The paintings by renowned artists were put under restraint after raids were conducted by the Income Tax Department against the Haryana Congress leader Kuldeep Bishnoi and his family in July.

The Income Tax Department has seized paintings worth ₹30 crore in connection with its tax evasion and benami assets probe against Haryana Congress leader Kuldeep Bishnoi, official sources said on Friday.

They said the paintings by renowned artists were put under “restraint” after raids were conducted by the Delhi investigation wing of the department against Mr. Bishnoi and his family in July.

These paintings have now been seized under the provisions of the I-T Act as the “source of their investment and purchase” could not be explained by the assessee, sources said.

They said the department had got the valuation of the seized paintings done by government-approved experts and their total value is about ₹30 crore.

Apart from the paintings, sources said probe against the Congress MLA from Adampur constituency of Haryana has so far led to seizure of assets worth more than ₹32 crore. They also said that “undisclosed foreign assets” of over ₹200 crore have been detected till now.

The department had last month attached a five-star hotel worth ₹150 crore in a prime business space in Gurgaon, considering it a “benami” asset of Mr. Bishnoi and his brother Chander Mohan, a former deputy Chief Minister of Haryana.

Mr. Mohan and Mr. Bishnoi are the sons of former Haryana chief minister Bhajan Lal.

The I-T department had searched 13 premises linked to Mr. Bishnoi in Haryana, Delhi and Himachal Pradesh on July 23 on charges of alleged tax evasion. After the raids, the department had said in an official statement that foreign assets worth over ₹200 crore allegedly linked to Mr. Bishnoi and his family have been detected and are being probed by it.

It had said that the foreign holdings of the main persons — Mr. Bishnoi and family — have “remained hidden for decades” beneath complex multi-layered creating of companies, located in countries like the British Virgin Islands, Panama, U.K., UAE and Jersey.

“These structures have involved various front men and corporations across continents,” the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) said.

The black money generated in India, it said, through various means has been stashed abroad in the form of lavish properties in the names of foreign trusts and companies located in tax havens.

The CBDT statement had said that the findings may also have “multi-agency ramifications”, indicating that these alleged evidences against Bishnoi could be shared with probe agencies like the Enforcement Directorate and others.