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Updated Jun 29, 2026 · 08:35
World News Updated Jun 29, 2026

US Court Asks DOJ to Justify Dropping Adani Charges: Legal Expert Weighs In

A US court has asked the Department of Justice to justify dropping charges against Gautam Adani and Sagar Adani. Legal expert Chris Man describes this as a routine procedural step under federal criminal rules. The DOJ must submit a formal response by July 13, 2026, with experts expecting the process to conclude in weeks. The Adani Group maintains the case suffered from fatal flaws, including lack of investor losses and jurisdictional issues.

"Judge has to approve dismissal": US lawyer Chris Man on US court asking Dept of Justice to justify dropping of charges against Adani

By Sahil Pandey, Naxos, June 29

A US-based legal expert has described Judge Nicholas Garaufis's recent order regarding the Department of Justice's motion to dismiss the indictment against the Adani Group as a routine procedural step, noting that such judicial oversight is standard practice rather than an indication of a major legal hurdle. Judge Nicholas Garaufis had passed an order asking the US Department of Justice to justify dropping charges against Gautam Adani and Sagar Adani.

Speaking with ANI, Chris Man, a partner at the prominent law firm Steptoe and a recognised leader in international white-collar and corporate defence, weighed in on the matter. With a distinguished track record of representing high-profile individuals, including Hunter Biden, and major corporations like Walmart in complex DOJ and SEC investigations, Chris Man is widely regarded as a significant legal voice on cross-border criminal and regulatory proceedings.

He explained that while the court has a "leave of court" requirement under federal criminal rules to consider a prosecutor's motion to dismiss, the executive branch maintains significant discretion.

"It is a fairly routine process. The Department of Justice has great discretion in deciding whether to bring a case and whether to dismiss it," Chris Man stated. "Once a case is filed, the judge has to approve the dismissal, but I'm not aware of any instance where any judge has ever refused that happening."

Addressing whether the court could effectively block the DOJ's request, Chris Man emphasised the constitutional limits of judicial intervention in prosecutorial decisions. "The judge would have no power to force the government to prosecute a case that it doesn't want to prosecute," he told ANI.

Legal sources familiar with the matter suggest that the order may actually fast-track the resolution, as the court has mandated that the US government submit a formal response by July 13, 2026.

Experts believe the DOJ is unlikely to be deterred by the request for further explanation and will likely provide a more detailed analysis to satisfy the court's requirements.

"I don't think the DOJ will be phased. They will come back with a more thorough analysis, and I think that will be sufficient for the judge," Chris Man remarked, estimating that the entire process will likely conclude in a matter of weeks rather than months.

Earlier, the US DoJ had decided to permanently drop all criminal charges against Gautam Adani and Sagar Adani in an alleged securities and wire fraud case pending in New York. Prosecutors had concluded that they could not sustain the allegations.

In another development, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission had also settled civil allegations relating to disclosures made to investors in connection with solar energy projects in India.

The Adani Group has maintained that the case against it suffered from fatal flaws. In a letter to the Court dated June 24, 2026, the company highlighted that the transactions were conducted by non-US issuers and lenders, governed by English law, and fell outside the scope of US securities law under the Supreme Court's ruling in Morrison v. National Australia Bank.

Furthermore, the defence highlighted that the bribery allegations lacked substance, supported by expert testimony from a former senior Indian regulatory official, which indicated that the alleged payments were transparent price reductions rather than illegal inducements. Adani also noted that there were no investor losses, as all bond and loan obligations have been met or are in good standing.

"If the judge were to deny the request to have the indictment dismissed, the government and Adani would both have the right to appeal," Chris Man added regarding potential next steps.

Legal analysts point out that the principal intent of the "leave of court" requirement in Rule 48(a) is to protect defendants from prosecutorial harassment, a principle recently affirmed by Judge Chen of the Eastern District of New York in the FIFA case, where the court recognised it holds "very little authority" to deny a DOJ motion to dismiss.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Rahul R

While I'm pleased for Adani, let's not pretend this was a simple misunderstanding. The allegations were serious—bribery in solar contracts, securities fraud... The "transparent price reductions" explanation raises eyebrows. The Indian regulatory testimony is interesting, but I'd like more transparency. Still, good that the US system didn't drag this out unnecessarily.

Kavya N

Finally some good news! The opposition was literally dancing on social media calling Adani a criminal, and now look—case dropped, SEC settled, everything falling apart for the haters. This is why we shouldn't believe everything we see online. Adani Group has contributed massively to India's infrastructure. 🙏

Aman W

Chris Man is a top lawyer, but let's be real—this was a PR disaster for India on the global stage. Even if the case is dropped, the reputation damage is done. Foreign investors will think twice before dealing with Indian companies if such allegations can be made and then quietly dropped. We need stronger compliance mechanisms within Indian corporates.

Priya S

The Indian angle here is key—Morrison v. National Australia Bank clearly limits US extraterritorial application. Our laws are not inferior, and this ruling vindicates that. But more importantly, why did the DOJ even file charges in 2024 if they knew the case was weak? Seems like political vendetta against a successful Indian businessman. Bhai log, focus on building India! 💪

Siddharth J

I'm a corporate lawyer, and I can say this is indeed standard procedure under

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

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