Nirav Modi to make another bail plea in UK court on May 8

Press Trust of India  |  London 

Fugitive diamond merchant would make another bail plea on May 8 at the where he is undergoing extradition proceedings to in the (PNB) fraud and charges amounting to up to USD 2 billion.

"The next hearing will be on 8 May. The application for bail will be heard before at Westminster Magistrates' Court," said a for (CPS), which is representing the Indian authorities in the extradition case.

Barrister from Furnival Chambers will represent the CPS at the bail hearing, while Modi will be represented by of Matrix Chambers.

At the last hearing in the case on April 26, when Modi had appeared before Arbuthnot via videolink from prison, his legal team had made no application for bail and he was further remanded in judicial custody until May 24. While his two previous bail pleas have been rejected on the grounds that there was a "substantial risk he would fail to surrender", he can make a third application if there is a considerable change in circumstances.

Modi is reportedly relying on "new evidence" and will seek to persuade the that this constitutes a change of circumstances so that he can be permitted to make another bail application next Wednesday.

His legal team, led by Anand Doobay, have previously offered one million pounds as security alongside an offer to meet stringent electronic tag restrictions on their client's movements, "akin to house arrest". It remains to be seen how they plan to bolster the application for a third attempt before the same court.

"This is a case of substantial fraud, with loss to a in of between USD 1-2 billion. I am not persuaded that the conditional bail sought will meet the concerns of the government of in this case," Judge Arbuthnot had said, when rejecting Modi's last bail attempt.

She also noted that "very unusually in a fraud case" the accused had made death threats to witnesses and also attempted to destroy evidence in the case. The diamond dealer's "lack of community ties" in the UK and an attempt to acquire the citizenship of in late 2017 went against him as the judge said it seemed like he was trying to "move away from India at an important time".

Montgomery, Modi's barrister, had made a series of offers to try and convince the judge to grant bail, even bringing up his pet dog.

"He did have a son at Charterhouse [school in London] who has now gone to university in the States and as a sign of ageing parents, led Mr Modi to get a dog instead. None of these actions are emblematic of someone setting out to flee the country," she had claimed.

"It is nonsense to say that he is a flight risk. He does not have a safe haven open to him and he has not travelled or applied for citizenship elsewhere he only qualifies for leave to remain in this country, she said.

Modi was arrested by uniformed officers in central on March 19. During subsequent hearings, was told that Modi was the "principal beneficiary" of the fraudulent issuance of letters of undertaking (LoUs) as part of a conspiracy to defraud PNB and then laundering the proceeds of

At the hearing last week, the court was told that May 30 had been tentatively fixed as the first case management hearing in his extradition case. It remains to be seen how the case will progress after the new bail plea next week.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, May 01 2019. 16:50 IST