Early assessment should separate allegation from evidence
The FIR or complaint begins the record but does not by itself determine guilt. The alleged role of each person, applicable BNS or special-law provisions, available documents and current investigation or court stage must be examined separately.
Custody, bail and evidence require coordinated preparation
Urgent liberty questions may arise alongside preservation of lawful evidence, review of searches or seizures, witness-related restrictions and preparation for investigation or trial.
FIR, complaint and police notices
Arrest, remand and bail orders
Charge sheet or supplied prosecution papers
Relevant original and electronic records
A lawful defence avoids interference and unsupported promises
Defence preparation may test procedure, admissibility, reliability, individual attribution and the prosecution burden. Records must be preserved, witnesses must not be influenced and no outcome can be guaranteed.
What should be prioritised in a serious criminal matter?
Confirm custody status, FIR and police station, alleged provisions, present court, latest order, next date and any immediate police or court direction.
Can a defence strategy be decided from the FIR alone?
No. The FIR must be read with the procedural stage, prosecution material, orders, available evidence and the verified account of the person concerned.
How can a consultation be arranged?
Call either chamber telephone number, briefly identify the type and urgency of the matter, and confirm a suitable consultation time before visiting.
This page provides general information only. It is not legal advice, does not create an advocate-client relationship and does not guarantee any outcome.