सं Samvidhan

Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023

Section 356

Inquiry, trial or judgment in absentia of proclaimed offender

Why this exists

This is a significant new mechanism introduced by the BNSS to address the long-standing problem of fugitives indefinitely evading trial simply by staying beyond the reach of arrest, sometimes for decades, effectively freezing justice. By allowing trial in absentia after rigorous, multi-layered notice procedures and guaranteed legal representation, it aims to ensure that deliberately absconding does not become a shield against accountability, while still protecting fairness through mandatory legal aid, recorded evidence, and a route back into the appeal process if the person eventually surfaces.

Common misconceptions
  • Myth: Anyone who simply doesn't show up to a single court hearing can be tried entirely without their knowledge under this section.
    Fact: This applies only to a person formally declared a 'proclaimed offender' who has absconded to evade trial, and only after strict, multi-step notice procedures, a ninety-day waiting period, and mandatory legal representation are all satisfied.