Rajpal Yadav Controversy

Rajpal Yadav Controversy Explained: The ₹9 Crore Case, The Tihar Jail Stint, The Screen Awards Debt Joke, Salman Khan’s Support & Everything That Happened

In early 2026, one of Bollywood’s most beloved comedians became the centre of two separate controversies — one legal, one social — that revealed something uncomfortable about how the entertainment industry treats the people who make it laugh.

First Rajpal Yadav Controversy, he surrendered to Tihar Jail in February over a ₹9 crore cheque bounce case that had been dragging through courts for 16 years. Then, barely two months after being released on bail, he sat in the audience at the Chetak Screen Awards 2026 and was publicly mocked about his debt by the show’s host in front of the entire Bollywood industry.

The joke went viral. The internet erupted. Salman Khan stepped in. And Rajpal Yadav — with more grace than most people could manage — defended the man who mocked him, called him a brother, and asked his fans not to retaliate.

Here is the complete story — from the 2010 loan that started it all to the Screen Awards incident that has the internet divided right now.


Part 1: The ₹9 Crore Case — 16 Years of Legal Battle, Explained Simply

How It Started: A Failed Film and a Loan That Wouldn’t Go Away

In 2010, Rajpal Yadav decided to step behind the camera. Having established himself as one of Bollywood’s most reliable comic actors — a man who could steal scenes from top stars with a single expression — he directed and produced his own film: Ata Pata Laapata.

To fund it, he borrowed ₹5 crore from Murali Projects Pvt. Ltd., a Delhi-based company.

Rajpal Yadav controversy

The film was released in 2012. It failed at the box office. With limited returns and mounting financial pressure, repayment became difficult. Cheques issued towards clearing the loan began to bounce. Under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act — which makes dishonoured cheques a criminal offence if dues aren’t cleared after notice — legal proceedings began.

What followed was sixteen years of courts, hearings, missed deadlines, partial payments, fresh undertakings, and a debt that grew with interest and penalties from ₹5 crore to nearly ₹9 crore.

The Complete Timeline: 2010 to 2026

📅 2010Rajpal Yadav borrows ₹5 crore from Murali Projects Pvt. Ltd. to finance Ata Pata Laapata.

📅 2012The film releases and fails commercially. Repayment issues begin. Multiple cheques bounce.

📅 2018A Magistrate’s Court convicts Rajpal Yadav and his wife Radha under Section 138 and sentences him to six months of imprisonment. He reportedly serves around three months before securing relief through appeal. Conviction upheld by Sessions Court in 2019.

📅 2018–2025A prolonged cycle of appeals, adjournments, partial payments, and missed undertakings. The outstanding dues rise from ₹5 crore to nearly ₹9 crore with interest and penalties. The court grants him approximately 20 extensions to settle — each time on the basis of fresh assurances that are not ultimately fulfilled.

📅 June 2024Delhi High Court temporarily suspends his conviction on the condition that he take “sincere and genuine measures” toward settlement. The court later observes this produced no progress. In October 2025, two demand drafts of ₹75 lakh are deposited — but nearly ₹9 crore remains unpaid.

📅 February 2, 2026Delhi High Court, citing repeated non-compliance and around 20 breached undertakings, directs Rajpal Yadav to surrender by 4 PM on February 4, 2026. The court’s words are stark: “This Court cannot be expected to show or create special circumstances for any person merely because such a person belongs to a particular background or industry.”

📅 February 5, 2026Rajpal Yadav surrenders at Tihar Jail. In an emotional statement before surrendering, he said: “Sir, kya karoon? Mere paas paise nahin hain. Aur koi upaay nahin dikhta… yahan hum sab akele hain. There are no friends. I have to deal with this crisis on my own.”

📅 February 16, 2026After 11 days in Tihar Jail, Delhi High Court grants Rajpal Yadav interim bail until March 18, 2026, after he deposits ₹1.5 crore to the complainant. He is released and walks out of Tihar.

📅 March 18, 2026 → April 1, 2026Court extends interim protection and makes clear Yadav will not be sent back to jail for now, citing his continued court appearances and partial payments. “He’s not running away. He’s here. He’s coming to court, and he has also been in jail. He’s made some substantial payments. So I’ll not send him to jail, right now.” — Justice Swarana Kanta Sharma

📅 Most recently — Hearing in late March 2026The complainant offered to close the matter for ₹6 crore. Rajpal did not agree. In a striking exchange, the actor told the court: “I am not emotional, send me to jail five more times.” The court’s verdict remains reserved as of publication.

Bollywood Rallied Around Him

When Rajpal Yadav surrendered at Tihar in February, the industry response was immediate and warm. Multiple stars stepped forward publicly:

Sonu Sood offered him a role in his upcoming film along with a signing amount: “Rajpal Yadav is a gifted actor who has given years of unforgettable work to our industry. Sometimes life turns unfair, not because of talent, but because timing can be brutal.”

Salman KhanAjay Devgn, and Varun Dhawan reportedly reached out with support. Singers Mika SinghGuru Randhawa, and Anup Jalota announced contributions. Filmmaker Priyadarshan — who has directed Rajpal in films like Malamaal Weekly and the upcoming Bhoot Bangla — told producers to pay him more than his quoted fee: “I told the producers of my next film to pay Rajpal more than what he charges because of his situation.”

The outpouring was genuine and significant. For a man who had stood in a courtroom and said he had no friends and no money, the industry’s response was the kind of moment that reminds you why the word “fraternity” still has meaning.


Part 2: The Screen Awards Incident — What Saurabh Dwivedi Said, and Why It Went Viral

The Moment That Sparked Everything

On April 5, 2026, the Chetak Screen Awards were held in Mumbai. Rajpal Yadav was in attendance — barely two months out of Tihar Jail, with his ₹9 crore case still actively in court and his upcoming film Bhoot Bangla releasing April 10.

The event was co-hosted by journalist Saurabh Dwivedi and comedian Zakir Khan. During a segment, Rajpal spoke about global uncertainty, currency fluctuations, and the chaos in the world. It was the kind of philosophical musing that veteran actors sometimes indulge in at public events.

Saurabh Dwivedi responded with a line that the audience laughed at — and the internet did not:

“Rajpal bhai, dollar aur rupee kitna hi upar neeche ho jaye, aapko utne hi paise lautane padenge jitne aapne udhaar liye hain.”
(Brother Rajpal, no matter how much the dollar or rupee goes up or down, you will still have to repay the same amount that you borrowed.)

Rajpal Yadav’s reaction — caught on camera and replayed thousands of times since — was a brief moment of visible discomfort before a composed, dignified response. He smiled and said: “Masla toh sun lo ek baar. Main toh masla hi sunana chahta hoon.” (At least listen to my issue once. I just want to present my side.)

The clip went viral within hours. And what it revealed to millions of viewers was a man who had been through Tihar Jail, was still in the middle of an active legal battle, still carrying a debt that had cost him apartments and years of his life — and was sitting in a public auditorium being publicly joked about for it.

The Internet’s Reaction: Furious on His Behalf

The backlash against Saurabh Dwivedi was swift and severe. Social media, particularly X (Twitter), filled with criticism:

One widely shared post read: “Saurabh Dwivedi ke sar par ghamand savar ho gaya hai. Yeh aadmi do-chaar Bollywood ke logon mein kya baithne laga hai, apni aukat bhool gaya hai. Rajpal Yadav jaise legend ki bhari mahfil mein beizzati kar raha hai.”

Another user wrote: “Saurabh Dwivedi has zero achievements and still dares to insult a senior artist like Rajpal Yadav. Rajpal was already an established actor in 2008 while you were just a small journalist.”

The consensus in comment sections was clear: making a public joke about a man’s active legal and financial troubles — especially one who had just come out of jail — crossed a line that comedy cannot justify.

Was It Scripted or Unscripted? The Reddit Leak

Here is where the story gets more layered. Rajpal Yadav would later claim the entire exchange was a pre-planned skit. But a Reddit post — from a user claiming to have received information from a technician who was present at the event — told a different story.

The Reddit user wrote: “During the Screen Awards, Saurabh Dwivedi had made a joke regarding the recent happenings around Rajpal Yadav (him going to prison), which many ppl found derogatory and below the belt… the reality I got to know from a friend’s friend who was a technician present at the awards is, it was all unscripted… the joke was supposed to end before Saurabh cracked that joke. And if you notice Rajpal’s reaction, it feels way too natural.. personally it felt way too insulting for an actor who is making us laugh since ages.”

Filmibeat, which reported this claim, noted it could not verify the Reddit user’s account independently. But the claim resonated with many who watched the clip and noticed what they described as a genuine, unguarded flash of hurt in Rajpal Yadav’s face before the smile returned.


Part 3: How Everyone Responded — Rajpal, Salman, and Bollywood

Rajpal Yadav’s Response: Grace Under Pressure

On April 7, 2026, Rajpal Yadav posted a video on his Instagram account that became one of the most-shared clips of the entire controversy — not because of what it revealed about the incident, but because of the man it revealed.

In the video, he addressed the controversy directly, defended Saurabh Dwivedi and Zakir Khan, and asked his fans to stop the backlash:

“Is par poori duniya ke liye ek general sa skit banane ka prayaas kiya. Kabhi-kabhi filmon mein bhi hota hai ki hum scene design karte hain, lekin uska meaning audience tak sahi tareeke se pahunch nahi paata. Yeh cinema hai!”
(“We tried to make a general skit for the whole world. Sometimes even in films, we design a scene but the meaning doesn’t reach the audience correctly. This is cinema!”)

He went further, calling Saurabh Dwivedi and Zakir Khan his younger brothers — his “jigar ke tukde” (pieces of his heart) — and issuing a direct appeal:

“Saurabh and Zakir are like brothers to me. They have always given me respect. If you hurt Saurabh’s heart, you are hurting mine. I love Saurabh. I love Zakir. I love you all. I am here because of you all.”

The video was met with an overwhelming wave of public admiration. “This man went to Tihar and came back with more dignity than most people are born with,” one comment read. Many described it as a masterclass in graciousness — particularly because Rajpal had every right to let the controversy run its course and had instead chosen to protect the person it was directed at.

Salman Khan Steps In

Before Rajpal’s video, Salman Khan had already publicly responded to the controversy on X (Twitter). His message to Rajpal was both an endorsement and a gentle reframe of the debt remark itself:

“Rajpal bhai aap 30 yrs se kaam kar rahe ho aur hum sabne aapko repeat kiya hai baar baar kyunki aap apna kaam jante ho aur ek value laate ho, kaam toh aapko bohot milega aur issi dollar rate pe milega aur milte rahega. Hakikat yeh hai. Aur yeh yaad rakhna ke kabhi kabhi flow mein kuch nikal aata hai, dena hi hai toh dimag mein rakho dil se kaam karo, dollar upar ho ya neeche kya farak padta hai dena toh India mein hi hai.”
(“Brother Rajpal, you have been working for 30 years and we have repeated you again and again because you know your craft and bring value. You will get a lot of work and at this same dollar rate. That is the reality. And remember that sometimes in the flow of a moment, things slip out. If you have to give, keep it in your mind and work from your heart — whether the dollar is up or down, what difference does it make? You have to give it back in India anyway.”)

The response from fans to Salman’s post was mostly positive — admiration for the senior star standing by a colleague. Some online were amused by the irony of Salman essentially echoing the structure of Dwivedi’s joke (“you still have to pay it back in India”) but with a far warmer intention.

Rajpal thanked Salman with characteristic warmth: “Bhai, mere 30 saal ke safar ko sarahne ke liye bahut-bahut shukriya. Aap hamesha ek bade bhai ki tarah raasta dikhate aaye hain. Love you, Bhai, Naman.”


The Bigger Question: Where Is the Line Between Roast and Humiliation?

This controversy sits at the intersection of comedy culture, celebrity responsibility, and the way public figures are treated at industry events.

Roasting has always been part of Bollywood award shows. The genre’s logic is that famous people can take a joke about their public persona — and that self-deprecating humour builds community. At their best, award show roasts generate warmth and laughter that everyone, including the target, genuinely shares.

But there is a meaningful difference between roasting Ranveer Singh’s eccentric fashion choices and making a joke about an actor’s active criminal case — one that resulted in him serving time in jail, that has cost him property and years of anxiety, that involves a real creditor who is still owed a significant sum. The first is a riff on public image. The second touches something genuinely painful.

Whether Saurabh Dwivedi intended to cause hurt — or whether, as the Reddit technician suggested, he improvised beyond the scripted joke — is ultimately less important than the question of judgment. A host reading the room before the words leave their mouth.

Rajpal Yadav’s response answered the question of character more definitively than any court filing ever could. The man who was publicly mocked protected the person who mocked him. That is not something the script required.


What’s Next for Rajpal Yadav: Bhoot Bangla and a Career Comeback

In the middle of all this legal and social turbulence, Rajpal Yadav is returning to the screen in one of the most anticipated Bollywood comedies of 2026. Bhoot Bangla — directed by Priyadarshan and featuring Akshay Kumar — releases on April 10, 2026. That’s two days after the Screen Awards controversy fully erupted.

Rajpal Yadav controversy

The timing is either terrible or perfect, depending on how you look at it. Terrible because his name is currently associated with controversy and a debt case. Perfect because the internet is entirely focused on him right now, and he is on the poster of a major Akshay Kumar film releasing in two days.

Priyadarshan has been one of his most vocal supporters throughout the legal saga. The director went out of his way to increase Rajpal’s fee for Bhoot Bangla specifically because of his situation — a gesture that speaks to the depth of their creative partnership and personal friendship.

Rajpal Yadav has worked continuously in Bollywood for over 25 years. He appeared in Jungle (2000), Mujhse Shaadi Karogi (2004), Hungama (2003), Phir Hera Pheri (2006), Bhool Bhulaiyaa (2007), Chup Chup Ke (2006), Dhol (2007) and dozens more. He is, by any measure, one of the most recognisable comedic faces in Hindi cinema history. The idea that a man with this portfolio could be sitting in a courtroom saying “I have no friends” is the kind of collision between industry mythology and industry reality that makes for uncomfortable reading.

His best answer to everything — the debt, the jail, the joke — is Bhoot Bangla. His best answer has always been showing up and being funny. That, at least, is something no court can take away.


Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q: What is the Rajpal Yadav controversy in 2026?Two overlapping controversies: First, Rajpal Yadav surrendered to Tihar Jail in February 2026 over a long-running ₹9 crore cheque bounce case related to his failed 2012 film Ata Pata Laapata. Second, in April 2026 at the Chetak Screen Awards, journalist Saurabh Dwivedi made a public joke mocking his debt in front of the entire Bollywood industry. Both events went viral.

Q: What did Saurabh Dwivedi say about Rajpal Yadav?While hosting the Chetak Screen Awards 2026, Dwivedi told Rajpal: “Rajpal bhai, dollar aur rupee kitna hi upar neeche ho jaye, aapko utne hi paise lautane padenge jitne aapne udhaar liye hain.” — meaning that no matter how much currencies fluctuate, he still has to repay the money he borrowed. The remark referenced his active ₹9 crore cheque bounce case.

Q: How did Rajpal Yadav respond to the debt joke?At the event, he responded with composure and dignity. Later, he posted a video on Instagram defending Saurabh Dwivedi and Zakir Khan, calling them his “brothers,” claiming the exchange was a pre-planned skit, and asking fans not to troll or criticise them. He said hurting Saurabh would feel like hurting him.

Q: What did Salman Khan say about Rajpal Yadav?Salman Khan posted a supportive message on X, praising Rajpal’s 30-year career, assuring him he would continue to receive work, and asking him not to worry about the financial situation. Rajpal responded with gratitude, calling Salman a “bade bhai” (elder brother) who always shows the way.

Q: Why was Rajpal Yadav in Tihar Jail?He surrendered to Tihar Jail on February 5, 2026, after the Delhi High Court rejected his last-minute plea for more time in a ₹9 crore cheque bounce case. The case began in 2010 when he borrowed ₹5 crore for his film Ata Pata Laapata, which failed. After 16 years of hearings and approximately 20 missed undertakings, the court ordered him to surrender.

Q: Is Rajpal Yadav still in jail?No. He was released on interim bail on February 16, 2026, after depositing ₹1.5 crore. As of April 2026, he is out on bail while the case is still ongoing. The Delhi High Court has reserved its verdict.

Q: What is Rajpal Yadav’s next film?Rajpal Yadav appears in Bhoot Bangla, a horror-comedy directed by Priyadarshan and starring Akshay Kumar, releasing April 10, 2026.

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Final Word: What This Story Is Really About

At its core, the Rajpal Yadav controversy of 2026 is a story about two things that are true simultaneously — and don’t resolve neatly.

A man who has entertained millions of Indians for 25 years made a financial mistake in 2010, took on debt to make a film that failed, and has been paying for it — in court, in instalment plans, in interest accumulation, and eventually in jail — for sixteen years. That is a genuine human story about the gap between a performer’s public legacy and their private financial reality.

And a moment at an awards show — where that man’s ongoing legal and financial pain was turned into a punchline, in public, in front of the industry, days before his next film — revealed something about how entertainment industry events sometimes treat their guests: as material, regardless of what they’re carrying.

Rajpal Yadav’s response was the most dignified thing in the entire story. Not the joke. Not the viral outrage. Not even Salman’s support — though that mattered. Just a man choosing, when he had every right not to, to protect the people who had underestimated his dignity.

He goes back into a courtroom soon. He goes back onto a cinema screen on April 10. He will make people laugh again — because that is what he has always done, and what he clearly intends to keep doing, whatever the dollar rate.

What do you think — did Saurabh Dwivedi cross a line, or was it just a joke that landed badly? And does Rajpal Yadav’s graceful response change your view of the incident? Tell us in the comments. 👇

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