BNSS §51
of accused by medical practitioner at police officer. 30 of 2019.
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53. Examination of accused by medical practitioner at the request of police officer.—(1) When a person is arrested on a charge of committing an offence of such a nature and alleged to have been committed under such circumstances that there are reasonable grounds for believing that an examination of his person will afford evidence as to the commission of an offence, it shall be lawful for a registered medical practitioner, acting at the request of a police officer not below the rank of sub-inspector, and for any person acting in good faith in his aid and under his direction, to make such an examination of the person arrested as is reasonably necessary in order to ascertain the facts which may afford such evidence, and to use such force as is reasonably necessary for that purpose.
(2) Whenever the person of a female is to be examined under this section, the examination shall be made only by, or under the supervision of, a female registered medical practitioner. 1[Explanation.—In this section and in sections 53A and 54,— (a) “examination” shall include the examination of blood, blood stains, semen, swabs in case of sexual offences, sputum and sweat, hair samples and finger nail clippings by the use of modern and scientific techniques including DNA profiling and such other tests which the registered medical practitioner thinks necessary in a particular case; (b) “registered medical practitioner” means a medical practitioner who possesses any medical qualification as defined in clause (h) of section 2 of the Indian Medical Council Act, 1956 (102 of 1956) and whose name has been entered in a State Medical Register.]
51.
(1) When a person is arrested on a charge of committing an offence of such a nature and alleged to have been committed under such circumstances that there are reasonable grounds for believing that an examination of his person will afford evidence as to the commission of an offence, it shall be lawful for a registered medical practitioner, acting at the request of any police officer, and for any person acting in good faith in his aid and under his direction, to make such an examination of the person arrested as is reasonably Pursuit of offenders into other jurisdictions. No unnecessary restraint. Person arrested to be informed of grounds of arrest and of right to bail. Obligation of person making arrest to inform about arrest, etc., to relative or friend. Search of arrested person. Power to seize offensive weapons. Examination of accused by medical practitioner at request of police officer. necessary in order to ascertain the facts which may afford such evidence, and to use such force as is reasonably necessary for that purpose.
(2) Whenever the person of a female is to be examined under this section, the examination shall be made only by, or under the supervision of, a female registered medical practitioner.
(3) The registered medical practitioner shall, without any delay, forward the examination report to the investigating officer. Explanation.—In this section and sections 52 and 53,— (a) "examination" shall include the examination of blood, blood stains, semen, swabs in case of sexual offences, sputum and sweat, hair samples and finger nail clippings by the use of modern and scientific techniques including DNA profiling and such other tests which the registered medical practitioner thinks necessary in a particular case; (b) "registered medical practitioner" means a medical practitioner who possesses any medical qualification recognised under the National Medical Commission Act, 2019 and whose name has been entered in the National Medical Register or a State Medical Register under that Act.
What changedAI-inferred
Examination of accused by medical practitioner.
Old position
CrPC 53 is concerned with Examination of accused by medical practitioner at the request of police officer. Examination of accused by medical practitioner at the request of police officer
New position
BNSS 51 preserves the framework with drafting modernisations as required by the new code. Topic: of accused by medical practitioner at police officer. 30 of 2019.. When a person is arrested on a charge of committing an offence of such a nature and alleged to have been committed under such circumstances that there are reasonable grounds for believing that an examination of his person will afford
BNSS 51 (of accused by medical practitioner at police officer. 30 of 2019.) preserves the framework of CrPC 53. BNSS 51 retains the operative provisions in substantively the same form, with drafting modernisation and structural updates as required by the new code. BNSS 51 text: When a person is...
Editorial deltaAI-indicated (source-linked)
BNSS 51 (of accused by medical practitioner at police officer. 30 of 2019.) preserves the framework of CrPC 53. BNSS 51 retains the operative provisions in substantively the same form, with drafting modernisation and structural updates as required by the new code.
BNSS 51 text: When a person is arrested on a charge of committing an offence of such a nature and alleged to have been committed under such circumstances that there are reasonable grounds for believing that an examination of his person will afford evidence as to the commission of an offence, it shall be lawful for a registered...
Transitional note (repeal & savings)
For matters initiated before 1 July 2024, CrPC 53 continues to apply. For matters from that date forward, BNSS 51 applies. The transition is governed by the repeal-and-savings clause in the new code (BNS 358 / BNSS 531 / BSA 170 as the case may be); pending proceedings under the old code carry forward unaffected.
Frequently asked
BNSS 51 (of accused by medical practitioner at police officer. 30 of 2019.). The relationship is classified as substantively_same — see the change-note above for the textual delta.
Sources
- India Code — Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973
- Gazette of India — Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023
Cite this page
Newlaws.in, CRPC §53 → BNSS §51 Mapping Page, last updated 2026-05-01, accessed 2026-06-13, https://newlaws.in/bnss/51.
Compiled using AI-assisted tools · Source-linked · Last updated 2026-05-01
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