J&K Police attach ₹93 lakh property in Chandigarh NDPS case
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Jammu and Kashmir Police on Saturday, 9 May announced the attachment of a residential property worth nearly ₹93 lakh in Chandigarh, in connection with a narcotics trafficking case registered at Police Station Bagh-e-Bahu, Jammu. The action marks one of the more significant asset-seizure moves under the ongoing Nasha Mukt Jammu Kashmir Abhiyaan, a 100-day anti-drug campaign.
How the Case Unfolded
The case traces back to 14 January this year, when police apprehended Arun Singh, a resident of Rajeev Nagar, Narwal, Jammu, during a routine naka checking operation. Officers recovered 5.61 grams of heroin from his possession, leading to the registration of an FIR under relevant sections of the NDPS Act at Bagh-e-Bahu Police Station.
Investigation Uncovers Wider Network
What began as a single-suspect seizure quickly expanded. Investigators traced financial transactions allegedly linked to the narcotics trade and followed the trail to Chandigarh, where Rishi Singh, brother of the accused Arun Singh, was found residing. According to police, the residential property located in Sector 38-A, Chandigarh was allegedly acquired through proceeds generated from illegal narcotics activities connected to the case.
A police team from Bagh-e-Bahu Police Station formally attached the immovable property on Thursday, acting under NDPS Act provisions governing illegally acquired assets. Officials described the move as a direct effort to dismantle the financial infrastructure supporting drug networks operating in Jammu and Kashmir.
The Nasha Mukt Abhiyaan Framework
The attachment is part of a broader crackdown under the Nasha Mukt Jammu Kashmir Abhiyaan, launched by Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha. The campaign introduced a set of additional punitive measures targeting drug smugglers and peddlers — beyond standard legal penalties — including cancellation of Aadhaar cards, passports, and driving licences, alongside property attachment for assets generated from the drug trade.
Notably, this layered punishment framework signals a shift from prosecution-only approaches toward economic disruption of drug networks — a strategy increasingly adopted by enforcement agencies across India.
What Comes Next
With the 100-day campaign still underway, further attachment actions and network dismantling efforts are expected. The Chandigarh property attachment illustrates how J&K Police are extending their operational reach beyond the Union Territory's borders to trace narcotics-linked assets wherever they are held.