Why Every Business Owner, CA, Banker, and Lawyer Must Understand PMLA: The Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 is not just about drug lords and corrupt politicians – it has become a foundational compliance requirement for every bank, NBFC, CA firm, real estate agent, and precious metals dealer. The ED has restituted ₹34,000+ crore in assets. Tax evasion through fake invoices, undisclosed foreign assets, benami property, and large cash transactions can create a chain that brings PMLA into play. A single non-compliance by a reporting entity (failure to file STR, inadequate KYC) can attract PMLA penalties. Understanding the three-phase money laundering process, what constitutes a scheduled offence, how ED attachment works, and when your professional activity triggers AML obligations – is essential.
Money laundering is the process of making illegally obtained money (“dirty money” – proceeds of crime) appear legitimate by passing it through a series of financial transactions or commercial activities. It converts criminal proceeds into assets that can be openly used without raising suspicion.
Phase 1 – Placement: Introducing Dirty Money into the Financial System
The criminal introduces proceeds of crime into the legitimate financial system. Examples: depositing drug sale proceeds as business income; using black money to purchase property or gold; converting cash into demand drafts; structuring deposits below reporting thresholds (smurfing). This is the riskiest stage – the money is most traceable to the underlying crime here.
Phase 2 – Layering: Concealing the Paper Trail
Multiple complex transactions to distance the proceeds from their criminal source. Examples: wire transfers through multiple jurisdictions; converting cash into investments and back; using shell companies across countries; buying and selling luxury goods or real estate; cryptocurrency mixers. The goal is to make it practically impossible to trace the original crime.
Phase 3 – Integration: Using Clean Money Openly
The laundered money re-enters the legitimate economy and appears to be from a lawful source. Examples: investing in legitimate businesses; purchasing high-value real estate at declared market value; spending on lifestyle expenses; making “legitimate” loans to oneself from offshore companies. At this stage, separating legitimate from criminal assets is extremely difficult.
§3 PMLA – Offence is a Continuing Offence: A 2019 amendment clarified that money laundering under §3 PMLA is a continuing offence – meaning a person is guilty of money laundering as long as they continue to enjoy, hold, conceal, or deal in proceeds of crime. The offence does not end when the initial transaction occurs – it continues as long as the person is in possession of the tainted assets. This has significant implications for limitation periods and prosecution strategy.
2. PMLA Structure – Key Provisions at a Glance
Section
Subject
Key Point
§ 3
Offence of money laundering
Whosoever directly/indirectly attempts to indulge or knowingly assists or is party to concealment, possession, acquisition, use, projection as untainted, or claiming as untainted property which is proceeds of crime is guilty of money laundering. Continuing offence (2019 amendment).
§ 4
Punishment
Rigorous imprisonment 3–7 years + fine. Up to 10 years if scheduled offence is under NDPS Act. Fine: as adjudicated by Special Court.
§ 5
Provisional attachment of property
Director/Deputy Director of ED can provisionally attach property believed to be proceeds of crime for up to 180 days. Can attach property even before arrest.
§ 8
Adjudicating Authority
Government-appointed authority confirms or rejects provisional attachment; if confirmed, property confiscated to Central Government.
§ 12
Obligations of reporting entities
Banks, FIs, CAs, real estate agents etc. must maintain records, perform KYC, file reports with FIU-IND.
§ 13
Powers of Director (FIU-IND)
FIU Director can call for information, issue directives on KYC/AML compliance.
§ 17
Search and seizure
ED can search premises and seize records/property if there are reasons to believe proceeds of crime are present. Court of law involvement for prolonged seizures.
§ 18
Search of persons
ED can search persons entering/exiting India for smuggled proceeds of crime.
§ 19
Power of arrest
Director/Deputy Director/Assistant Director of ED can arrest a person if there are reasons to believe they are guilty of money laundering – without court warrant. Arrested person must be produced before court within 24 hours.
§ 24
Reverse burden of proof
Once ED establishes that property is proceeds of crime – the accused must prove that they are not guilty. Completely reverses the normal presumption of innocence for property-related aspects.
§ 44
Special Court
Designated Special Court under PMLA handles all PMLA cases; separate from regular criminal courts.
§ 45
Bail conditions – twin test
PMLA offences are cognizable and non-bailable. Bail only if court is satisfied: (a) reasonable grounds that accused is NOT guilty, AND (b) not likely to commit any offence while on bail. Exceptionally difficult to get bail – both conditions must be met simultaneously.
§ 56
International cooperation
Letters rogatory; mutual legal assistance; international confiscation treaties; can recover proceeds abroad.
3. Scheduled Offences – The Predicate Offences That Trigger PMLA
PMLA can only be invoked if there is an underlying scheduled offence (predicate offence). Money laundering proceeds must be traceable to a scheduled offence. The PMLA cannot operate in a vacuum – the existence of a scheduled offence is a prerequisite (Vijay Madanlal Choudhary v. UoI, SC 2022). Police/CBI/agency investigating the scheduled offence must have registered a case first.
Part A – Serious Scheduled Offences (Stricter Bail under §45)
Wildlife (Protection) Act – poaching, trafficking in protected species
Human trafficking
Immoral Traffic (Prevention) Act, human trafficking provisions
Companies Act fraud
Companies Act 2013 – certain serious fraud provisions (SFIO territory)
Benami property
Prohibition of Benami Property Transactions Act, 1988 – benami transactions are now scheduled under PMLA
FEMA
Foreign exchange violations of a serious nature
Cyber crimes
Information Technology Act (selected serious offences; Jan Vishwas Act 2022 partially decriminalised minor IT offences from PMLA Schedule)
Part B – Less Serious Scheduled Offences (IPC Offences)
Various offences under the Indian Penal Code / Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS 2023) including: cheating (IPC §420 / BNS §318), forgery (IPC §463/BNS §336), criminal breach of trust (IPC §405/BNS §316), criminal conspiracy (IPC §120B/BNS §61). These IPC/BNS offences are critical because they create the link between tax evasion (not itself a scheduled offence) and PMLA – see Section 9 below.
PMLA Schedule updates – Jan Vishwas Act 2022: Minor offences under the Trade Marks Act and IT Act were removed from the PMLA Schedule, reducing the scope of PMLA in these areas. This is part of the government’s decriminalisation policy. However, the core serious offences remain, and the Schedule has been expanded more than it has been reduced over the years.
4. The Money Laundering Offence – §3 PMLA
Section 3 of PMLA creates the criminal offence of money laundering in broad terms. A person is guilty if they directly or indirectly:
Attempt to indulge in any process or activity connected with proceeds of crime
Knowingly assist or are party to such process or activity
Are involved in concealment, possession, acquisition, or use of proceeds of crime
Project proceeds of crime as untainted property
Claim proceeds of crime as untainted property
⚠️ “Proceeds of Crime” – Broader Than You Think:
Proceeds of crime under PMLA means “any property derived or obtained, directly or indirectly, by any person as a result of criminal activity relating to a scheduled offence.” The 2019 amendment expanded this to include: property derived indirectly from criminal activity. Even if the original proceeds were partially converted, reinvested, or mixed with legitimate funds – the tainted portion (and sometimes equivalent untainted assets) can be attached. ED has attached properties far exceeding the alleged proceeds in some cases, though courts have intervened to calibrate proportionality.
PMLA punishment was NOT changed by Finance Act 2026: Unlike ITA 2025 prosecution where Finance Act 2026 reduced maximum sentences and replaced RI with SI – PMLA punishment under §4 remains Rigorous Imprisonment with a mandatory minimum of 3 years. Courts cannot impose a fine-only sentence for PMLA. There is no graded quantum-based decriminalisation in PMLA. This makes PMLA the most severe financial crime legislation in India’s tax/financial enforcement arsenal.
6. ED Powers – Attachment, Search, Seizure and Arrest
6.1 §5 – Provisional Attachment of Property
Director or Deputy Director of ED can provisionally attach property believed to be proceeds of crime
No prior court order required for provisional attachment – it is an administrative action
Duration: 180 days from date of attachment (extendable by adjudicating authority under §8)
The attached person can continue to use the property during provisional attachment (it is “frozen” – not confiscated yet)
Attachment can cover: bank accounts, real estate, cars, jewellery, shares, FDs – any asset believed to be proceeds of crime
Attachment can happen before or after arrest
Property abroad: ED can request confiscation through international cooperation under §56
6.2 §8 – Adjudicating Authority and Confiscation
Within 30 days of attachment (or earlier), ED must file a complaint before the Adjudicating Authority (government-appointed authority). The Authority gives the attached person an opportunity to be heard, then:
If confirmed: Property confiscated to Central Government; attached person cannot use, transfer, or deal with the property
If rejected: Provisional attachment revoked; property returned
Appeals: Appellate Tribunal → High Court
6.3 §17 & §18 – Search and Seizure
§17: ED officers can conduct search of premises if they have reason to believe proceeds of crime or records relating to money laundering are present. No prior warrant required in urgent circumstances.
§18: Search of persons at customs checkpoints if suspicion of carrying proceeds of crime
All searches must be recorded with detailed documentation – seized items listed in panchnama
Digital records, electronic devices, and account books are commonly seized
6.4 §19 – Arrest Without Warrant
Director, Deputy Director, or Assistant Director of ED can arrest a person if there are “reasons to believe” they are guilty of money laundering. Key procedural requirements:
Reasons to believe must be recorded in writing before or immediately after arrest
Arrested person must be informed of the grounds of arrest
Must be produced before a Special Court within 24 hours (excluding travel time)
No prior FIR by police needed – ED can arrest based on its own investigation
PMLA offences are cognizable and non-bailable (§45) – bail is very difficult to obtain (see Section 8)
Important distinction from income tax: Unlike most income tax prosecution offences which are non-cognizable (ITA 2025 §492), PMLA offences are cognizable – meaning ED can arrest without a warrant and without prior court approval. This is a fundamental difference that makes PMLA enforcement significantly more aggressive than income tax prosecution. GST fake invoice fraud above ₹5 crore (§132 CGST) is also cognizable – creating a triangle of cognizable enforcement powers for serious financial crime.
7. §24 – Reverse Burden of Proof: You Must Prove Innocence
§24 PMLA – The Reversal of Innocent Until Proven Guilty:
Section 24 of PMLA reverses the fundamental presumption of innocence for property-related aspects of money laundering. It states: “In any proceeding relating to proceeds of crime under this Act, in the case of a person charged with the offence of money-laundering under §3 – the burden of proving that proceeds of crime are untainted property shall be on the accused.”
This means: once the ED establishes that (a) a scheduled offence was committed, and (b) the property in question is connected to it – the accused must prove that the property is NOT proceeds of crime. The prosecution does not have to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the property is tainted – the accused must disprove it. The Supreme Court upheld this provision in Vijay Madanlal Choudhary (2022) as constitutionally valid.
Practical implications of §24:
If ED attaches your bank account alleging it contains proceeds of crime – you must prove the funds are legitimate
If ED attaches your property bought using a bank loan – you must prove the loan was legitimate and serviced from legitimate income
Maintain complete documentation of all large income receipts, investments, and property purchases to defend against potential PMLA action
ITR filings, audited accounts, bank statements for 7-10 years backward are your primary defence
8. §45 – Bail Conditions: The Twin Test
§45 PMLA – The “Twin Conditions” for Bail:
Bail in PMLA cases is exceptionally difficult to obtain. Under §45 (as amended), a court can grant bail ONLY if it is satisfied that:
(a) There are reasonable grounds for believing that the accused is NOT guilty of the money laundering offence; AND
(b) The accused is not likely to commit any offence while on bail.
Both conditions must be satisfied simultaneously. This is a higher standard than regular bail (where the court merely considers flight risk and evidence tampering). Courts have consistently held that these twin conditions are onerous and that PMLA bail should be granted sparingly.
Bail Aspect
Regular Criminal Bail
PMLA Bail (§45)
Standard
Flight risk, evidence tampering, nature of offence
Must prove likely NOT guilty + not likely to reoffend – both simultaneously
Cognizable?
Depends on offence
Yes – cognizable and non-bailable
Bail court
Magistrate / Sessions Court depending on offence
Special Court under PMLA
Average bail timeline
Days to weeks typically
Months to years in many high-profile cases
Supreme Court review
Standard processes
Many high-profile accused went to Supreme Court for bail (Manish Sisodia, Arvind Kejriwal, P. Chidambaram – all faced prolonged pre-trial detention)
Exception for elderly/sick
Courts consider health
Courts consider health but twin conditions still apply
Pavana Dibbur v. ED (SC 2023) – Right to Default Bail: The Supreme Court held that default bail (bail due to failure to file chargesheet within 60 days under BNSS) is available in PMLA cases as a fundamental right under Article 21. Despite §45’s strict conditions, if ED fails to file complaint within 60 days of arrest – the accused has an indefeasible right to default bail (which is not subject to §45 twin conditions). This is a critical protection against prolonged pre-trial detention.
9. Tax Evasion and PMLA – When Does Tax Crime Become Money Laundering?
Tax evasion itself is NOT a scheduled offence under PMLA: Income tax evasion under ITA 2025/1961 is not directly listed in the PMLA Schedule. Similarly, GST evasion and general tax fraud are not standalone PMLA predicates. However – tax evasion frequently involves scheduled offences that bring PMLA into play.
Tax Crime Scenario
Scheduled Offence Connection
PMLA Triggered?
GST fake invoices – creating invoices without actual supply
Cheating (BNS §318/IPC §420), Forgery (BNS §336/IPC §463) – these are Part B scheduled offences
YES – ED has aggressively used PMLA in large GST fake invoice cases; proceeds from saved tax = proceeds of crime
Customs duty evasion by fraudulent means (misdeclaration, under-valuation)
Customs Act serious evasion offences – Part A scheduled offence
YES – directly scheduled under Part A; ED works in parallel with Customs DRI
Income tax evasion – simple under-reporting without fraud
Income tax provisions not scheduled; no IPC offence if it’s mere under-reporting
Generally NO – unless IPC fraud (false documents) is involved
Income tax evasion using fabricated purchase invoices, forged documents
YES – hawala is a PMLA predicate in most structured cases
The GST-PMLA nexus in 2025-26: ED has filed PMLA cases in over 200 large GST fake invoice fraud cases since 2023. The logic: fake invoices = forgery (BNS §336/IPC §468) + cheating (BNS §318/IPC §420) = scheduled offences → savings from fraudulent ITC = proceeds of crime → PMLA. Promoters, directors, and even CA signatories to tax returns have been arrested under PMLA in large fake GST schemes. In most cases, ED coordinates with CGST’s §132 prosecution – creating a dual track of criminal action.
10. AML Compliance – Who Must Comply and What They Must Do
Reporting Entities (§2(wa) PMLA read with PMLA Rules)
Entity Type
AML Obligation Trigger
Key Obligations
Banks & financial institutions
All customer relationships
KYC for all accounts; CDD (Customer Due Diligence); EDD (Enhanced Due Diligence) for high-risk; STR/CTR/CCR filing; PEP screening; record maintenance 5 years
NBFCs
All lending/deposit relationships
Same as banks; NBFC-specific RBI AML guidelines apply additionally
Insurance companies
Premium payments above threshold; claim payments
KYC for policy issuance; STR for suspicious claims; beneficial owner identification
Stockbrokers / SEBI intermediaries
Opening of trading accounts
KYC per SEBI norms; beneficial owner disclosure; STR for suspicious trading
Chartered Accountants
When conducting specified transactions for clients: buying/selling real estate, managing client money, company formation, acting as nominee director
KYC for specified transactions; maintain records; file STR if suspicious; Principal Officer designation
Company Secretaries & Lawyers
When conducting specified transactions (same as CAs)
Same obligations as CAs for specified transactions
Real estate agents / developers
Property transactions above ₹50 lakh (buyer and seller side)
KYC for both buyer and seller; source of funds verification; STR if suspicious; registration with FIU-IND
Dealers in precious metals/stones
Cash transactions ≥₹10 lakh or equivalent in a single transaction
KYC mandatory; STR if suspicious; register with FIU-IND
Principal Officer designation: Every reporting entity must designate a Principal Officer responsible for AML compliance and FIU-IND interaction
KYC Policy: Board-approved written KYC policy; must include risk categorisation (Low/Medium/High) of customers
Customer Due Diligence (CDD): Identity verification before establishing relationship; PAN + Aadhaar or passport; beneficial owner identification for companies/trusts
Enhanced Due Diligence (EDD): For high-risk customers: PEPs (Politically Exposed Persons), non-resident customers, businesses in high-risk sectors, unusual transaction patterns
Record maintenance: All transaction records and KYC documents for minimum 5 years from cessation of relationship
Transaction monitoring: Automated or manual review of transactions for unusual patterns; alert on cash structuring, round-tripping
Annual AML audit: Internal audit of AML/KYC procedures; report to Board
Employee training: Annual AML training for all relevant staff
The Financial Intelligence Unit – India (FIU-IND) is India’s nodal agency for receiving, analysing, and disseminating financial intelligence to the ED, Income Tax, Customs, CBI, and other law enforcement agencies.
Report Type
Full Name
Threshold
When to File
Deadline
STR
Suspicious Transaction Report
No monetary threshold – suspicion-based
When there is any reason to suspect a transaction is connected to money laundering, proceeds of crime, or financing of terrorism – regardless of amount
Within 7 working days of forming suspicion
CTR
Cash Transaction Report
≥ ₹10 lakh in cash in a single transaction or series of connected transactions in a month
All banks/FIs; automatically generated from core banking for qualifying cash transactions
Within 15 days of month-end
CCR
Cross Border Wire Transfer Report
International transfer ≥ ₹5 lakh or USD 5,000 or equivalent
All international transfers meeting threshold
Monthly
NTR
Non-Profit Transactions Report
All receipts/payments of NPOs above threshold
Banks reporting to/from NPOs/NGOs
Monthly
CWTR
Counterfeit Currency Report
Any detected counterfeit note
Any detection of counterfeit currency
Within 7 working days
⚠️ Failure to file STR – PMLA §13 penalty: Failure by a reporting entity (bank, CA, real estate agent) to file STR when there are reasonable grounds for suspicion can attract: (a) a warning/fine from FIU-IND Director (§13 penalty), (b) suspension of license/registration, (c) in serious cases – personal liability of the Principal Officer. The threshold for filing STR is suspicion, not certainty – when in doubt, file.
12. Key Supreme Court Judgments
Case
Year
Key Ruling
Vijay Madanlal Choudhary v. Union of India
2022
PMLA constitutional validity upheld. Scheduled offence is a prerequisite for PMLA. Reverse burden (§24) valid. ED’s power to arrest (§19) valid. Broad “proceeds of crime” definition upheld. Vijay Madanlal challenge largely failed – PMLA powers confirmed.
Nikesh Tarachand Shah v. Union of India
2017
Original twin bail conditions in §45(1) for Part A scheduled offences struck down as unconstitutional (violated Art.14 and Art.21). Government restored twin conditions via 2018 amendment – applicable to all PMLA offences, not just Part A.
Rana Ayyub v. Directorate of Enforcement
2023
The area in which the property is derived, obtained, held, or concealed is the area where the money laundering offence is committed – for jurisdictional purposes.
Pavana Dibbur v. Enforcement Directorate
2023
Default bail (right to bail if chargesheet not filed within 60 days) is available in PMLA cases as an indefeasible fundamental right under Art.21 – not subject to §45 twin conditions. Significant protection against prolonged pre-trial detention.
G Square Layout Pvt. Ltd. v. DCIT
2025
Mere delay in tax payment without wilful attempt or mens rea does not attract prosecution for wilful evasion. Intent is essential. (Context: ITA 1961 §276C – relevant for the tax evasion-PMLA connection analysis.)
13. PMLA vs Black Money Act vs Benami Act – How They Interact
Parameter
PMLA 2002
Black Money Act 2015
PBPT Act 1988 (Benami)
Targets
Anyone who launders proceeds of any scheduled offence
Residents with undisclosed foreign income/assets
Anyone holding property in another’s name (benamidar) to conceal beneficial owner
Predicate offence needed?
Yes – scheduled offence required
No – standalone; non-disclosure itself is the offence
No — the benami holding itself is the offence
Enforcement agency
ED (Enforcement Directorate)
Income Tax Department (Investigation wing)
IT Department (Benami wing) + can involve ED under PMLA
Punishment
RI 3–7 years (10yr for NDPS) + fine (§4 PMLA)
§49: 6 months–7 years RI; §51: 3–10 years RI
Up to 7 years RI + 25% fine
Asset confiscation
Yes – to Central Government (§8)
Tax + 300% penalty (not physical confiscation)
Yes – benami property vested in Central Government
Bail
Very difficult – §45 twin conditions
Standard bail provisions
Standard bail (PBPT adjudicating authority and court)
Can they run simultaneously?
Yes – all three can run simultaneously for the same set of facts. Example: benami property funded by corruption proceeds → PBPT for benami holding + PMLA for laundering corruption proceeds + Black Money Act if funds routed abroad.
14. Practical Case Studies
Case 1: GST Fake Invoice Network – PMLA Triggered
A network of 5 companies created fake GST invoices of ₹15 crore to transfer fraudulent ITC to buyers. The mastermind used the ITC savings to purchase real estate in relatives’ names.
Predicate offence: Forgery (BNS §336/IPC §468) + Cheating (BNS §318/IPC §420) + Criminal conspiracy (BNS §61/IPC §120B) in creating fake invoices – all Part B scheduled offences under PMLA
Proceeds of crime: ₹15 crore in fraudulent ITC saved (= financial benefit from the cheating)
PMLA action: ED provisionally attaches real estate under §5 PMLA; arrests mastermind under §19 (cognizable – no warrant needed)
Bail: §45 twin conditions apply – mastermind must prove to court he is likely NOT guilty AND won’t reoffend. Court denies bail given documentary evidence of fake invoices.
Reverse burden: Mastermind must prove under §24 that the real estate was purchased from legitimate income (not ITC savings). Without ITR/audited accounts showing sufficient legitimate income at the time of purchase – virtually impossible.
Parallel action: CGST also prosecutes under §132 (cognizable, ≥₹5 crore) – dual criminal proceedings
Case 2: Real Estate Developer – AML Compliance Failure
A real estate developer sold apartments and accepted ₹50 lakh cash component from each buyer (on-money). The developer’s bank filed an STR based on unusual cash deposit patterns. Developer had no written AML policy and principal officer was not designated.
AML compliance failure: Developer (as a reporting entity for transactions above ₹50L) should have: (a) designated Principal Officer, (b) KYC’d buyers for source of funds, (c) flagged cash transactions via STR. None done.
FIU-IND action: Bank’s STR triggers FIU-IND analysis → forwarded to IT and ED
IT action: Cash on-money = concealed income → assessment + 200% penalty under §270A ITA 1961/ITA 2025 §439
PMLA potential: If buyer’s cash was from a scheduled offence (corruption/drug money) → the developer’s acceptance of the cash = knowingly dealing in proceeds of crime → §3 PMLA offence for the developer too
Lesson: Real estate professionals must implement AML compliance – not just for regulatory compliance but to protect themselves from PMLA liability when handling cash from high-risk buyers
Case 3: CA Firm – STR Obligation When Clients Are High-Risk
A CA firm incorporates 10 shell companies for a client who is later found to have been running a ponzi scheme. The CA created the companies, maintained accounts, and filed returns. FIU-IND notices ask the CA why no STR was filed when suspicious patterns were visible.
CA’s PMLA obligation: CAs acting as gatekeepers for company formation and account management are reporting entities under PMLA for specified transactions
STR obligation triggered when: Multiple shell companies with no real business activity; unusual fund flows through company accounts; client unable to explain business rationale
Defence: If the CA had no actual suspicion and the client presented legitimate-seeming documentation – credible defence. If the CA knowingly assisted or ignored obvious red flags – §3 PMLA applies (knowingly assisting in money laundering = §3 offence)
Best practice for CAs: (a) File STR when any suspicious pattern is noticed – even before certainty; (b) Maintain records of client KYC and business rationale for all transactions; (c) Resign from engagement if client cannot satisfactorily explain suspicious activity
15. Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. Can the ED attach my property without filing a case against me personally?
Yes – provisional attachment under §5 PMLA can happen before arrest and before chargesheet/complaint is filed. ED needs only “reasons to believe” that the property represents proceeds of crime. Your property can be attached even if you are not the accused in the scheduled offence – if you received or hold proceeds of crime (even unknowingly in some interpretations). The attachment order must be reviewed by the Adjudicating Authority within 30 days, which gives you an opportunity to be heard. If attachment is confirmed by the Adjudicating Authority, you can appeal to the Appellate Tribunal and then to the High Court. Maintain complete documentation of all large asset purchases (source of funds, bank statements, ITR) to challenge any attachment.
Q2. I have undisclosed income but no connection to any crime. Can PMLA apply to me?
PMLA requires a predicate (scheduled) offence. Income tax evasion through mere under-reporting – without any IPC/BNS fraud, forgery, or other scheduled offence – is generally not a direct PMLA predicate. However, if your undisclosed income was generated through: forged purchase bills or contracts (IPC/BNS forgery = scheduled offence), cheating customers or suppliers (IPC/BNS cheating = scheduled offence), corruption or bribery (PCA = scheduled offence), or Customs duty evasion through misdeclaration (Customs Act serious offences = scheduled) – then PMLA applies. Tax evasion combined with IPC/BNS-level fraud is where the two worlds collide. Simple under-reporting without any fraud element keeps you in the income tax enforcement track, not PMLA.
Q3. As a CA, when must I file an STR with FIU-IND?
CAs are reporting entities under PMLA when conducting “specified transactions” for clients: buying/selling real estate, managing client funds in accounts, company/LLP formation or dissolution, acting as nominee director, providing registered office address. For these transactions, you must file an STR with FIU-IND within 7 working days when you form a suspicion (not certainty) that the transaction may involve proceeds of crime, money laundering, or financing of terrorism. Common triggers: client unable to explain large cash components in business; complex multi-entity structures with no apparent business purpose; transactions inconsistent with client’s stated business profile; large round-trip transactions; unusual international transfers to high-risk jurisdictions. When in doubt – file. The STR process is confidential and protected – you cannot be held liable for filing a STR in good faith, even if it proves unfounded.
Q4. What is the difference between PMLA arrest and income tax prosecution arrest?
Critical difference: PMLA (§19) and GST §132 (large fake invoices) offences are cognizable – the Enforcement Directorate or GST officers can arrest without a court warrant based on their own assessment of “reasons to believe.” Income tax prosecution under ITA 2025 (§473-494) is generally non-cognizable per §492 ITA 2025 – the department must approach a Magistrate and get judicial sanction before arrest. Additionally, PMLA has the extremely onerous §45 twin bail conditions – making bail very difficult to obtain. Income tax prosecution uses standard bail provisions (and the graded §478 punishment means most income tax evasion cases end at fine, not imprisonment). This is why PMLA enforcement is so much more feared than pure income tax prosecution – it combines arrest without warrant, difficult bail, reverse burden of proof, and confiscation of assets in a single framework.
Q5. Can I be tried for PMLA even if I am acquitted of the scheduled offence?
This is a complex and evolving area. Post the 2019 PMLA amendment, PMLA prosecution is an independent, standalone offence. However, the Supreme Court in Vijay Madanlal Choudhary (2022) maintained that the existence of a scheduled offence remains a “prerequisite” for initiating PMLA proceedings – meaning ED must show that a scheduled offence was committed, though it need not wait for conviction in the predicate offence case. If you are acquitted of the scheduled (predicate) offence by a competent court – courts have held that the PMLA proceeding cannot survive without the underlying scheduled offence. However, this principle is still being litigated in various High Courts and the Supreme Court. The legal position is: PMLA can proceed parallel to and independent of the predicate offence trial, but acquittal in the predicate offence trial significantly impacts the PMLA case.
PMLA Notice? ED Inquiry? AML Compliance Setup – GCA
Facing ED attachment of property, PMLA summons, or arrest risk? Need to set up AML/KYC compliance programme as a CA firm, NBFC, or real estate developer? GCA provides strategic guidance on PMLA defence (coordinating with criminal lawyers), AML programme setup, STR compliance, FIU-IND registration, and risk assessment for reporting entities. Pan-India, 100% digital.
Disclaimer: Educational purposes only. Not legal advice. For PMLA criminal defence matters, engage a qualified criminal lawyer specialising in financial crimes. PMLA provisions as per Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 as amended through Finance Act 2019, Jan Vishwas Act 2022, and other amendments as available up to May 2026.
Key References: PMLA 2002: §3 (offence – continuing), §4 (3-7yr/10yr RI + fine), §5 (provisional attachment 180 days), §8 (adjudicating authority/confiscation), §12 (reporting entity obligations), §13 (FIU-IND powers), §17 (search/seizure), §18 (person search), §19 (arrest without warrant), §24 (reverse burden), §44 (Special Court), §45 (twin bail conditions), §56 (international cooperation) · PMLA Schedule Part A (serious offences) and Part B (IPC/BNS offences including cheating, forgery, criminal conspiracy) · PMLA Rules 2005 (as amended) · FIU-IND: fiuindia.gov.in
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