A five-year prison in Dubai sentence, a Dh500,000 personal fine, and deportation upon completion of the sentence were all part of the original verdict, which the court upheld. One of the biggest financial crime trials ever tried in the nation, the high-profile case involves 33 defendants.
In order to transfer illegal monies both inside and outside the United Arab Emirates, investigators claimed that Sahni and others set up a network of shell corporations and carried out dubious transfers. They were found guilty of both possessing and hiding items thought to be of illicit origin and laundering money as members of an organized crime group.
Previously, Sahni and thirty-two other people, including his son, were sentenced by the Criminal Court. Eleven defendants were found guilty in absentia and sentenced to five years in prison; other defendants were given lower penalties and one-year jail terms.
The validity of their detention was questioned by a number of defendants who filed appeals, arguing that the case was about unlawful cryptocurrency trading rather than money laundering. Following a reconsideration of the arguments, the appellate court changed the ruling but dismissed the majority . The Dh150 million fine must now be paid jointly by all defendants, it decided, while the other penalties stay the same.
Also Read:
Glodi Ntoya’s Journey to Building an International Business
Transforming Visions into Reality with Agents Stack: Aanchal Gupta