Why was the NewsClick case quashed?


NewsClick Case Quashed — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Portal NewsClick (PPK NewsClick Studios Pvt. Ltd.)
Editor-in-Chief Prabir Purkayastha
Investigating agency (economic) EOW, Delhi Police + Enforcement Directorate (ED)
Investigating agency (terror) Delhi Police Special Cell
Primary FIR year 2020 (EOW); UAPA FIR — 2023
Foreign investment alleged $1.5 million from Worldwide Media Holdings LLC, USA
FDI cap violated (alleged) 26% FDI cap in digital news entities
Applicable laws FEMA 1999, PMLA 2002, UAPA 1967
Informant (not complainant) Sobhan Singh (letter to MIB, June 26, 2020)
Ministry that forwarded complaint Ministry of Information & Broadcasting (MIB)
Under Secretary who forwarded Vijay Kaushik
HC judge who quashed FIR Justice Neena Bansal Krishna, Delhi HC
Grounds for quashing Mala fide, arbitrary, abuse of legal process
SC ruling (UAPA arrest) Arrest declared illegal — May 15, 2024

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Political / Administrative

Economic / Regulatory

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The EOW-FIR against NewsClick originated from a letter to the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, dated June 26, 2020. [S1]
  2. The informant who wrote the letter was Sobhan Singh — he was not an aggrieved party. [S1]
  3. NewsClick allegedly received $1.5 million from Worldwide Media Holdings LLC, USA. [S1]
  4. The allegation was that shares were over-valued to circumvent the 26% FDI cap applicable to digital news media. [S1][S2]
  5. Under PMLA, criminal proceedings require a valid predicate/scheduled offence — quashing the EOW-FIR collapses the ED case. [S1]
  6. Justice Neena Bansal Krishna of Delhi HC quashed the FIR (June 2026), calling the prosecution "mala fide and arbitrary." [S1]
  7. The Supreme Court in May 2024 declared Purkayastha's UAPA arrest illegal on the ground that written grounds of arrest were not supplied — violating Article 22(1). [S3]
  8. FDI in digital news media is permitted up to 26% under the approval route (Press Note 3, 2020, DPIIT). [S2]
  9. Both FEMA 1999 (civil) and PMLA 2002 (criminal) were invoked in the same factual matrix — the HC's ruling raises limits on simultaneous use of both. [S1]
  10. The letter from the informant was forwarded to Delhi Police by Vijay Kaushik, Under Secretary, MIB. [S1]
  11. Raids on ~46 journalists linked to NewsClick were conducted on October 3–4, 2023 by Delhi Police Special Cell.
  12. The UAPA chargesheet alleged NewsClick received funds from China to spread pro-China propaganda and disrupt India's sovereignty. [S2]
  13. Purkayastha was released from Tihar Jail in May 2024 following the Supreme Court order. [S3]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper mapping: - GS-II: Governance, constitutional provisions, statutory institutions, press freedom, role of quasi-judicial bodies. - GS-III: Internal security — UAPA, role of ED, foreign funding, money laundering. - GS-IV: Ethics of state power — use of institutions, accountability, transparency.

Specific syllabus headings: - GS-II: "Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation"; "Important aspects of governance — transparency and accountability." - GS-III: "Money laundering and its prevention"; "Role of external state and non-state actors in creating challenges to internal security."

Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "Critically examine the implications of using PMLA proceedings as a tool against media organisations, in light of the NewsClick case and the Supreme Court's jurisprudence on predicate offences." 2. "How does the 26% FDI cap on digital news media balance the interests of press freedom and national security? Discuss with reference to recent judicial developments." 3. "Discuss the constitutional safeguards available to an accused under Article 22 in the context of arrests under UAPA, citing recent Supreme Court judgments."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
PMLA, 2002 — predicate offences and judicial review Core legal mechanism challenged in NewsClick; SC has repeatedly refined its scope
UAPA, 1967 and press freedom Same case; broader question of anti-terror law being used against non-violent actors
FDI in media — Press Note 3, 2020 (DPIIT) The regulatory trigger for the entire case; 26% cap is examinable
FEMA vs IPC/PMLA — civil vs criminal overlap Key legal question raised: can compounded FEMA violation become PMLA predicate?
Freedom of Press — Article 19(1)(a) jurisprudence Constitutional basis for HC's ruling on threat to journalism
ED's powers under PMLA — Section 19 arrest, Section 50 summons Procedure challenged in multiple media/opposition-related cases
National Herald case Closest contemporary parallel — PMLA against a media/political entity
Romesh Thappar v. State of Madras (1950) Foundational SC precedent on press freedom under Part III

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing the two parallel cases: There are two distinct cases — (a) the EOW/ED FDI-FEMA-PMLA case (quashed June 2026) and (b) the UAPA case (arrest quashed May 2024, chargesheet still active). Aspirants often conflate them.
  2. Misattributing the FIR origin: The FIR was not filed on a complaint by MIB — the Ministry merely forwarded an informant's letter. This distinction was central to the mala fide finding.
  3. Wrong FDI cap: The cap for digital news is 26% (approval route), not 49% or 74% as applicable to other media segments; do not generalise.
  4. Treating FEMA and PMLA as identical: FEMA violations are civil/regulatory; PMLA violations are criminal. The argument that RBI's compounding of the FEMA violation bars PMLA prosecution is legally significant and should not be overlooked.
  5. Supreme Court's 2024 ruling scope: The SC declared only the UAPA arrest illegal (on procedural Article 22 grounds) — it did not quash the UAPA FIR or chargesheet. The June 2026 HC order (on the economic offences FIR) is a separate and subsequent ruling.

11. Sources