I’ve seen this happen too many times
Someone hears about an FIR filed against them. They hesitate. They hope it will pass. They wait until they receive a call from the police or worse, until the arrest is already done.
By then, the law offers fewer options. Not because the law is unforgiving—but because they missed the moment when action was still in their control.
Under the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS), 2023, we now have two clear legal pathways:
Anticipatory Bail under Section 482
A preventive tool for those who apprehend arrest in a non-bailable offence. You file this before the arrest happens. Once granted, the police cannot take you into custody without court permission. It’s protection before the damage is done.
Regular Bail under Section 480, 483
A post-arrest remedy. You’ve already been taken into custody. Now you seek the court’s permission to be released. The process is longer, stricter, and often affected by how the initial arrest played out.
What most people don’t realise is
- These two are not interchangeable. And delay is not neutral.
- Once you miss the anticipatory stage, you’re no longer negotiating from strength. You’re defending from custody. That shift changes the legal and emotional tone of the entire case.
- In criminal law, timing isn’t just strategic—it’s personal.
- The law offers protection. But it’s only useful when you ask for it before the knock on the door comes.