In an earlier hearing, the court had asked what would Ms. Banerjee’s “legal reaction” be if, in a reversal of fortune, she came to power in the Centre in 2030-2031, and a Chief Minister from an opposing political party “barged” in and disrupted a raid by a central agency. File

In an earlier hearing, the court had asked what would Ms. Banerjee’s “legal reaction” be if, in a reversal of fortune, she came to power in the Centre in 2030-2031, and a Chief Minister from an opposing political party “barged” in and disrupted a raid by a central agency. File
| Photo Credit: PTI

The Supreme Court on Wednesday (April 22, 2026) said West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee’s conduct of “walking into the midst” of an ongoing Directorate of Enforcement (ED) raid at I-PAC premises in Kolkata in January cannot translate to a Centre-State dispute.

A Bench of Justices Prashant Kumar Mishra and N.V. Anjaria was responding to an argument made by the West Bengal government side, represented by senior advocate Menaka Guruswamy, that the writ petition filed by the ED in the apex court for a Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) investigation against Ms. Banerjee, senior police and State officials who accompanied her.


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