header banner
ECONOMY

Nepal’s biggest money laundering case worth over Rs 115 billion reaches Special Court

Nepal’s largest-ever money laundering and financial misappropriation case, involving over Rs 115 billion, has been filed at the Special Court, marking a major escalation in scrutiny of alleged organised financial crimes spanning the securities, insurance, and banking sectors.  
alt=
By REPUBLICA

KATHMANDU, June 14: Nepal’s largest-ever money laundering and financial misappropriation case, involving over Rs 115 billion, has been filed at the Special Court, marking a major escalation in scrutiny of alleged organised financial crimes spanning the securities, insurance, and banking sectors.



The Department of Money Laundering Investigation (DoMLI), after a five-month probe, on Thursday filed a charge sheet against 39 individuals and several companies, claiming that more than Rs 106.25 billion was directly linked to illicit financial activities. Officials said the broader scale of suspected transactions exceeds Rs 115 billion.


According to the department, the case involves complex patterns of alleged share price manipulation, misuse of insurance funds, routing of money through brokerage firms, concealment of beneficial ownership through corporate structures, and layering of transactions to project illicit funds as legitimate assets.


At the centre of the case is businessman Deepak Bhatta, against whom the state has sought recovery of Rs 26.63 billion—the highest amount claimed against any individual. He is currently in police custody.


Another major accused, businessman Sulabh Agrawal, faces claims of Rs 25.59 billion, while additional claims have been filed against his wife Subhi Agrawal (Rs 3.96 billion) and son Krishiv Agrawal (Rs 328.3 million).


Investigators have also named executives and associates linked to stock broking firms, reinsurance companies, micro-insurance firms, and investment entities, alleging their involvement in facilitating or benefiting from the financial network under investigation. Former regulators, including ex-chairpersons of the Nepal Insurance Authority Sharad Ojha and Madan Dahal, have also been brought under scrutiny, with combined claims exceeding Rs 3.5 billion.


DoMLI has alleged that regulatory weaknesses and influence networks may have enabled the large-scale movement and concealment of funds within the formal financial system. The agency said the case reflects an organised structure of financial crime involving both private sector actors and regulatory institutions.


Beyond recovery of the disputed funds, the charge sheet seeks fines of up to double the claimed amounts under the Money Laundering Prevention Act, 2008. Analysts say the case could become a major test of Nepal’s financial governance and regulatory enforcement capacity.


Defendants and claim amounts


Related story

Special Court convicts two individuals of money laundering


Deepak Bhatta                  Rs 26.63 billion


Sulabh Agrawal                Rs 25.59 billion


Subhi Agarwal                  Rs 3.96 billion


Krishiv Agarwal               Rs 328.3 million


Rishi Raj More                 Rs 3.78 billion


Amit More                         Rs 120.06 million


Rajkumar More                Rs 276.9 million


Sandeep Chachan Aggarwal and Bhrikuti Stock Broking    Rs 14.58 billion


Sahil Aggarwal                 Rs 6.04 billion


Shekhar Golcha, Rohit Gupta, Khashar Kharel, Subhash Kumar Jhunjhunwala, Amit More and Rajeev More Rs 2.73 billion


Upasana Paudel, Manish Kumar, Shishir Gaire and Deepak Kumar Shrestha Rs 6.04 billion


Raj Bahadur Shah                         Rs 1.41 billion


Ritesh Pradhan                        Rs 370 million


Sumer Shamsher JBR                   Rs 1.27 billion


Subash Bahadur Shrestha           Rs 459.4 million


Ashish Shrestha, Mrigendra Nath Rimal and Siddhant Jhunjhunwala  Rs 597.5 million


Manoj Kumar Lal Karna             Rs 7.22 billion


Surendra Thapa                            Rs 49 million


Ram Kumar Yadav (CEO of Liberty Micro Life Insurance) Rs 42 million


Pratap Man Shrestha (CEO of Crest Micro Life Insurance) Rs 237.3 million


Naresh Kumar Roka (CEO of Protective Micro Insurance)    Rs 119.09 million


Chirayu Bhandari (CEO of Guardian Micro Life Insurance)   Rs 404.9 million


Shankarlal Agrawal         Rs 210.07 million


Sharad Ojha and Madan Dahal (Former Chiefs of Nepal Insurance Authority)  Rs 3.50 billion


 

Related Stories
SOCIETY

Money laundering case filed against four persons a...

special_court.JPG
SOCIETY

Special Court convicts Nepali individual after 15...

lottery_20240920145954.jpg
SOCIETY

Special Court convicts former president of Nepal E...

Neupane_20201125165640.jpg
POLITICS

Money laundering case worth over Rs 22 billion fil...

DOMLI-1777948624.webp
POLITICS

DoMLI resumes investigation against Lamichhane on...

p7PRfs38Md23VTIJqA9MISNui2V1PuqonP0WC9pE.jpg