Constitutional Liberty vs. PMLA Rigors: High Court Grants Bail in Multi-Crore Scholarship Scam
In the judgment of Vikas Bansal v. Directorate of Enforcement (ED), the High Court of Himachal Pradesh granted regular bail to the Vice Chairman of two professional institutions accused in a massive money-laundering case. The Court ruled that the statutory “twin conditions” for bail under Section 45 of the PMLA must yield to the fundamental right to a speedy trial under Article 21 of the Constitution when a trial is unlikely to conclude in a reasonable timeframe.
The Dispute: Scholarship Fraud and Allegations of Vengeance
The case originated from a 2019 scholarship scam involving the siphoning of post-matric funds meant for SC, ST, and OBC students in Himachal Pradesh.
- The Allegations: The ED alleged that the applicant, as Vice Chairman of the Himalayan Group (HGPI) and Apex Group (AGPI), fraudulently claimed over ₹18.29 crore in proceeds of crime by using bogus student details and pre-signed cheques.
- The “Vengeance” Plea: The applicant contended that his arrest in January 2025 was an act of “sheer vengeance”. He claimed he had cooperated with the investigation since 2019 and was only arrested after his brother reported an ED officer (Vishal Deep) to the CBI for demanding a ₹60 lakh bribe, which led to a successful CBI trap.
Key Legal Principles: Balancing Statute and Constitution
Justice Virender Singh’s ruling established that the severity of an economic offense does not authorize indefinite pre-trial detention.
- Article 21 Superiority: Relying on Supreme Court precedents like Manish Sisodia and UOI v. K.A. Najeeb, the Court held that while Section 45 of the PMLA is stringent, it cannot be used to keep an undertrial in custody for an “unreasonably long time”.
- The Scale of Trial: The Court noted that the prosecution intends to examine 493 witnesses and rely on over one lakh pages of digitized documents. Given this volume, the Court found “not even the remotest possibility” of the trial concluding in the near future.
- Bail is the Rule: The judgment reaffirmed the principle that “bail is the rule and jail is the exception,” emphasizing that detention should not become “punishment without trial”.
- The Doctrine of Parity: The Court granted relief partly because several high-profile co-accused—including Arvind Rajta, Hitesh Gandhi, and Rajdeep Singh—had already been released on bail by the same Court.
Final Ruling and Conditions
The Court concluded that the “rigours of Section 45… will melt down” where there is no likelihood of a timely trial.
Release Conditions:
- Personal Bond: The applicant was ordered to be released on a bond of ₹2,00,000 with two sureties.
- Trial Participation: He must attend all court hearings and is prohibited from tampering with evidence or threatening witnesses.
- Travel Restriction: He cannot leave India without prior permission from the Court.
- Ongoing Conduct: He must file a monthly affidavit confirming he has not been named as an accused in any other cases.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 80
Vikas Bansal V. Directorate of Enforcement (Ed) (D.O.J. 12-03-2026)





