High Court appoints special officer for debit-frozen TMC bank accounts for Mamata-led group's daily expenses
The Calcutta High Court appointed a special officer to manage TMC bank accounts. These accounts were frozen following a complaint alleging proceeds of crime. The officer will oversee daily expenses until September 2026. Transactions for legal cost...

A complaint was lodged on June 18 before the Cyber Crime Police Station of Bidhannagar Police Commissionerate, alleging that the three accounts of the TMC in a private bank were repositories of proceeds of crime and the police authorities concerned were requested to take steps.
The three accounts were made debit-frozen the very next day following the registration of the FIR on June 18.
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Justice Saugata Bhattacharyya appointed retired Calcutta High Court judge Subrata Talukdar as a special officer for running the day-to-day expenses of the Mamata Banerjee-led group till September 30, 2026.
Leaders of the other party faction, led by TMC MLAs Ritabrata Banerjee and Sandipan Saha, lodged the police complaint that led to the freezing of debit transactions from the three accounts.
Justice Bhattacharyya permitted any two authorised signatories of the three bank accounts to present a cheque before the special officer, which will thereafter be presented before the bank authority for encashment.
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The court clarified that the petitioner is permitted to operate bank accounts for day-to-day expenditures only to run the political party.
On a plea by the petitioner, Justice Bhattacharyya permitted transactions to meet legal expenditure of the Mamata Banerjee-led TMC and the honorarium of Rs 1.25 lakh per month of the special officer from the three bank accounts till September 30.
The court directed the special officer to file a report disclosing the statement of expenditure incurred during the period on the next date of hearing.
The court also asked the bank authority to preserve electronic records and banking data of the three accounts and to cooperate with the ongoing police investigation.
The police authority was directed to file a report on the progress of the investigation on the next date of hearing on September 21.
Noting that the issue of recognition of a faction of the TMC is pending before the Election Commission, the court directed that the commission's decision be brought to the court's notice if it is decided by the poll body, for vacating this interim order.
Senior lawyer Abhishek Manu Singhvi, representing the petitioner - the Mamata Banerjee-aligned Trinamool Congress - said that the complainants are part of a faction of the party formed after the declaration of the West Bengal assembly election results on May 4, 2026, with the "oblique motive" of crippling a political party.
He further stated that the difference in vote share in the poll results between the TMC and the BJP is five per cent.
Singhvi contended that the complainants were also beneficiaries of funds from these bank accounts to contest the assembly elections on TMC tickets.
The petitioner prayed for a direction upon the police authorities to permit the operation of the three debit-frozen bank accounts.
Solicitor General of India Tushar Mehta, representing the police authorities, stated before the court that the investigating agency, on receipt of the complaint, had to take steps expeditiously in order to prevent the petitioner (Mamata Banerjee-aligned faction) from making illegal transactions on those three bank accounts.
He stated that the other faction of the party is also seeking recognition as the official group of the TMC and that it is for the Election Commission of India to take a decision on the issue.
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