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Updated Jul 6, 2026 · 09:16
India News Updated Jul 6, 2026

Adani Case Was "Name and Shame" Exercise Without Trial Prospect: Harish Salve

Senior Advocate Harish Salve stated that the US case against Gautam Adani was filed as a "name and shame" exercise without any prospect of trial. The US Department of Justice defended its decision to drop charges, citing weak evidence and jurisdictional overreach. Salve claimed the timing reflected the Biden administration's anti-India narrative and political motivations. Legal experts believe the presiding judge will likely close the case following the DOJ's firm stance.

"Case against Adani was filed as name and shame without prospect of trial": Harish Salve

London, July 6

The US Department of Justice strongly defended its decision to drop the high-profile charges of the alleged criminal bribery case against Gautam Adani, citing evidentiary weakness, jurisdictional overreach, and constitutional limits on judicial power.

The alleged case against Adani and others was filed merely as a "name and shame" exercise designed to levy accusations without any prospect of a trial occurring, said Senior Advocate Harish Salve.

Salve stated that the original indictment reflected a broader political agenda rather than a standard legal proceeding.

"This is what I have always said, at least it was my view, that the timing of this was such that the Biden administration had a constant anti-India narrative running," Salve told ANI. "There are senators there, I don't want to name them, who constantly have this India's bad on human rights, India's this, India's corrupt all the time trying to paint India in a bad light. And they were trying to pressure India. I don't think it's any secret. The Biden administration was not in love with India. That's why they are saying. They said it was filed as a 'name and shame' design to levy accusations without any prospect of any trial occurring. It was a political move."

The US Department of Justice in its reply said that forcing prosecutors to spell out their reasoning in detail could undermine constitutional authority over prosecutorial decisions. Prosecutors say the alleged case took place in India and it was not appropriate for US prosecutors to get into it.

The US DoJ in its reply had argued that the case was weak due to evidentiary problems. It further said that most of the alleged evidence was based in India making US prosecution difficult.

Legal experts noted that the firm stance taken by the DoJ leaves the presiding judge with very little room to keep the matter alive.

"Will the judge close the case soon? I think he will have to. After this, he may have to. I mean, I don't see why he will not close it," Salve said. "If he doesn't close, for them, they are raising it to a larger issue. I'd end by saying it is the Constitution wastes the prosecutorial power in the executive not the judiciary. They are telling the judge whether to prosecute or not is for us to decide, not for you."

The Senior Advocate also observed that the tone used by the US Justice Department in its response to the court was remarkably firm, even when accounting for the direct nature of American legal communications.

"See, because the judge, the attorney general's office obviously has taken offense. See, American English, the way they address courts and the way they write, it's very different from even the British here in England, the kind of language we use. And India, of course, is even more differential. America is more direct. Even their judgments are in more direct language. So you have to account for that. even by the American standard, this is a pretty hard hitting statement."

"They even said that they were not satisfied. They should never have brought this case," Salve added.

The case against Gautam Adani and others had alleged a bribery scheme linked to solar power contracts in India which further allegedly misled US investors. In May this year the US DoJ had moved to dismiss these charges following which the US Court of the Eastern District of New York has sought a reply from the DoJ. With that reply cementing the US DoJ's position, legal experts argue that teh the Judge in all likelihood would back the DoJ stand.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Sneha F

While I'm relieved the case is being dropped, let's not pretend everything is perfect. We should still hold our corporate leaders accountable domestically. That said, this was a clear case of the US trying to dictate terms to India — they have no business meddling in our affairs.

James A

As an American watching this, I'm embarrassed by my government's actions. The DOJ should focus on real corruption at home rather than going after Indian businessmen for political theater. Salve's analysis is spot-on.

Vikram M

This entire episode shows how global power games work. The US thought they could bully India through legal means, but our legal system and leaders stood firm. Harish Salve ji's explanation about constitutional limits on prosecutorial power is brilliant. Jai Hind! 🚀

Rohit P

Let's be honest — while the US clearly had political motives, this case did expose how vulnerable Indian businesses are to international legal harassment. We need stronger bilateral agreements to prevent such misuse of legal systems in the future.

Sarah B

The DOJ's response is indeed unusually harsh by American standards. It shows even the US government recognized this was a weak case brought for the wrong reasons. The judge will almost certainly close this now. Good riddance to bad lawfare.

Priya S

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

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