HC notice to Kejriwal, 22 others on CBI plea over case discharge


HC Notice to Kejriwal, 22 Others on CBI Plea Over Case Discharge

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
Nov 2021 Delhi government notifies new Excise Policy 2021-22, privatising liquor retail to increase revenue and reduce corruption.
Jul 2022 Lieutenant Governor (LG) Vinai Kumar Saxena recommends CBI inquiry; Policy withdrawn by Delhi government.
Aug 2022 CBI registers FIR; conducts searches at Sisodia's residence and other locations.
Mar 2023 Manish Sisodia arrested by CBI; subsequently also arrested by ED under PMLA.
Mar 2024 Arvind Kejriwal arrested by ED in the money laundering angle; later also summoned/arrested by CBI.
2024–25 Multiple bail hearings; Supreme Court grants interim bail to Kejriwal in Sep 2024.
27 Feb 2026 Trial court discharges all 23 accused in CBI case; finds no prima facie case.
9 Mar 2026 Delhi HC issues notices on CBI's revision petition challenging the discharge. [S1][S2]

Policy in Question: Delhi Excise Policy 2021-22 alleged to have given undue benefits to a "South Group" of liquor traders; wholesale licence given to private entities (AAP-linked entities allegedly benefited with ₹ in kickbacks per CBI). [S2]


4. Core Static Facts

Legal Concepts Involved

Key Parties

Entity Role
CBI (Central Bureau of Investigation) Investigating agency; filed 5 chargesheets (1 main + 4 supplementary)
ED (Enforcement Directorate) Filed PMLA case; parallel to CBI case
Special Judge Jitendra Singh Trial court judge who discharged all 23 accused
Justice Swarana Kanta Sharma Delhi HC judge hearing CBI's revision petition
Solicitor General Tushar Mehta Represented CBI before Delhi HC
Arvind Kejriwal Former Delhi CM; principal accused
Manish Sisodia Former Delhi Deputy CM; held multiple ministerial portfolios

Enabling Laws


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Administrative / Federalism

Political / Historical


6. Recent Developments (last 12-18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. The Delhi Excise Policy 2021-22 was notified by the Delhi government and withdrawn in July 2022 after the LG recommended a CBI probe.
  2. CBI registered its FIR in August 2022; filed 5 chargesheets (1 main + 4 supplementary) in the case.
  3. The "grave suspicion" standard is the legal test for framing charges under Section 227 CrPC (Section 250 BNSS) — lower than proof beyond reasonable doubt.
  4. Discharge is not acquittal — it is a pre-trial order; the case can be reopened via revision/appeal.
  5. Section 397 CrPC (Section 442 BNSS): Provides revisionary jurisdiction to the High Court over trial court orders.
  6. The Enforcement Directorate's PMLA case is a parallel/separate proceeding from the CBI case; proceeds of crime alleged = ₹76.54 crore. [S2]
  7. Justice Swarana Kanta Sharma is the Delhi HC judge who issued the notice on 9 March 2026. [S1]
  8. Solicitor General Tushar Mehta represented CBI before the Delhi HC. [S1]
  9. CBI operates under DSPE Act, 1946 (Delhi Special Police Establishment Act); its general consent to investigate in Delhi is affected by Article 239AA.
  10. The trial court also recommended departmental action against the CBI Investigating Officer — stayed by the HC. [S1]
  11. Under PMLA, a "scheduled offence" must exist as a predicate for money laundering charges; discharge in the CBI case (predicate) may thus affect the ED case.
  12. The next hearing date in the Delhi HC was fixed for 16 March 2026. [S1]
  13. Manish Sisodia was arrested by CBI in March 2023, making him one of the earliest high-profile arrests in this case.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers & Syllabus Headings

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Structure, organization, and functioning of the Executive and the Judiciary; functioning of investigative agencies (CBI, ED)
GS-II Constitutional provisions — Article 239AA (Delhi's special status); Centre-State relations
GS-IV Ethics in public life; conflicts of interest; probity in governance
GS-II Role of statutory bodies; regulatory capture; federalism

Plausible Mains Question Stems

  1. "Examine the constitutional and legal implications of the Delhi High Court's revisionary jurisdiction over trial court discharge orders, with reference to the Delhi Excise Policy case."
  2. "The Delhi Excise Policy case raises questions about the independence of investigative agencies like CBI and ED. Critically analyse the structural factors that affect their autonomy."
  3. "Distinguish between 'discharge' and 'acquittal' under the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023. How does a discharge in a CBI case affect parallel PMLA proceedings?"

9. Related Topics to Study Next

  1. DSPE Act, 1946 & CBI's legal framework — CBI derives its powers from this Act; understanding its scope is essential to analyse Centre-state tensions.
  2. PMLA, 2002 & ED's powers — The parallel ED case; twin conditions for bail under PMLA are heavily tested in Prelims and Mains.
  3. Article 239AA — Delhi's Special Status — LG's role vs. elected government; directly relevant to how this case was triggered (LG's CBI referral).
  4. Code of Criminal Procedure / BNSS 2023 — Discharge, acquittal, revision, appeal — foundational criminal procedure concepts.
  5. Federalism & Centre-State Relations (Use of CBI) — States withdrawing general consent to CBI; political use of investigative agencies.
  6. Regulatory Capture — The theoretical concept underlying excise policy manipulation allegations.
  7. Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 — The substantive offences underlying the CBI case (bribery, conspiracy).
  8. SC Judgments on Bail (Manish Sisodia, Kejriwal cases) — Landmark bail jurisprudence under PMLA.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Discharge ≠ Acquittal: Aspirants often treat discharge as the end of the case. It is a pre-trial order; the HC can set it aside, restoring the charges.
  2. CBI ≠ ED: Two separate agencies, two separate cases (CBI → predicate offence; ED → money laundering under PMLA). The HC deferring the ED case does not mean the ED case is also discharged.
  3. "Grave Suspicion" is NOT the same as "proof beyond reasonable doubt": It is the lower threshold applied at charge-framing; confusing the two thresholds is a common Mains writing error.
  4. CBI operates under MHA through DSPE Act, not directly under the PM or Home Minister — many aspirants incorrectly place CBI under the PMO.
  5. Article 239AA gives Delhi a special status but does not make it a full State — LG retains powers over police, public order, and land; the CBI referral by LG exploits this limited autonomy.
  6. PMLA "scheduled offence" dependency: An ED conviction under PMLA requires a predicate scheduled offence; if the CBI discharge is upheld ultimately, it could undermine the ED case — but this is a legal argument, not a confirmed outcome.

11. Sources


Note: Tier 1/2 government sources (pib.gov.in, prsindia.org, etc.) did not return indexed content for this specific court/judicial case. All facts above are grounded in the primary newspaper article (S1, Tier 4) and corroborating journalism (S2–S4, Tier 4). BNSS/CrPC statutory references are drawn from established legal knowledge within the knowledge cutoff.