Bail under PMLA after Vijay Madanlal Choudhary v. Union of India
(2022) 10 SCC 386 β Constitution Bench
πΉ 1οΈβ£ Legal Framework β Section 45 PMLA
After Vijay Madanlal, Section 45 PMLA (Twin Conditions) stands fully upheld and constitutionally valid.
To grant bail, court must be satisfied that:
1οΈβ£ There are reasonable grounds to believe that the accused is not guilty of the offence;
2οΈβ£ The accused is not likely to commit any offence while on bail.
These are in addition to CrPC bail principles.
πΉ 2οΈβ£ Effect of Vijay Madanlal Judgment
The Court upheld:
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Validity of twin conditions
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Reverse burden structure
-
EDβs arrest and attachment powers
Thus, PMLA bail is stricter than ordinary bail under CrPC.
πΉ 3οΈβ£ How Courts Apply Bail Test Post-2022
Step 1 β Apply Section 45 Twin Conditions
Court must form prima facie satisfaction that accused is not guilty.
Step 2 β Apply Tripod Test
(Flight risk, tampering, influencing witnesses)
Step 3 β Article 21 Consideration
In cases of prolonged incarceration, constitutional courts may grant bail despite statutory rigour (especially when trial unlikely to conclude soon).
πΉ 4οΈβ£ Interaction with Economic Offence Jurisprudence
Earlier cases like:
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P. Chidambaram v. Directorate of Enforcement
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Sanjay Chandra v. CBI
emphasized liberty even in economic offences.
Post Vijay Madanlal:
β Liberty remains important
β But statutory twin conditions are mandatory
β Courts cannot dilute Section 45 mechanically
πΉ 5οΈβ£ Important Practical Points
β’ Bail harder at trial court stage
β’ High Courts/Supreme Court may intervene in prolonged detention
β’ Predicate offence status crucial
β’ Acquittal/discharge in predicate offence impacts PMLA case