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US SEC asks India for help in Adani Fraud Probe

US SEC asks India for help in Adani Fraud Probe

A court filing on Tuesday revealed that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission had asked Indian authorities to assist in its investigation into Adani Group founder Gautam Adani and nephew, over an alleged $265 million bribery and securities fraud scheme.

The regulator said to a New York District Court that it was trying to serve the complaint to both the founder, Sagar Adani and his nephew. It was also seeking assistance from India's Law Ministry to do this.

Both are in India and neither is under U.S. custody.

In a court filing, the SEC stated that it had requested assistance under the Hague Service Convention.

Adani Group, and India's Law Ministry did not respond immediately to a comment request.

Last week, Prime minister Narendra Modi told reporters that he had not discussed the Adani case during his Washington visit with U.S. president Donald Trump, and described it as an issue which leaders never discuss.

India's Congress Party has demanded Adani's immediate arrest, and Modi is accused of favouring or shielding Adani in past deals. Modi's Party and Adani deny the allegations.

Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn unveiled an indictment last year accusing Adani bribing Indian government officials to convince them that Adani Green Energy, a subsidiary from his Adani Group, produces electricity.

It added that he then misled U.S. Investors by providing reassuring data about the company's anti graft practices.

Adani Group called the allegations "baseless", and promised to pursue "all legal remedies".

Adani Green announced in January that it had hired independent law firms to review U.S. charges. (Reporting and editing by Lisa Shumaker, Clarence Fernandez and Aditya Kalra)

(source: Reuters)