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No Evidence To Support Fraud Case Against Mallya, Defence Team Says

Vijay Mallya’s defense team opened the arguments on saying there was no evidence to support the fraud.

Vijay Mallya, founder and chairman of Kingfisher Airlines Ltd., arrives at Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London, U.K. (Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg)
Vijay Mallya, founder and chairman of Kingfisher Airlines Ltd., arrives at Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London, U.K. (Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg)

Vijay Mallya’s defence team today argued that there was no evidence to support the case of fraud presented against him by the government of India as the liquor baron returned to court in London on the second day of his extradition trial.

The 61-year-old, wanted in India on charges of fraud and money laundering amounting to around Rs 9,000 crores, was in the dock at Westminster Magistrates’ Court for his defence, headed by barrister Clare Montgomery.

Montgomery opened her arguments by stating that there was no evidence to support the case of fraud.

On the opening day of the trial, the Crown Prosecution Service, arguing on behalf of the Indian government, had asserted that the embattled liquor baron had a “case of fraud” to answer. Montgomery said the evidence presented by the CPS, on the direction of the Indian government, to prove a case of fraud amounted to ‘zero’, which she said was a “critical failing on the part of government of India.”

The government does not have a credible case to support the argument that the borrowing by Mallya was fraudulent and that he had no intentions to pay back the loans he sought because his profit projections for loss-making Kingfisher Airlines were unreliable, she pointed out.

“The reality is that the profitability of an airline depends on economic factors, which are largely cyclical and out of the control of the airline itself,” she said.

Indicating that it would be plausible to conclude that any loan default was the result of a ‘business failure’, she presented internal company assessments and bank documents to prove that all numbers related to the struggling airline were known to the bankers and there was ‘no attempt to mislead by over-valuing the worth of the brand.’

The prosecution had yesterday laid out what it termed as the “three chapters of dishonesty” by the former Kingfisher Airlines boss – the first being misrepresentations to various banks to acquire loans, then how he misused the money and finally his conduct after the banks recalled the loans.

Instead of acting as an honest person and doing what he could to meet his obligations, he set about erecting lines of defence.
Mark Summers, Barrister, Crown Prosecution Service

The charge of money laundering, for which Mallya had been re-arrested in October, is being focussed on by the CPS less at this stage.

Summers told the court that the Indian government said that there are reasons why a court can conclude that the bank loans at the centre of the fraud case were ones the “defendant (Mallya) never intended to repay.”

While Kingfisher Airlines and the airline industry were in ‘intensive care’, Mallya chose to palm off the losses to banks, in particular the state-owned banks.

The opening day’s proceedings were concluded with an assertion by the CPS that it had “shown by virtue of evidence a prima facie case” against Mallya and the hearing should now move to the next phase of any “bars to extradition.” The next phase is when factors such as prison conditions in India are likely to take centrestage.

The CPS had earlier admitted that there may have been ‘irregularities’ in the internal processes of the banks sanctioning some of those loans but that would be a question to be dealt with at a later stage in India.

“The focus of our case will be on Mallya’s conduct and how he misled the bank and misused the proceeds,” Summers said, as he presented a detailed chronology of events with specific focus on a loan sought by Kingfisher Airlines from IDBI bank in November 2009.

His erstwhile Kingfisher Airlines owes several Indian banks around Rs 9,000 crores.

Mallya, who was arrested by Scotland Yard on an extradition warrant in April this year, has been out on bail on a bond worth 6,50,000 pounds. His trial is scheduled to end on Dec. 14, with Wednesday and Friday marked as non-sitting days.

A timeframe for a judgement in the case, being presided over by Judge Emma Louise Arbuthnot will be determined only at the end of the trial and once the closing arguments have been made.

The tycoon has been on a self-imposed exile in the U.K. since he left India on March 2, 2016. If the judge rules in favour of extradition at the end of the trial, the U.K. home secretary must order Mallya’s extradition within two months. However, the case can go through a series of appeals in higher U.K. courts before arriving at a conclusion.