Practice MCQs
Key Highlights:
Supreme Court’s ruling in Imran Pratapgarhi vs State of Gujarat reasserts that criminalisation must be principled and tied to procedural safeguards.
Emphasizes the role of police discretion in criminalising conduct and the potential for overreach, especially in cases involving freedom of speech.
Reminds that procedural law, including preliminary inquiries, is key to ensuring accountable and proportionate criminal law enforcement.
Detailed Insights: 1. What is principled criminalisation?
Criminalisation is the state's power to define wrongs as crimes and impose punishment. This must align with constitutional morality, not arbitrary discretion.
Legal scholar Victor Tadros describes this as part of the larger moral function of the state in a democratic society—to punish wrongs only after due process.
2. The Court’s ruling in Imran Pratapgarhi case:
The Court quashed an FIR against the politician over a social media post seen as inflammatory.
It held that police should have first conducted a preliminary inquiry under Section 173(3), BNSS, before proceeding.
This protects the freedom of speech and prevents the over-criminalisation of dissent.
3. Role of police and procedural law:
Police hold vast discretionary power in deciding what to criminalise via arrests, investigations, and FIRs.
Without proper guidelines and accountability, this can lead to over-policing of trivial offences while neglecting serious harm.
BNSS now allows police 14 days to conduct preliminary inquiry in cases with punishment of three years or more, before registering an FIR.
4. Conceptual framework:
Criminalisation should be based on “master principles”:
Offence must conflict with core public interest
Must constitute violent harm
Must violate non-intervention rights (e.g., autonomy, privacy)
These are reflected in India’s Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS).
Scientific/Technical Concepts Involved:
Section 173(3), BNSS: Empowers police to conduct a preliminary inquiry before FIR registration in select cognisable offences.
Overcriminalisation: Inclusion of acts that do not merit criminal response, often infringing on liberties.
Significance:
Reaffirms the importance of procedural justice in preserving individual freedoms in a constitutional democracy.
Advocates a reformist policing culture, shifting from mechanical criminalisation to responsible discretion.
Serves as judicial guidance for ensuring balance between public order and fundamental rights, especially amidst rising misuse of digital speech-related laws.
Mains Mock Question:
Discuss the significance of principled criminalisation in a constitutional democracy. How does procedural criminal law ensure a balance between state power and individual liberty in India?