A United States federal court has refused to immediately allow the Department of Justice (DoJ) to drop criminal charges against Gautam Adani, Sagar Adani and others in the alleged $250 million bribery case, after finding that the government’s explanation for doing so was “terse, bland, and conclusory.”
Judge Nicholas G Garaufis of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York directed the DoJ to give reasons for its decision to seek dismissal of the indictment against all eight accused.The Government’s terse, bland, and conclusory statement affords the court neither a sufficient basis to reach any conclusion, nor the opportunity to conduct any analysis of the Government’s request for dismissal.
The Court said that the government must provide each reason for seeking dismissal of the indictment with prejudice, along with sufficient factual support for each basis.“Here, the Government’s terse, bland, and conclusory statement affords the court neither a sufficient basis to reach any conclusion, nor the opportunity to conduct any analysis of the Government’s request for dismissal,” the judge said.
It added that Rule 48(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure requires the government to set out the basis for a motion to dismiss. It described the rule as a “sunshine provision” under which prosecutors must supply sufficient reasons to support dismissal of an indictment.
"Thus, the Government has failed to meet its obligation to supply adequate reasoning and sufficient facts to support dismissal of the Indictment. And, without this additional information, the court cannot fulfill its own obligation to exercise "sound judicial discretion in considering [the Government's] request for dismissal."The DoJ has been directed to file its explanation by July 13, 2026.
The order came after the US government moved the Court under Rule 48(a). In its May 18 filing, the DoJ said that after reviewing the case, it decided not to devote further resources to the criminal charges against the individual defendants.
The indictment had arisen from allegations concerning a 12 gigawatt solar power project. According to the earlier indictment, the Solar Energy Corporation of India needed state electricity distribution companies to enter into power supply agreements so that the project and related power purchase agreements would become financially workable.
The indictment had alleged that Gautam Adani, Sagar Adani, Vneet Jaain, Ranjit Gupta and others devised a plan to bribe Indian state government officials to get the project going. It was alleged that bribes worth ₹2,029 crore (around $265 million) were promised to officials of state electricity distribution companies. Of this, ₹1,750 crore was allegedly allocated to officials in Andhra Pradesh to secure purchase of 7 gigawatts of solar power.
The defendants were charged with securities fraud, wire fraud, conspiracy to violate the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and conspiracy to obstruct justice.