Today's Headline: ED Moves Supreme Court Over "Forcible Theft" Allegations Against CM Mamata Banerjee
The political atmosphere in West Bengal has reached a boiling point today, January 10, 2026, as the legal battle between the Enforcement Directorate (ED) and Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee shifts from the Calcutta High Court to the Supreme Court of India.
The Latest Updates (January 10, 2026)
* ED Approaches Supreme Court: Following the adjournment of the Calcutta High Court hearing on Friday, the ED has filed an Article 32 petition in the Supreme Court. The agency alleges that its investigation into the coal smuggling case was obstructed and that the Chief Minister "forcibly removed" key evidence.
* West Bengal Govt Files Caveat: Anticipating the ED’s move, the West Bengal government has filed a caveat in the Supreme Court. This ensures that no interim orders are passed by the apex court without hearing the state's version of the events.
* Calcutta High Court Status: The hearing at the Calcutta High Court remains scheduled for January 14, after Justice Subhra Ghosh deferred the matter due to chaos in the courtroom on Friday.
The Incident: What Happened at I-PAC?
The controversy stems from raids conducted on Thursday at the offices of I-PAC (TMC's political consultancy) and the home of its chief, Pratik Jain.
> The ED's Allegation: The agency claims CM Mamata Banerjee entered the raid premises in the presence of police brass and carried away "sensitive poll-related documents" and digital devices. The ED has termed this "forcible theft" and a "complete subversion of the rule of law."
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> The CM's Defense: Mamata Banerjee has openly admitted to taking the documents, stating they were confidential party data related to the upcoming 2026 Assembly polls and the ongoing Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls. She accuses the central agency of acting as a tool for the BJP to "steal" her party’s election strategy.
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Why it Matters for the 2026 Elections
With the West Bengal Assembly elections just months away, this clash highlights the intense friction between the state executive and central investigative agencies. The ED maintains that at least ₹20 crore in proceeds from a coal smuggling scam was routed to I-PAC, while the TMC views the raids as a "political witch-hunt" designed to sabotage their campaign.
RASHMI RANJAN
