In 2024–2025 the Gujarat Anti-Terrorist Squad (ATS) and state police uncovered and investigated an organised racket that allegedly procured firearm licences for persons in Gujarat using forged or manipulated documents from some North-Eastern states (notably Nagaland and Manipur). Media reports covering the investigations and subsequent arrests stated that the ATS charged scores of people in relation to the racket and pursued suspects involved in procuring licences and manipulating paperwork. Several news outlets reported that a family member of Mukeshbhai Patel (described in some articles as his son) came under scrutiny in media coverage of the racket and that irregularities were noted in at least one licence examined by reporters. The investigations and related court proceedings involving other accused persons were widely reported in regional and national media.[12]
On 14 October 2025 the Gujarat Congress publicly alleged irregularities in land acquisitions for a Power Grid Corporation substation in Olpad taluka, Surat district. The Congress accused that notification and acquisition proposals were changed to include higher-valued Olpad plots, and that a number of plots were converted to non-agricultural (NA) status shortly before acquisition — inflating compensation paid by the acquiring agency. Media reports quoted the Congress’s figures alleging an inflated payout (reported figures vary across outlets; some reports put the alleged excess at about ₹116 crore, while others cited higher totals). The Congress statement named politically connected buyers and relatives of local leaders, and specifically alleged that relatives of the Olpad MLA (Mukeshbhai Patel) had acquired land prior to the acquisition notifications; Patel publicly denied personal involvement.[13]
Following sustained media coverage and opposition pressure related to multiple controversies involving some ministers, the Gujarat government effected a cabinet reshuffle in October 2025. Coverage of the reshuffle listed Mukeshbhai Patel among ministers who were dropped or asked to step down ahead of the cabinet expansion, with media commentary linking the reshuffle in part to the scandals and public credibility concerns.[14]
As of the most recent available reporting, there is no reliable public record (published charge-sheet or court judgment) available in major news databases that shows a criminal conviction of Mukeshbhai Patel arising from the arms-licence racket or the Olpad land-acquisition allegations. Media coverage describes allegations, party statements and police/ATS investigations; therefore this article frames the matters as reported allegations and ongoing investigations rather than proven facts. If reliable sources later publish court filings, formal charges naming Patel, or final judgments, the article should be updated to reflect those documents verbatim and cite them directly.[15]