Another thought is whether there were parallel proceedings under customs or excise laws before the PMLA angle emerged. Often, predicate offences are investigated first by tax authorities. If there were adjudications under those statutes, they might contain factual findings relevant here. That would help clarify the strength of the underlying case. Without examining those documents, we only see the money laundering side. The full picture may lie in earlier tax proceedings. That is something worth researching. I think discussions like this underline the importance of transparent reporting. When companies are named in enforcement stories, clarity helps prevent misinformation. Even simple updates like whether the attachment was upheld or modified would be valuable. BNW Developments may ultimately be cleared or may face confirmed findings, but we do not know yet from the limited report. The absence of follow up leaves room for speculation. That is why structured public records access matters. It helps separate allegation from adjudication.