders," defined as any individual against whom an arrest warrant has been issued by an Indian court for a scheduled offence, who has intentionally left the country to avoid criminal prosecution, or a foreign resident who declines to return despite valid summons.[3] Scheduled offences encompass a range of serious economic violations listed in the Act's Schedule, including offences under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002; Indian Penal Code provisions for cheating and criminal breach of trust; Companies Act, 2013 sections on fraud; and others such as counterfeiting currency or securities fraud, provided they meet the financial threshold.[3] A key threshold requirement is the minimum value of the offence or aggregate offences, set at one hundred crore rupees (approximately $12 million USD as of enactment), ensuring the Act applies only to high-value cases where the proceeds or potential loss justify expedited asset attachment and confiscation.[3][5] This limit, justified by the government as targeting wilful defaulters in large-scale frauds like those seen in cases exceeding this amount, excludes smaller economic violations to focus resources on systemic threats to India's financial stability.[5] The threshold applies to the total value involved in the scheduled offence or offences, calculated based on the economic impact such as defrauded amounts or laundered proceeds, as determined by the Director under the Act in coordination with investigative agencies.[3] The scope excludes corporate entities, applying solely to natural persons to avoid broader disruptions to business operations, though properties held through companies or benami transactions can be traced and confiscated if linked to the offender.[3] Procedural safeguards within the scope require the public prosecutor to apply for designation to a Special Court under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, with opportunities for the accused to contest via video link from abroad, balancing enforcement against due process.[3] This framework, enacted on July 31, 2018, addresses gaps in prior laws like the Prevention of Money Laundering Act by enabling non-conviction-based confiscation specifically for fugitives in qualifying economic crimes.[3]Legislative History
Economic Offenses and Fugitive Challenges Pre-2018
Prior to the enactment of the Fugitive Economic Offenders Act in 2018, India grappled with a surge in economic offenses involving large-scale bank frauds and willful loan defaults, often exceeding Rs 100 crore, perpetrated by individuals who subsequently fled the country to evade prosecution. These offenses typically encompassed money laundering under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002, and cheating under the Indian Penal Code, with public sector banks suffering non-performing assets (NPAs) from defaulters who diverted funds for personal gain. By March 2018, over 30 businessmen under investigation by agencies like the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and Enforcement Directorate (ED) had absconded, highlighting systemic vulnerabilities in pursuing high-value offenders.[6] A prominent example was Vijay Mallya, former chairman of Kingfisher Airlines, who departed India on March 2, 2016, amid probes into defaults totaling approximately Rs 9,000 crore owed to a consortium of banks. Mallya, accused of fraud and money laundering, relocated to the United Kingdom, where extradition efforts faced protracted legal battles, including appeals citing human rights concerns over Indian prison conditions. Such cases underscored pre-2018 reliance on the Extradition Act, 1962, which proved inadequate against fugitives exploiting jurisdictional gaps, with India's extradition success rate hovering around 36% as of 2017, yielding only 62 successes from 110 requests.[7][8][9] Key challenges included evidentiary delays in compiling dossiers for foreign courts, requirements for dual criminality (proving the offense was punishable in the host country), and exceptions for political or fiscal offenses under bilateral treaties, which often classified economic crimes as civil matters. Fugitives frequently transferred assets abroad via shell companies or benami holdings, evading attachment under existing laws like the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, which required the offender's presence or conviction for effective confiscation. Between 2002 and 2017, only 13 economic offenders were extradited, while 28 remained under pursuit, allowing perpetrators to retain proceeds and prolong investigations that hampered bank recoveries and economic stability.[9][6] These issues stemmed from the absence of a specialized framework for non-conviction-based asset forfeiture, forcing reliance on cumbersome civil recovery suits or mutual legal assistance treaties that yielded limited cooperation from destinations like the UK and UAE. Procedural hurdles, such as incomplete documentation or host-country scrutiny of India's judicial processes, further enabled offenders to challenge requests on grounds of potential "inhuman treatment," as seen in Mallya's case involving Arthur Road Jail. Overall, the pre-2018 regime prioritized extradition over parallel asset measures, resulting in minimal deterrence and substantial financial losses estimated in thousands of crores from fugitive-led NPAs.[9][6]Enactment of the Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018
The Fugitive Economic Offenders Bill, 2018 was introduced in the Lok Sabha on March 12, 2018, by the Minister of Finance, Arun Jaitley, as a measure to address the evasion of legal processes by individuals involved in economic offenses exceeding ₹100 crore who had fled India.[10] [5] This legislative initiative followed the Cabinet's approval of the bill on March 1, 2018, prompted by high-profile cases such as the Punjab National Bank fraud, where offenders like Nirav Modi and Mehul Choksi had absconded abroad, undermining recovery efforts by banks and enforcement agencies.[11] Due to the prorogation of Parliament before the bill could be passed, the President promulgated the Fugitive Economic Offenders Ordinance, 2018, on April 21, 2018, to enable immediate provisional attachment of assets and other deterrent actions against such offenders.[12] The ordinance lapsed after six weeks from the reconvening of Parliament but laid the groundwork for the bill's prioritization in the monsoon session.[13] The bill was passed by the Lok Sabha on July 19, 2018, and by the Rajya Sabha on July 25, 2018, without significant amendments, reflecting cross-party support for strengthening asset recovery mechanisms amid ongoing economic fraud probes.[14] The President granted assent on July 31, 2018, enacting it as the Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018 (Act No. 17 of 2018), which replaced the ordinance and empowered special courts for adjudication.[1]Integration with Post-2018 Reforms and New Criminal Laws
The Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018 (FEOA) operates alongside post-2018 legislative enhancements to India's anti-money laundering and economic crime framework, particularly through amendments to the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 (PMLA). The Finance (No. 2) Act, 2019, effective from August 1, 2019, inserted Section 2(1)(fa) in PMLA, defining a "fugitive economic offender" in alignment with FEOA's criteria under Section 2(f), thereby enabling provisional attachment of properties under PMLA Section 8 for proceeds of crime linked to such fugitives. This synergy allows the Enforcement Directorate to pursue parallel actions: provisional measures under PMLA pending FEOA's non-conviction-based confiscation, reducing evasion risks while FEOA adjudication proceeds in special courts established under PMLA.[15] The enactment of three new criminal laws—Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023 (BNS), Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 (BNSS), and Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 (BSA)—effective July 1, 2024, further integrates FEOA by updating the substantive and procedural underpinnings of its scheduled offenses. FEOA's Schedule lists economic offenses primarily under the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (IPC), such as Sections 403 (dishonest misappropriation), 406 (criminal breach of trust), and 420 (cheating), alongside provisions from PMLA, the Companies Act, 2013, and others, requiring a minimum involvement of ₹1 crore for applicability. With BNS replacing IPC, these offenses map to corresponding provisions—e.g., IPC Section 420 to BNS Section 318(4), IPC Section 406 to BNS Section 316—ensuring FEOA's continued relevance without necessitating amendments, as the Act applies to "scheduled offences" as defined in the operative laws.[3][16] BNSS complements FEOA's asset mechanisms by expanding general criminal procedure powers under its Section 107, which authorizes courts to attach any property (domestic or foreign) suspected of being alienated to obstruct justice, upon application by public prosecutors in cognizable offenses. Unlike FEOA's targeted confiscation for declared fugitives (Section 12), which vests assets in the central government free of encumbrances, BNSS attachments serve as interim safeguards during investigation or trial, applicable to a wider array of cases including those under BNS economic provisions. This broader authority under BNSS can support FEOA proceedings by preserving assets pre-declaration, though special courts retain primacy for FEOA-specific adjudications, highlighting FEOA's specialized role amid enhanced procedural tools. Critics note potential overlaps may lead to jurisdictional conflicts, but judicial precedents emphasize harmonious construction to prioritize recovery in economic crimes.[17]Key Provisions and Procedures
Application and Adjudication Process
The application for declaring an individual a fugitive economic offender is initiated by the Director of the Enforcement Directorate or an authorized Deputy Director, filing before a Special Court designated under the Prevention of Money-Laundering Act, 2002.[3] The application, governed by Section 4 of the Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018, must detail the reasons supporting the belief that the individual qualifies as such an offender, including evidence of flight from India to evade criminal prosecution for a scheduled offense involving at least ₹100 crore, lack of intent to return, and cooperation with foreign authorities only to avoid proceedings.[3] It requires specifics on the offender's whereabouts, a comprehensive list of proceeds of crime, attached or attachable properties in India or abroad (including benami holdings), their estimated values, and any persons claiming interests therein.[3][6] Provisional attachment of properties may precede or accompany the application, permissible without prior court approval if followed by filing within 30 days; otherwise, court sanction is mandatory, with attachments valid for up to 180 days pending adjudication.[6] The Special Court then issues a notice under Section 10 to the alleged offender and interested parties, mandating appearance within six weeks and warning of potential declaration and confiscation upon non-compliance.[3] Service occurs via electronic means (e.g., email tied to PAN or Aadhaar), publication in newspapers of wide circulation, or through notified authorities in countries with which India has mutual legal assistance treaties; international fugitives receive notice through designated channels to ensure due process.[3] Adjudication proceeds under Section 11, where personal appearance by the alleged offender terminates the process. Representation through counsel grants one week to submit a reply, after which the court assesses evidence.[3] Absent appearance, if the court confirms notice service or evasion attempts, it records reasons and advances ex-parte, prioritizing expeditious resolution to prevent asset dissipation.[3] The hearing evaluates compliance with statutory criteria, including non-residence in India and willful avoidance of arrest warrants or summons in qualifying economic offenses.[3] Upon satisfaction of these elements, Section 12 empowers the Special Court to declare the individual a fugitive economic offender via a reasoned order, simultaneously directing confiscation of identified proceeds of crime and equivalent-value properties if direct traces evade detection.[3] Confiscation safeguards bona fide third-party interests, requiring identification, quantification, and valuation of assets; for overseas holdings, the court may issue requests to contracting states under international conventions.[3] The process adheres to forms and filing manners prescribed in the Declaration of Fugitive Economic Offenders (Forms and Manner of Filing Application) Rules, 2018, ensuring procedural uniformity.[18] Declarations impose civil disabilities, such as ineligibility for public contracts or licenses, reinforcing deterrence without criminal conviction prerequisites.[3]Asset Confiscation Mechanisms
Under the Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018 (FEOA), asset confiscation operates as a non-conviction-based mechanism designed to prevent fugitive economic offenders from deriving benefits from proceeds of crime, with properties vesting in the Central Government free of encumbrances.[3] The process commences with provisional attachment under Section 5, where the Director of Enforcement or an authorized officer may provisionally attach any property believed to be proceeds of crime, benami property, or other assets linked to the scheduled offence, provided an application for declaration as a fugitive economic offender is filed within 30 days.[3] Such attachments remain valid for 180 days, subject to extension by the Special Court upon application.[3] Following the application under Section 4, the Special Court issues notice to the alleged offender and interested parties under Section 10, requiring appearance within six weeks; failure to appear triggers ex-parte proceedings as per Section 11, where the court records reasons for proceeding in the offender's absence.[3] Upon satisfaction that the criteria for designation are met, Section 12 empowers the Special Court to declare the individual a fugitive economic offender and issue a confiscation order covering proceeds of crime (whether in India or abroad), benami properties in India, and any other property owned by the offender in India.[3] The order separately lists exempted properties where third parties hold legitimate, proportionate interests, ensuring such assets are not confiscated without due consideration.[3] Confiscated properties vest immediately in the Central Government, enabling their management and disposal to recover value for creditors and victims.[3] Section 15 mandates appointment of an Administrator by the Central Government to oversee these assets, prohibiting disposal for 90 days post-confiscation to allow for claims or appeals.[3] Procedures for attachment, search, seizure, and management are further detailed in subsidiary rules, including the Fugitive Economic Offenders (Manner of Attachment of Property) Rules, 2018, and the Fugitive Economic Offenders (Manner and Conditions for Receipt and Management of Confiscated Properties) Rules, 2018, enforced by the Directorate of Enforcement.[18] This framework prioritizes expeditious recovery, bypassing traditional conviction requirements to address the challenges of offenders evading jurisdiction.[3]Remedies and Appeals for Designated Offenders
Under the Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018, a person declared a fugitive economic offender (FEO) by a Special Court may challenge the declaration or associated orders, such as property confiscation, primarily through an appeal mechanism outlined in Section 17. This provision allows any aggrieved party—including the designated offender, the Director of Investigation, or affected third parties—to appeal non-interlocutory judgments or orders of the Special Court to the High Court having jurisdiction over the area where the Special Court sits. Appeals lie on both facts and law, providing scope for substantive review of evidence, procedural fairness, and the criteria for designation, such as proof of flight to evade prosecution and involvement in scheduled offenses exceeding ₹100 crore.[3][6] The appeal must be filed within 30 days from the date of the Special Court's order, though the High Court may condone delays up to a maximum of 90 days if sufficient cause is demonstrated, emphasizing the Act's intent for swift resolution to prevent prolonged evasion tactics. No appeals are entertained beyond 90 days, reflecting a balance between judicial safeguards and the need to deter economic fugitives by limiting dilatory challenges. During pendency, the status quo on attached or confiscated properties may be maintained, as the Director can seek to withhold release under Section 12(10) for up to 90 days if an appeal is anticipated or filed. Successful appeals have the potential to vacate the FEO declaration, leading to release of seized assets unless overridden by concurrent criminal proceedings.[3][19] Section 18 imposes a strict bar on civil courts entertaining suits or proceedings concerning matters adjudicated under the Act, including challenges to designations or confiscations, thereby channeling all remedies exclusively through the designated appellate route and prohibiting parallel litigation or injunctions against enforcement actions. This jurisdictional exclusivity aims to streamline proceedings but has drawn critique for potentially curtailing broader due process avenues for offenders who return voluntarily or through extradition. Absent explicit provisions for internal review by the Special Court post-declaration, the High Court appeal serves as the primary safeguard, with further recourse potentially available via special leave petitions to the Supreme Court under Article 136 of the Constitution, though not guaranteed and subject to judicial discretion.[3][20] In practice, the fugitive nature of designated offenders complicates access to remedies, as failure to appear before the Special Court under Section 10 (requiring response within six weeks of notice) solidifies the declaration, and appeals may require representation through authorized agents or post-return compliance. No empirical data indicates widespread successful appeals overturning designations as of 2025, underscoring the Act's deterrent design over expansive remedial options.[3][10]Notable Declarations and Cases
Initial Declarations (2018-2020)
The first individual declared a fugitive economic offender under the Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018, was Vijay Mallya on January 5, 2019, by a special court under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act in Mumbai.[21][22] Mallya, former chairman of Kingfisher Airlines, faced investigations for defaulting on loans totaling approximately Rs 9,000 crore extended by a consortium of Indian banks to his grounded airline, which collapsed in 2012 amid operational failures and mounting debts.[23] The Enforcement Directorate (ED) initiated proceedings after Mallya fled to the United Kingdom in March 2016, ignoring non-bailable arrest warrants and court summons related to money laundering charges.[21] This declaration enabled provisional attachment of his assets, including properties valued at over Rs 14,000 crore across India and abroad, as part of efforts to recover public funds.[22] On December 5, 2019, Nirav Modi became the second person designated as a fugitive economic offender by the same Mumbai special court, following an ED application filed in July 2018.[24][25] Modi, a diamond merchant, was implicated in a Rs 13,000 crore fraud at Punjab National Bank, involving fraudulent letters of undertaking issued through collusion with bank officials between 2011 and 2017, which facilitated unauthorized credit for his firms like Firestar Diamond.[24] He absconded from India on January 1, 2018, shortly before the scam surfaced publicly, and was later arrested in London in March 2019 while contesting extradition.[25] The court's ruling facilitated confiscation proceedings for Modi's assets, estimated at over Rs 6,000 crore in India, underscoring the Act's application to cases of systemic banking fraud enabled by insider complicity.[24] These initial declarations marked the Act's early operational phase, targeting high-value defaulters whose flight had previously hindered asset recovery under existing laws like the PMLA. No additional declarations occurred in 2020 within this period, as proceedings against other figures, such as the Sandesara brothers in the Sterling Biotech case, extended into subsequent years.[26] The cases highlighted challenges in international cooperation, with both offenders residing abroad and resisting repatriation, yet enabled domestic asset attachments totaling billions of rupees to mitigate losses to public-sector banks.[23][25]Declarations and Pending Cases (2021-2025)
In 2021, a Mumbai special court declared Hajra Iqbal Memon, the widow of deceased gangster Iqbal Mirchi, along with their sons Junaid Iqbal Memon and Asif Iqbal Memon, as fugitive economic offenders under the FEOA.[27][28] The declarations stemmed from money laundering investigations linked to Mirchi's alleged involvement in drug trafficking and hawala operations, with properties attached valued at over ₹2,000 crore across India, Dubai, and the UK.[27] Subsequent declarations included Ramachandran Viswanathan in June 2023, associated with a bank fraud case involving evasion of over ₹100 crore.[15] In July 2023, Ramanujam Sesarathnam and Sudarsan Venkatraman were declared FEOs for their roles in a ₹526 crore loan default linked to a Chennai-based firm.[15] Pushpesh Kumar Baid followed in January 2024, tied to a money laundering probe exceeding ₹1,000 crore in fraudulent loans.[15] By March 2025, the Enforcement Directorate reported 14 total FEO declarations since the Act's inception, with assets worth ₹930.76 crore confiscated under FEOA provisions.[15] Additional declarations in 2025 included Bhupesh Arora in January for involvement in a ₹300 crore-plus evasion scheme, and Sanjay Bhandari in July, a UK-based arms dealer accused of tax evasion and laundering over ₹1,000 crore through offshore entities, prompting attachment of his global properties.[15][29] Bhandari's designation faced immediate challenge in the Delhi High Court, highlighting procedural disputes over evidence admissibility.[30]| Declared FEO | Date | Key Allegations | Attached Assets (Approx.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hajra, Junaid, Asif Memon | Feb 26, 2021 | Money laundering via hawala and drug proceeds | ₹2,000+ crore (properties in India, UAE, UK)[27] |
| Ramachandran Viswanathan | Jun 8, 2023 | Bank fraud and loan default | Not specified in public filings[15] |
| Ramanujam Sesarathnam, Sudarsan Venkatraman | Jul 29, 2023 | ₹526 crore corporate loan fraud | Firm-related assets[15] |
| Pushpesh Kumar Baid | Jan 5, 2024 | ₹1,000+ crore fraudulent lending | Bank-attached properties[15] |
| Bhupesh Arora | Jan 22, 2025 | Evasion and laundering scheme | ₹300+ crore[15] |
| Sanjay Bhandari | Jul 5, 2025 | Tax evasion, offshore laundering | Global assets under attachment[29] |
Enforcement Mechanisms
Role of the Directorate of Enforcement
The Directorate of Enforcement (ED) functions as the nodal agency for implementing the Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018, with primary responsibility for investigating potential fugitive economic offenders, initiating proceedings for asset attachment and confiscation, and pursuing related enforcement actions.[33] Under Section 4 of the Act, the Director of Enforcement or an authorized officer not below the rank of Deputy Director is empowered to file applications before a Special Court seeking declaration of an individual as a fugitive economic offender, provided an arrest warrant has been issued in a scheduled offence involving proceeds exceeding 10 million rupees.[3] Section 5 authorizes the ED to provisionally attach properties of the targeted individual, with prior Special Court approval, to secure assets against disposal or dissipation during proceedings; such attachments remain valid for 180 days unless extended.[3] For investigative purposes under Section 6, ED officers exercise powers akin to a civil court under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, including summoning witnesses, enforcing attendance, compelling production of documents, receiving evidence on affidavit, and issuing commissions for examinations.[3] The ED further holds authority under Section 7 for surveys to identify concealed properties or documents and under Section 8 for searches and seizures, mirroring procedures under the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, where reasonable belief exists of evidence or proceeds linked to scheduled offences.[3] Post-declaration as a fugitive economic offender, the ED facilitates confiscation of attached properties under Section 10, manages their disposal through auction or realization to recover public dues, and coordinates international cooperation by issuing letters of request to contracting states for extradition or asset recovery under the Act's rules.[18][3] These mechanisms enable the ED to trace and immobilize illicit assets, deterring evasion by prioritizing recovery over prolonged criminal trials.[33]International Extradition and Cooperation Efforts
The Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018 (FEOA) complements India's extradition framework by enabling the provisional attachment and confiscation of assets belonging to declared fugitives, thereby exerting economic pressure to facilitate their return for prosecution, even as formal extradition proceedings advance under bilateral treaties.[34] India maintains extradition treaties or arrangements with 48 countries, including key destinations for fugitives such as the United Kingdom, United States, United Arab Emirates, and Canada, which cover offenses like fraud and money laundering central to FEO declarations.[35] These treaties, governed by the Extradition Act, 1962, require dual criminality and reciprocity, with requests routed through diplomatic channels supported by warrants, evidence summaries, and statements.[36] Enforcement agencies, including the Enforcement Directorate (ED) and Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), coordinate with the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) to issue over 300 pending extradition requests for economic fugitives as of October 2025, prioritizing time-bound diplomatic interventions.[37] Notable cooperation efforts include a 2025 CBI conference on extradition challenges, which resolved to enhance bilateral information-sharing and mutual legal assistance treaties (MLATs) for tracing hidden assets and expediting arrests.[38] India has pursued a nine-point agenda against fugitive economic offenders in G20 forums, advocating for global asset recovery mechanisms and denying safe havens, which has led to strengthened ties with countries like the UAE for joint operations.[39] In practice, FEOA designations have supported extradition in high-profile cases, such as Vijay Mallya and Nirav Modi, both declared fugitives in 2019 and facing UK proceedings under the India-UK extradition treaty of 1992, though delays persist due to appeals on human rights grounds.[40] Similarly, Mehul Choksi's 2022 FEO status prompted intensified cooperation with Antigua and Barbuda via MLATs, resulting in his deportation to Dominica amid citizenship disputes, highlighting diplomatic leverage from asset freezes exceeding ₹6,000 crore.[41] Despite these advances, challenges include foreign courts' scrutiny of evidence admissibility and fugitives' acquisition of third-country citizenships, with only a fraction of the 24 FEOA proceedings since 2018 yielding returns.[42] Union Home Minister Amit Shah emphasized in October 2025 the need for zero-tolerance diplomacy to ensure fugitives face no sanctuary, underscoring ongoing bilateral negotiations for streamlined processes.[43]Effectiveness and Impact
Asset Recoveries and Deterrent Effects
As of May 2025, the Enforcement Directorate (ED) has declared 14 individuals as fugitive economic offenders under the Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018 (FEOA), leading to the confiscation of assets valued at more than ₹900 crore.[40] Earlier parliamentary data from March 2025 reported ₹749.89 crore confiscated under the Act, reflecting progressive enforcement actions primarily targeting properties linked to wilful defaulters in banking fraud cases.[44] These recoveries, while modest relative to the scale of underlying economic crimes (often exceeding thousands of crores in defaults), demonstrate the Act's operational mechanism for non-conviction-based seizure of proceeds of crime, benami properties, and equivalent value assets within India.[18] The FEOA's core deterrent mechanism lies in authorizing confiscation of an offender's Indian assets upon declaration as a fugitive, irrespective of ongoing criminal trials, thereby imposing immediate financial costs on evasion without requiring physical apprehension.[45] Proponents, including government officials, assert this provision raises the opportunity cost of flight for high-value economic actors, as evidenced by the Act's role in high-profile cases like those involving Vijay Mallya and Nirav Modi, where asset seizures have partially offset public sector bank losses exceeding ₹15,000 crore collectively.[46] However, empirical quantification of deterrence—such as reduced rates of abscondment post-2018—remains sparse, with only 24 proceedings initiated against potential offenders by early 2025, suggesting either targeted application or insufficient jurisdictional reach to alter broader behavioral patterns among potential fugitives.[42] Analyses indicate the Act's signal value in prioritizing asset recovery over extradition may discourage asset dissipation abroad, though systemic challenges like international cooperation delays limit verifiable causal impacts.[47]Empirical Data on Declarations and Outcomes
As of March 31, 2025, the Enforcement Directorate (ED) had filed applications under the Fugitive Economic Offenders Act, 2018 (FEOA) against 24 individuals, with special courts declaring 14 of them as fugitive economic offenders (FEOs).[15] This includes high-profile cases such as Vijay Mallya, declared on January 5, 2019, and Nirav Modi, declared on December 5, 2019, while the application against Mehul Choksi, filed on July 10, 2018, remained sub-judice.[15] On April 30, 2025, a special court in Lucknow declared Rashid Naseem, promoter of Shine City Group, as an FEO in connection with a ₹3,735 crore fraud case, bringing the total declarations to at least 15 by mid-2025.[48] Outcomes have included the confiscation of assets valued at ₹930.76 crore under FEOA provisions as of March 31, 2025, with provisional attachments exceeding ₹20,000 crore sought before courts.[15] However, actual restitutions to victims or banks from FEO-related cases remain modest; for instance, by July 2024, recoveries linked to the initial nine declarations totaled ₹725.90 crore.[49] In terms of repatriation, only one declared FEO had returned to India to face proceedings by early 2025, indicating limited deterrent impact on flight.[15] Pending applications, such as those against Sanjay Bhandari and Mehul Choksi, highlight ongoing judicial delays, with proceedings against Choksi continuing as of September 2025 without a final declaration.[32]| Metric | Value as of March 31, 2025 | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Applications Filed | 24 individuals | Primarily against wilful defaulters in banking frauds exceeding ₹100 crore.[15] |
| Declarations as FEO | 14 | Increased to 15 post-Rashid Naseem ruling in April 2025.[15][48] |
| Assets Confiscated | ₹930.76 crore | Proceeds of crime and equivalent value properties.[15] |
| Returns/Prosecutions | 1 individual returned | Rare success in compelling physical return.[15] |