ED arrests former NSE MD Chitra Ramakrishna

Finance    14-Jul-2022
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New Delhi, Jul 14: The Enforcement Directorate on Thursday arrested former NSE top boss Chitra Ramakrishna in the money laundering case relating to the illegal phone tapping and snooping of employees of the stock exchange.
 

ED NSE MD 
 
Special Judge Sunaina Sharma allowed four-day custodial interrogation of Ramakrishna.
 
 
 
The former NSE MD was produced in the court from jail on an order passed by the judge earlier. The judge had issued a production warrant against the accused on a plea moved by the ED. After the accused was produced, the ED took permission from the court to interrogate her. Later, the ED arrested Ramakrishna on the ground of non-cooperation and again produced her before the court and urged for her nine-day custodial interrogation. The court, however, granted her four-day custody to the agency. The ED had filed the case under criminal sections of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) against ex-Mumbai Police Commissioner Sanjay Pandey, Ramakrishna, and Ravi Narain. This comes a week after the CBI booked them. The Central Bureau of Investigation had alleged that Narain and Ramkrishna, both former chief executives of the National Stock Exchange, had roped in a company founded by retired IPS officer Pandey to snoop on the stock market employees by illegally intercepting their phones calls. The CBI and ED have named Pandey, his Delhi-based company, NSE's former MD and CEOs Narain and Ramkrishna, executive vice president Ravi Varanasi, and head (premises) Mahesh Haldipur, among others, in their respective complaints. The ED will probe if any proceeds of crime were generated through this alleged illegal activity and if the accused laundered public funds. Pandey, a 1986-batch Indian Police Service (IPS) officer, retired from service on 30 June. Before his four-month stint as Mumbai's commissioner of police, he served as acting Maharashtra director general of police (DGP). He was questioned by the ED on 5 July in the alleged NSE colocation scam case in Delhi.
 
 
The ED discovered secret phone surveillance while probing the alleged financial irregularities at the NSE following which it reported it to the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA), which asked the CBI to probe the charges, officials said.
The CBI had alleged in its complaint that during the period 2009-17, Narain, Ramkrishna, Varanasi, and Haldipur conspired to illegally intercept the telephones of NSE employees for which they hired iSEC Services Pvt Ltd, founded by Pandey in 2001. Pandey had incorporated the company after resigning from service but his resignation was not accepted.