[Answered] Evaluate the efficacy of plea bargaining under BNSS. Examine how the stigma of conviction hinders its potential to reduce judicial pendency.

Introduction

India has 58.8 million pending cases and prisons at ~131% occupancy with 75% undertrial prisoners. Plea bargaining could structurally address both. Yet NCRB data 2023 reveals only 35,889 cases resolved through plea bargaining out of 1.65 crore tried, a disposal rate of 0.216%. The reform exists; the system refuses to use it.

Historical and Legal Context

  1. Plea bargaining, introduced in India in 2006 (and retained under Section 290-300 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS), 2023), is a pre-trial negotiation where the accused pleads guilty in exchange for a lesser sentence.
  2. It excludes serious offences (death/life imprisonment), crimes against women/children, and socio-economic crimes, aiming for faster resolution in minor cases.

Positive Features under BNSS

  1. Speedy Justice Mechanism: BNSS provides structured sentencing reductions—up to one-fourth or one-sixth punishment thereby ensuring predictability in outcomes. Example: petty theft cases.
  2. Reducing Judicial Burden: Plea bargaining can substantially reduce trial duration, witness examination burden, and prosecutorial workload, thereby aiding Article 21’s “speedy trial” mandate. Example: cheque bounce disputes.
  3. Economic Efficiency: Long trials impose high transaction costs on litigants, prisons, and the State. Faster disposal improves Ease of Doing Business and investor confidence, repeatedly emphasized by industry bodies like FICCI.
  4. Technological Synergy: Budget 2026–27 allocated ₹1,200 crore for e-Courts Phase III to promote digital justice delivery, online case management, and faster disposals. Plea bargaining can complement this transition.
  5. Victim-Centric Resolution: Mutually satisfactory disposition encourages compensation and restorative justice principles. Example: neighbourhood assault.

Structural Weaknesses Limiting Efficacy

  1. Extremely Narrow Applicability: BNSS excludes: offences punishable with death/life imprisonment, socio-economic offences and crimes against women and children below 14 years. Thus, a large portion of India’s criminal docket remains outside its ambit. Example: corruption offences.
  2. Rigid Procedural Timeline: Section 290 BNSS, strict 30-day timeline and voluntariness certification limit meaningful negotiations.
  3. Constitutional Concerns: Concerns persist regarding voluntariness under Articles 20(3) and 21, especially where undertrials may plead guilty due to coercion, poverty, or prolonged incarceration. Example: indigent undertrials.
  4. Conviction-Centric Model: Results in formal conviction, unlike compounding (Section 359) which leads to acquittal.
  5. Prosecutorial Indifference: Lack of training and incentive to prioritise high conviction rates over negotiated settlements.

How Stigma of Conviction Undermines Pendency Reduction

  1. Permanent Criminal Record: Unlike compounding under Section 359 BNSS, plea bargaining culminates in a formal conviction. This creates lifelong reputational and occupational consequences. Example: government recruitment.
  2. Social Ostracisation: Indian society rarely distinguishes between negotiated guilt and full-trial conviction, resulting in loss of social capital and family standing. Example: matrimonial prospects.
  3. Employment and Mobility Restrictions: Convictions adversely affect: government jobs, passports and visas, professional licenses and private sector verification. Hence, accused persons prefer prolonged trials over immediate conviction. Example: civil services aspirants. Trial Preference: Accused prefer prolonged trials hoping for acquittal rather than accepting guilt. Example: cheque bounce cases 43 lakh pending.
  4. Comparative Disadvantage vis-à-vis Compounding: Compounding results in acquittal, whereas plea bargaining results in conviction; therefore, litigants naturally prefer compounding wherever available.

Way Forward

  1. India needs to move toward Expungement (wiping the record clean after a period of good behavior) or Non-conviction based settlements for first-time petty offenders. Example: USA Model.
  2. Establish independent court-mandated mediation cells in every district with trained facilitators.
  3. Mandate specialised training for prosecutors and legal aid lawyers on plea bargaining.
  4. Reconcile compounding and plea bargaining through clear guidelines.
  5. Create High Court dashboards for monthly monitoring of disposal rates by offence category.

Conclusion

As the Law Commission of India 154, 1996 foresaw: A system that forces the innocent to choose between indefinite detention and a guilty plea has failed its foundational purpose. Plea bargaining’s potential is not a legal question it is a civilisational one about whether conviction should punish twice.

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