For the first time in its history, the Enforcement Directorate (ED) has issued a Purple Notice through Interpol, signalling a new phase in India’s fight against financial crime. The notice, issued on August 21, 2025, was aimed at exposing how shell companies in India and abroad have been manipulating international trade channels to launder black money under the façade of legitimate business transactions.
Investigators revealed that the racket relied on sophisticated methods designed to bypass regulatory checks.
The racket operated through multiple deceptive techniques. These included under-invoicing imports by recording bills at values much lower than the actual transaction, making fake duty-free import claims such as semiconductor shipments, and forging compliance paperwork including banking and trade documents.
Another method used was circular trading, where the same goods were repeatedly shown as exported through different jurisdictions to create the illusion of legitimate trade.
Officials noted that while the system bore similarities to hawala operations, it differed in one key aspect: unlike hawala’s reliance on informal channels, this network was made to appear legitimate by routing transactions through formal banking systems and a web of paper companies spread across several countries.
How do shell companies exploit global trade?
The ED found that domestic and foreign shell entities were colluding to disguise illicit funds. These entities would route goods across borders, manipulating invoices and customs paperwork to artificially inflate or deflate trade values. The black money generated in India would thus appear as legitimate export earnings abroad.
“Trade-based money laundering has emerged as one of the most difficult financial crimes to detect because it exploits the sheer volume and complexity of global commerce,” explained a financial crime analyst as quoted in a News 18 report. “The Purple Notice ensures that law enforcement across 196 countries remains vigilant against these tactics.”
What exactly is a Purple Notice?
Interpol issues nine different kinds of notices to its 196 member countries, each serving a distinct purpose. While the Red Corner Notice is the most popular, used to track fugitives, the Purple Notice is far less understood.
The Purple Notice is specifically designed to alert global law enforcement about criminal modus operandi, tools, concealment methods, or equipment used in offences. In this case, the ED used it to expose trade-based laundering techniques, enabling other countries to recognise and counter similar threats within their jurisdictions.
A senior ED officer explained: “By taking the lead in issuing this notice, India has positioned itself at the forefront of global efforts to detect and prevent money laundering through trade.”
The agency has also been working with international platforms such as the Global Focal Point Network and the Asset Recovery Inter-Agency Network (Asia Pacific) to ensure that economic offenders find no safe haven.
How does a Purple Notice differ from a Red Corner Notice?
The distinction between the two is significant:
Red Corner Notice (RCN): Aimed at persons to locate, track, and provisionally arrest fugitives wanted in a member country.
Purple Notice: Aimed at methods exposing techniques, tools, and tricks used by criminals, rather than targeting a single offender.
Thus, while the Red Notice focuses on catching individuals, the Purple Notice is about spreading awareness of evolving criminal strategies.
What other Interpol notices exist?
To understand the uniqueness of the Purple Notice, it is worth looking at the wider set of Interpol alerts:
Red Notice: To locate and arrest wanted persons.
Yellow Notice: To help trace missing persons, especially minors.
Blue Notice: To collect information on suspects’ identity or activity.
Black Notice: To identify unknown bodies.
Green Notice: To warn about a person’s criminal activities posing a threat.
Orange Notice: To alert about dangerous objects, persons, or processes.
Purple Notice: To share information on criminal modus operandi.
Silver Notice (pilot stage): To trace and recover criminal assets.
Interpol-UNSC Special Notice: To identify entities and individuals under UN sanctions.
With this first Purple Notice, India joins the global conversation not just on fugitives, but also on the changing architecture of crime itself.
Why is this step considered Historic for India?
This move is viewed as more than just an isolated measure. It is being seen as a signal of India’s growing influence in shaping international legal norms.
The ED has already been collaborating with global platforms such as:
The Global Focal Point Network – for tracking fugitives.
The Asset Recovery Inter-Agency Network (Asia Pacific) – to recover illicit assets hidden abroad.
By engaging in these networks, the ED has ensured that economic offenders cannot easily find safe havens abroad.
“This is India moving beyond domestic enforcement into actively shaping the global response to financial crime,” noted a former intelligence official. “It also puts pressure on countries often seen as weak links in trade-based laundering to strengthen their regulatory frameworks.”
Why is trade-based money laundering so dangerous?
Unlike traditional money laundering, which often involves direct cash movement or banking fraud, trade-based laundering hides behind legitimate business activity. With trillions of dollars worth of goods moving across borders each year, identifying manipulated invoices becomes extremely complex.
For example, a consignment of semiconductors falsely claimed as duty-free may pass through multiple countries, with values inflated or deflated at each stop. By the time the paperwork reaches enforcement agencies, the trail is so convoluted that tracing the original crime becomes nearly impossible.
The ED believes that by exposing these tricks at a global level, the Purple Notice will compel regulators worldwide to tighten their monitoring of international trade flows.
What does this mean for the future of financial policing?
India’s issuance of a Purple Notice may pave the way for similar actions by other countries. As global commerce continues to expand, so too will the opportunities for fraudsters to exploit trade systems. By creating global awareness through Interpol, the ED has set a precedent for proactive policing in financial crimes.
So, this is not just about one case. It is about reshaping the way we look at economic crime. If India can alert 196 countries about laundering methods today, tomorrow we could see joint investigations and faster recovery of illicit assets.
Will Purple Notices become a new tool against Global fraud?
The Enforcement Directorate’s first-ever Purple Notice via Interpol marks a watershed moment in India’s enforcement strategy. Unlike past efforts focused narrowly on fugitives, this step highlights the ED’s intention to tackle methods of crime at their roots.
As trade-based money laundering grows into a multi-billion-dollar global challenge, India’s proactive approach may inspire similar measures worldwide. In an age where financial fraud knows no borders, such tools could be decisive in ensuring that economic offenders find no place to hide.



















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