On 29 June 2020, Indonesian Attorney General
S.T. Burhanuddin said Tjandra had been in Indonesia for the past three months. He said Tjandra had on 8 June filed a case review against his conviction. Justice Minister
Yasonna Laoly said immigration data showed no record of Tjandra returning to Indonesia. On 2 July 2020, Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal and Security Affairs
Mahfud M.D. said he had ordered the Attorney General's Office to immediately arrest Tjandra. Mahfud later said police informed him that Tjandra's name had been taken off Interpol's list of fugitives in 2014 because the Indonesian Attorney General's Office had never requested an extension. Tjandra managed to obtain an
electronic identity card (e-KTP) issued on 8 June 2020 by South Grogol Village in Kebayoran Lama, South Jakarta. The card was used in the submission of his request for a judicial review of his two-year jail sentence. South Grogol Urban Village head Asep Subhandi said the card was issued within less than one hour, after he was contacted by Tjandra's lawyer on 3 June 2020. Tjandra was also issued with a new Indonesian passport on 23 June 2020. Tjandra was scheduled to appear at South Jakarta District Court on 7 July 2020 for his case review hearing, but he did not show up. His lawyer, Anita Kolopaking, claimed he was in
Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia, being treated for an undisclosed illness. Indonesian Immigration spokesman Arvin Gumilang insisted there was no record of Tjandra having flown to Malaysia. On 29 July 2020, South Jakarta District Court rejected Tjandra's case review request. On 30 July 2020, Tjandra was arrested in Malaysia and sent back to Indonesia, after 11 years on the run. In August, he was sent to Jakarta's Salemaba jail to begin serving his sentence. Police named him a suspect for allegedly bribing police and document forgery.
Conspirators arrested, jailed In July 2020, two police generals were removed from their posts for facilitating Tjandra's travel in Indonesia. National Police international relations division head Inspector General
Napoleon Bonaparte was found to have violated ethics, while National Central Bureau (NCB)-Interpol Indonesia secretary Brigadier General Nugroho Wibowo had on 5 May 2020 sent a letter to Indonesian Immigration, stating the Interpol red notice against Djoko Tjandra was withdrawn, prompting Immigration to erase Tjandra's name from its watch-list. Separately, Brigadier General Prasetyo Utomo, head of the Civil Servant Investigator Supervisory and Coordination Bureau at the Police Criminal Investigation Department, reportedly issued a travel letter on 18 June that enabled Tjandra to fly from Jakarta to Pontianak in West Kalimantan on 19 June and return on 22 June. On 14 August, Bonaparte and Utomo were declared suspects for allegedly accepting bribes. Police said $20,000 had been confiscated as evidence. Police also named businessman Tommy Sumardi a suspect for allegedly paying the bribes. Testifying in November 2020 at Sumardi's trial, Bonaparte said that when Sumardi had asked him to remove the Interpol red notice on Tjandra, the businessman had mentioned the names of then-National Police Criminal Investigation Agency chief
Listyo Sigit Prabowo, lawmaker
Azis Syamsuddin and
People's Consultative Assembly speaker
Bambang Soesatyo. Sumardi denied having mentioned their names to Napoleon. On 29 December 2020, Jakarta Anti-Corruption Court convicted Sumardi of corruption for his role in helping Tjandra to bribe the two senior police, sentencing him to two years in jail and fining him Rp100 million. On 11 August 2020, the Attorney General’s Office arrested prosecutor Pinangki Sirna Malasari for allegedly accepting bribes of $500,000 in connection with efforts to assist Tjandra. Pinangki had made nine unauthorized trips to Singapore and Malaysia in 2019 allegedly to meet with Tjandra. On 22 August 2020, Pinangki's office was destroyed by a fire at the main building of the Attorney General's Office. The Attorney General's Office on 8 September 2020 said Pinangki had used part of the $500,000 (Rp 7.5 billion) to fund a luxury lifestyle, such as purchasing a BMW X series car, paying for body and facial care, and renting an apartment for Rp75 million a month. Director of Investigations, Febrie Adriansyah, said Pinangki had transferred the money to a bank account of her younger sibling, Pungki Primarini, in an effort to avoid detection. The money from Djoko Tjandra was described as a down-payment for arranging an acquittal from the Supreme Court, with the assistance of
NasDem Party politician Andi Irfan Jaya. Andi allegedly acted as a go-between, "selling" the names of Supreme Court judges to Djoko Tjandra to approach for an acquittal. On 18 January 2021, Jakarta Anti-Corruption Court sentenced Andi to six years in jail for his role in the conspiracy to help Tjandra avoid jail time. The court heard that Andi had met with Tjandra, Pinangki and lawyer Anita Kolopaking in Kuala Lumpur on 25 November 2019. During the meeting, Andi proposed that Tjandra pay $100 million in order for the Supreme Court and the Attorney General's Office to arrange for Tjandra to be able to return to Indonesia without serving jail time; however, Tjandra only agreed to pay $10 million. The following day, Tjandra's brother-in-law Herriyadi Angga Kusuma gave $500,000 to Andi near
Senayan City Mall as a down-payment for the bribe. Andi then gave the money to Pinangki, who gave $50,000 to Anita Kolopaking. In February 2021, Pinangki was sentenced to 10 years in jail by Jakarta Anti-Corruption Court for her role in channeling the bribe money. On 10 March 2021, Napoleon Bonaparte was sentenced to four and a half years in jail for accepting US$370,000 and SGD$200,000 from Tjandra, and Prasetyo Utomo was sentenced to three and a half years for receiving US$100,000.
Lawsuit by fired lawyer After his arrest, Djoko Tjandra appointed lawyer
Otto Hasibuan to represent him for a fee of $2.5 million; however, Tjandra soon fired Otto on 15 August 2020. Otto on 25 September filed a lawsuit against Tjandra at the Commercial Court of Central Jakarta District Court, demanding full payment. The court on 27 October 2020 ruled the fee agreement was still valid and therefore Tjandra was obliged to pay the full amount. ==2020 document forgery conviction==