ED is Not a “Super Cop”, Rules Madras HC
The Madras High Court has drawn a firm line against the overreach of the Enforcement Directorate (ED). The Court emphasized that the ED cannot function like a “loitering munition”—investigating cases without a legally valid starting point.
In a strong judgment delivered by Justice M.S. Ramesh and Justice V. Lakshminarayanan, the Court ruled that the ED’s powers can only be activated when a predicate offence—an offence listed in the PMLA Schedule—is present and leads to actual proceeds of crime.
The Core of the Judgment
The ruling came in a plea by R.K.M. Powergen Private Limited, challenging the ED’s freezing of its fixed deposits. The ED was acting on alleged irregularities in coal block allocation to the company. But the Court found no foundational offence that would justify ED’s involvement under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA).
“The ED is not a super cop to investigate anything and everything,” the judges stated. They likened the ED to a limpet mine—powerful, but inert without its target. “The ship is the predicate offence. If there’s no ship, the limpet cannot work,” the Court remarked.
No Predicate Offence, No ED Jurisdiction
According to the Court, mere suspicion or information is not enough. There must be:
- A crime covered under the PMLA schedule.
- Proof that the crime generated proceeds of crime.
Only after these two conditions are met can the ED begin its probe.
Legal Boundaries for ED
The Court invoked Section 66(2) of the PMLA. It clarifies that if ED comes across other violations during its probe, it must pass them on to the relevant agencies. The ED cannot act as a parallel investigative body or go beyond its statutory role.
“If the act is required to be done in a certain way, it must be done in that way and in no other,” the bench said, reiterating the legal principle from Taylor v. Taylor.
Background of the Case
RKM Powergen was allocated a coal block in Chhattisgarh. But it was later found that the block fell within a reserved forest zone, making mining illegal. A PIL in the Supreme Court led to the cancellation of such allocations. The CBI investigated and filed a closure report citing “mistake of fact”.
Later, the CBI filed a supplementary chargesheet. Based on this, the ED initiated proceedings and froze RKM’s fixed deposits. However, the High Court found no link between these deposits and any “proceeds of crime”.

Caption: Enforcement Directorate team during a financial investigation.
Alt Text: ED officers working on documents
Description: ED officers reviewing evidence during a PMLA-related investigation.
Company’s Argument: No Proceeds, No Crime
RKM Powergen argued that since the coal block allocation was never operationalized, no revenue was generated. Therefore, there were no proceeds of crime. Furthermore, their foreign investments were cleared by the RBI and could not be tainted as illegal.
The Court agreed. Since no predicate offence or illicit money flow could be established, the ED’s actions—especially the freezing order—were without legal foundation.
ED’s Counter Falls Flat
The ED tried to justify its action by claiming the company had inflated its net worth to secure loans—invoking Sections 420 and 471 IPC. But the Court pointed out that even this did not justify ED’s jurisdiction without the proper predicate offence being legally established and prosecuted.
Key Takeaways from the Judgment
- ED needs a valid predicate offence to begin investigation.
- There must be clear proceeds of crime linked to that offence.
- ED cannot probe other offences it stumbles upon—it must refer them to appropriate agencies.
- The ED’s seizure powers are not automatic—they must be backed by legal evidence.
Implications for Future Investigations
This ruling is a significant check on ED’s powers. It reiterates that the agency cannot launch roving inquiries or act on assumptions. The verdict also provides clarity for companies under probe—ensuring that investigative overreach does not violate fundamental rights or disrupt legitimate operations.
Final Verdict
The Madras High Court quashed the freezing orders and allowed RKM Powergen’s plea. It reaffirmed that the rule of law must govern every action of the ED.
This landmark ruling is likely to influence future PMLA-related cases, especially in curbing arbitrary actions by the ED.
