Punjab & Haryana High Court, Chandigarh

Act Overview

Full Title: Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 (Act No. 46 of 2023)
Replaces: Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC), 1973
Enacted: 25 December 2023 | Effective: 1 July 2024
Objective: To consolidate and amend criminal procedure law, incorporating technology, timelines, and victim-centric reforms.
Total Sections: 531 (vs 484 in CrPC)

What is BNSS?

The Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS), 2023 is the new criminal procedure code that replaces the 50-year-old Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC), 1973. It governs the entire process of criminal justice — from FIR registration to investigation, arrest, bail, charge sheet, trial, judgment, and appeal. Every criminal case in India now follows the BNSS procedure.

Key Changes from CrPC to BNSS

FeatureCrPC (Old)BNSS (New)
FIR RegistrationIn person at police stationE-FIR + zero FIR at any police station + electronic/oral complaint
Charge Sheet Timeline60/90 days (no strict enforcement)90 days mandatory with extension up to 180 days by court order
Trial TimelineNo fixed timelineTrial to be completed within 2 years of first hearing (for sessions cases)
Mercy PetitionNo time limitMust be filed within 30 days of exhausting all legal remedies
Forensic InvestigationOptionalMandatory forensic evidence collection for offences punishable with 7+ years
Witness ProtectionLimited provisionsAudio-video recording of witness statements; vulnerable witness protections
Electronic ProcessPaper-basedElectronic summons, warrants, and service of process permitted
Detention ReviewMagistrate reviewUndertrial cannot be detained beyond 1/3 of maximum sentence (for first-time offenders)
Community ServiceNot availableIntroduced as punishment for minor offences
Absconder PropertyAttachment onlyProperty of proclaimed offender can be confiscated after court proceedings

FIR & Information to Police

Sec. 173Information in Cognizable Cases (FIR) (संज्ञेय मामलों में सूचना)+

Every information relating to the commission of a cognizable offence shall be given to the police. Key changes:

  • E-FIR: Information can now be given by electronic communication — not just in person
  • Zero FIR: FIR can be filed at any police station regardless of jurisdiction; it will be transferred to the appropriate station within 15 days
  • Information to informant: Police must give free copy of FIR to the informant and upload to police portal within 24 hours
  • Preliminary Inquiry: For offences punishable with 3-7 years, police may conduct preliminary inquiry within 14 days before registering FIR
The Zero FIR provision is very powerful — if your local police refuse to register an FIR, you can go to any other police station. They are legally bound to register it and transfer it.

Arrest & Bail Provisions

Sec. 35-44Arrest Provisions (गिरफ्तारी)+

BNSS introduces important safeguards around arrest:

  • No handcuffing except for habitual, repeat offenders or those who attempted escape (Sec. 43)
  • Arrest memo: Must include time, date, and must be attested by a family member or respectable local person
  • Information to family: Police must inform a nominated person of the arrest immediately
  • Medical examination: Mandatory for the arrested person
  • Women's safeguards: Women cannot be arrested after sunset and before sunrise except in exceptional circumstances with written permission of Magistrate
  • Police custody limit: Maximum 15 days (can be extended but total police custody cannot exceed 60/90 days for investigation)
Sec. 478-484Bail Provisions (ज़मानत)+

Bail provisions have been modernized with important new safeguards:

  • Mandatory bail (Sec. 479): Undertrial prisoners who have served one-third of the maximum sentence (for first-time offenders) must be released on bail — this is a landmark provision to prevent indefinite detention
  • Bailable offences: Bail is a matter of right; police officer or court must grant bail
  • Non-bailable offences: Bail is at the discretion of the court; factors include nature of offence, severity of punishment, and whether the accused is likely to abscond
  • Anticipatory bail: Any person apprehending arrest may apply for anticipatory bail before the High Court or Sessions Court
  • Bail bonds: Court may impose conditions including electronic monitoring, passport surrender, and periodic reporting
Section 479 (mandatory bail for undertrials) is one of the most significant reforms. If you or a family member has been in jail as an undertrial for more than one-third of the maximum sentence and has no prior convictions, apply for bail citing this provision.

Investigation & Charge Sheet

Sec. 176-193Investigation Process (अन्वेषण)+
  • Forensic evidence mandatory: For offences punishable with 7 years or more, a forensic expert must visit the crime scene and collect evidence — this is mandatory, not optional
  • Audio-video recording: Search and seizure proceedings should be videographed; statements of victims and witnesses should be audio-video recorded
  • Investigation timeline: Investigation to be completed within 60 days (for offences punishable up to 3 years) or 90 days (for other offences), extendable up to 180 days by court
  • Police report (Charge Sheet): Must be filed within 90 days. If not, the accused is entitled to default bail
  • Electronic evidence: Provisions for collection and preservation of electronic evidence including phone records, CCTV footage, and digital documents

Trial Procedure

Sec. 230-283Trial Before Sessions Court & Magistrate (सत्र न्यायालय में विचारण)+
  • Charges: Must be framed within 60 days of first hearing
  • Trial timeline: Sessions trials to be completed within 2 years of first hearing
  • Summary trial: Expanded scope — Magistrates can conduct summary trials for offences punishable up to 3 years
  • Plea bargaining: Available for offences punishable up to 7 years (except offences against women and children)
  • Victim rights: Victim or their legal representative must be heard before withdrawal of prosecution and before granting compensation
  • Judgment timeline: Judgment must be pronounced within 30 days of completion of arguments (extendable to 45 days with reasons)

CrPC Section to BNSS Section — Quick Reference

SubjectCrPC SectionBNSS Section
FIR (Cognizable Offence)154173
Arrest by Police4135
Arrest — When Not Required41A35(3)
Bail — Bailable436478
Bail — Non-Bailable437480
Anticipatory Bail438482
Default Bail167(2)187(2)
Charge Sheet173193
Maintenance (Wife/Children)125144
Quashing (High Court)482528
Appeal374399
Revision397442

Disclaimer

This guide is for educational purposes. The BNSS is a comprehensive statute with 531 sections. For advice specific to your criminal matter, always consult a qualified advocate who can analyze the full facts and applicable provisions.

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