Criminal Justice Reforms India Actually Needs (& Deserves!) (Part 1)

First published at Bar & Bench here

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Introduction

The dust on the new criminal laws has not settled yet. And it won’t, if you ask me, for a very long time. Some of the amendments raise far more questions than they answer. Let alone the substantive provisions, even the ‘savings clauses’ (ironically, a clause that should – as the name suggests – save and not cause trouble) would lead to very complex litigation. Some of these battles have already begun in courts across the country and are likely to benefit no one apart from counsels arguing these technical points, in favour of, or against, retrospectivity. These amendments, as someone wise said, would make the legal philosopher weep, and certain masters of technicalities laugh – all the way to the bank. For instance, High Courts have already taken conflicting positions on applicability of BNSS (the newfangled Code of Criminal Procedure “CrPC”) to offences that have taken place before 1st July, and where investigation commences after 1st of July, 2024. 

Though, in fairness, there are indeed some important additions such as: mandatory videography of searches/seizures, recording of testimony through VC, but, having said that, many important areas of much needed reforms have been totally overlooked. 

We all know that much ink has already been spilled over what can be termed as the: The Good, Bad and Ugly of the New Criminal Laws, and I don’t intend add to it. Instead, what this column attempts to do is, put before you, briefly, some criminal justice reforms which we actually need (and deserve!) and on which the new laws say nothing at all. 

But before I get into those, we must, at the very outset, confront a few things about our system’s capacity: 

Some troubling stats-

1. There are over 4.5 Crore cases pending in Indian Courts. (I, when I started my career as a young magistrate, had about 100 cases on my cause list – every day, on an average.). With about 2.7 Crore new cases coming-in every year. 

2. Roughly 87% of cases pending in India are pending before Trial Courts, which are, the first and last resort for most people in the Country.   

3. About 74% of these cases are criminal cases.  

4. India has about 20 judges per 10 lakh people as opposed to 51 in the UK and about 107 in the US.

5. About 5388 posts in the district judiciary are vacant. 

6. About 26% of non-judicial court staff positions are vacant.

7. Roughly. US spends 10 times more (as a fraction of GDP) than India on the Justice System. [1]

8. Even simple tests take years and years in forensic labs, which are utterly under-equipped.

9. And, don’t even get me started about police reforms.

In this background, here’s what I propose:

The Reforms

Creating Institutional Capacity & Increasing Number of Trial Court Judges.

So much has been said about this already that we’ve become desensitised to this phrase itself. But I must repeat this. As somebody who, as a baby-magistrate of 23 years, has had 100 cases listed before him on a single day, and who, despite decision-fatigue, struggled to do meaningful justice in all of those, I must say, the situation is more than dire.

Passing laws is easy, creation of institutional capacity and competency is difficult.

Merely adding a timeline to a task, in a top-down manner, and telling the Trial Court that you must now do 10 more things, and do them in a time-bound manner, is not going to solve the problem.

We must have more judges. There’s simply no getting around this problem.   

Empowering Trial Court Judges through Law Clerks/Legal Researchers

There’s no system for this currently. We must equip our trial court judges with at least one LR/Law Clerk to help them with legal research/notes, etc. Better Trial Court judgments would mean lesser appeals. This would allow Constitutional Courts to focus on the truly important legal, constitutional & interpretational questions of general importance, instead of day-to-day & purely private litigation which is best resolved before the Trial Courts (who’ve had the benefit of seeing the evidence play-out themselves).

This would also have the unseen benefit of exposing a lot of young lawyers to the life & role of a trial court judge and may help us attract even better talent at the District Judiciary level.

Further, this experience may increase the level & quality of trial-lawyering in the country. 

Amendments to Criminal Laws to make more offences compoundable.  

Currently, a huge number of offences are not compoundable but are being quashed by the High Courts – in exercise of Section 482 of the CrPC – on an ad-hoc/case-to-case basis. This is hardly ideal. This is taking up valuable time of Constitutional Courts & encouraging ad-hocism in what offences can be quashed and what not, with different benches sometimes taking different views. (For instance, in cases of Section 376 IPC & subsequent marriage between accused and victim – different benches have taken contrary views on whether such cases should be quashed on the basis of compromise or not) .

Making more offences compoundable (after proper deliberation) would introduce much-needed certainty in the law & unclog the dockets of Criminal Benches of the High Court. These cases can then be compounded at the Trial Court or Registrar Court’s level. Saved time of High Courts can be used to decide bail applications, quashing petitions (which are currently pending for years and decades), and other matters involving personal liberty and constitutional interpretation (and there are quite a few!) 

Accused’s right to counsel during investigation has to be recognised and put on a solid pedestal

There is absolutely no reason why this should not be done. We must recognise this immediately & require all arrests/interrogations to be compulsorily videographed. This would check instances of custodial torture and arbitrary arrests.  

BNSS mandates all searches/seizures to be mandatorily on-video.

This is good but there’s something else that the law needs to say. This provision should be tweaked to say – explicitly – that if a Search/Seizure is not videographed and there are no exceptional justifications for why-not, then the evidence procured through such a search is rendered inadmissible & has to be thrown-out, lock, stock and barrel.

If this is not done, let me say this from experience, the police officers would continue to violate this safeguard with impunity (as happened in the case of the provision which, in 1973, made presence of independent witnesses mandatory in all searches). A provision without a consequence becomes ‘directory’ and not ‘mandatory’ for all practical purposes. Further, the section should also be tweaked & recovery statements u/s 27 IEA included within its ambit. That is where we’ve seen a lot of false implications on the basis of planted items. 

The concept of ‘co-operation’ in investigation has to be clarified – for once and for all. 

Currently, merely because, in the opinion of the police, a person is not ‘co-operating’ in the investigation (in other words, not saying what the IO wants her to say) bails are routinely denied. The protection against self-incrimination has to be safeguarded and maintained. Law should be amended to define the contours of this expectation and making it subject to the constitutional right to silence. 

All important & factual witness statements during investigation & statements before magistrates (u/s 164) to be mandatorily video-recorded, across the board.

All depositions at trial to be transcribed or – atleast- videographed

The current processes of recording of evidence where, on a good day, the Judge and, on others, staff/prosecutor translates what the witness says and records evidence is hardly satisfactory. All depositions at trial should videgraphed or at-least transcribed. Data/Cloud space is cheaper than ever, and the benefits of this would far outweigh the costs associated with the trial court (at the time of final hearing) trying to make sense of often inaccurately recorded/translated evidence.

Also, this would allow the successor court (since trials don’t happen day-to-day in Courts & there are various changes in roster along the way) to also look at the demeanour better. We can start this off, first, in serious criminal cases and then extend to all cases – across the board. 

Mandatory Perjury Evaluation in All cases. 

Now, let’s admit it. Perjury is a way of life here in Indian Courts. And it’s simply because one often gets away with it. Levelling of false charges, fabrication of forged wills/deeds is rampant. Law should be amended here. It should be the duty of the court (not just the power!) to initiate perjury proceedings wherever they acquit and find the testimony/document to be false and fabricated. Now that’s the way it should be but that isn’t the case.

Often, the already over-burdened Court is only too happy disposing-off the main matter and not opening – what they consider – a can of worms (collateral proceedings). It’s clear that the overburdened courts have no incentive to take up perjury matters.  The process of S.340 of the CrPC has completely failed.

A part of it would be solved when we have more courts but even within the existing system there are things that can be done. First, we need to put in a mandate on a judge to undertake a compulsory ‘perjury evaluation’ in every case – at the end – and if it’s a case where false (and not just mistaken) evidence was led, then the judge, if perjury is not being initiated, would have to explicitly record reasons as to why not.

Further, Judges have a unit system (Call them Key Performance Indicators for judges). We need to tweak the criteria to incentivise decisions on perjury more. Currently, there’s a huge emphasis on solving old cases but not enough on this. The current point/unit system of assessing judges merit rewards disposal above all else.  (A serious rethink is needed on how do we judge our judges and I have to lot to say on that but that’s a discussion for another day.)

To summarise, in every case where false evidence comes up, there should be a mandate on the court to record reasons as to why perjury proceedings are not being initiated. Those reasons should be re-evaluated by a special committee. If perjury is of a material fact & prima facie proved, initiation of proceedings should be the rule and not the exception. This is the only way to check perjury which is rampant in Indian Courts & for people to respect the value and meaning of Oath. 

Strongest disincentives on misuse of criminal law in commercial, civil, matrimonial cases.  

About 74% of all cases at District Courts are criminal (especially when compared with only about 40% receipts of total cases in the UK)[2] . This is a very damning statistic and absolutely unheard-of, across the world. Strongly punishing litigants and police involved in false cases would ensure civil cases remain civil. As an unintended upside, it may develop the law of torts, which is practically dead in India.

Make illegally obtained evidence (except a few exceptions) totally inadmissible. 

This has been recommended for decades now. Courts looking the other way on illegal evidence collection and procedural irregularities has ensured police has no incentive to improve their methods and absolutely no accountability. Seen differently there is no disincentive on cutting corners with the Law. (Show me the incentive, and I’ll show the outcome, as someone wise said). Also, more police officers, separation of investigation from law-and-order & protection from executive influence is of extreme importance. (More on that, in another column!).

A few more suggestions in Part – II 


[1] From – Karthik Muralidharan, Accelerating India’s Development: A State-Led Roadmap For Effective Governance (2024) & Data released at the National Conference of District Judiciary, 31.08.2024, Supreme Court &

[2] Courts Justice data UK Government: 2021

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