Social Sciences, asked by daksh060307, 5 months ago

1. Explain the procedure of filing an FIR. What are the details recorded in an FIR?
2. What is the procedure of justice adopted in a criminal case?
3. Discuss the role of the defence lawyer and the public prosecutor.
4. Why do you think the court cannot act on its own?
5. Why should justice be impartial?

Please answer these questions.


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Answers

Answered by gopalkrishnathumar
10

Answer:

Explanation:The procedure of filing an FIR is prescribed in Section 154 of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1973. commission of a cognizable offence is given orally, the police must write it down. information or making a complaint to demand that the information recorded by the police is read over to you

Answered by ayushbag03
26
  1. The procedure of filing an FIR is prescribed in Section 154 of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1973. commission of a cognizable offence is given orally, the police must write it down. information or making a complaint to demand that the information recorded by the police is read over to you.
  2. the affected persons file a FIR against the supposed to be a criminal . The police accept the FIR and starts the questioning process to collect all possible information relevant to the evidence . If sufficient evidences are available the police must file a charge sheet .
  3. Prosecutors charge suspects with crimes and attempt to convict them in court, while defense attorneys strive to defend their client, the suspect, and prevent a conviction. ... A public prosecutor has the right to file a criminal case against the person who did a crime
  4. Court cannot act on its own because Court is a temple of law and "law is blind". Bind person or a 'Court of law' cannot decide or act on its own and needs to be guided via evidence, argument and plaint.
  5. Fair and impartial courts protect the rights of everyone to the fundamental promise of our justice system: equal justice under the law. ... When people come to court to resolve their disputes, they should have confidence that the judges deciding their cases will act in a neutral manner.
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