If you belong to a Scheduled Caste or Scheduled Tribe and have faced a caste-based crime, you can file an FIR at any police station, the police must register it without any preliminary enquiry, and you are entitled to monetary relief under the law that is paid in stages as the case moves forward. This guide explains how to do both, step by step, using only what the Act and its Rules actually say.
The Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989 protects members of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes from a defined list of offences called atrocities. Section 3 of the Act lists these offences. The relief, or compensation, comes from a separate set of rules, the SC and ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Rules, 1995, as amended in 2016.
A reader from a small town once told us their family had been humiliated and threatened over caste, and the local police first asked them to “settle it” instead of writing anything down. Under this law the police have no choice: no waiting period, no permission, no enquiry first. Once they quoted the Act by name and asked for a copy of the FIR, the station registered it the same day. Knowing the exact provisions changed everything for them, and that is the point of this guide.
Section 3 lists the offences that count as atrocities when committed against a member of a Scheduled Caste or Scheduled Tribe by a person outside those communities. The list is wide. It covers forcing a person to eat an inedible or obnoxious substance, dumping waste in their premises, parading a person naked or garlanding with footwear to humiliate, wrongful occupation of their land, forced or bonded labour (begar), manual scavenging, preventing a person from voting or contesting, social and economic boycott, and instituting false legal proceedings. The 2015 amendment expanded and renumbered this list. If your situation involves caste-based humiliation, violence, economic harm, or misuse of the legal system, it likely falls within Section 3.
Most offences under the Act are cognizable, which means the police can register a case and investigate, and arrest where necessary, without first getting a warrant or court permission.
Relief is governed by Rule 12(4) of the 1995 Rules read with Annexure I, as substituted by the 2016 amendment. The District Magistrate, Sub-Divisional Magistrate or Executive Magistrate must arrange relief in cash or kind within seven days, according to the scheduled scale, along with immediate help such as food, shelter, medical aid and transport.
The amount depends on the offence. Annexure I, titled Norms for Relief Amount, sets a scheduled scale ranging from a minimum of ₹85,000 up to ₹8,25,000, depending on the nature of the atrocity. For example, it fixes a minimum of ₹1,00,000 for several Section 3 offences, ₹85,000 for offences such as preventing a person from voting, and up to ₹8,25,000 where an atrocity causes 100 per cent incapacitation.
Crucially, the money is paid in stages as the case progresses, not all at once:
To claim, take your FIR copy, medical report where relevant, and caste certificate to the District Magistrate or District Social Welfare Officer, who processes relief under these Rules. This relief is in addition to any other compensation you may claim under any other law.
For a deeper walkthrough of dealing with officials and using information rights to track your case, see The RTI Playbook. You can also use the RTI Wiki tools to ask the police or District Magistrate for the status of your FIR and relief.
No. Section 18A, inserted by the 2018 amendment, states that no preliminary enquiry is required to register an FIR and the investigating officer does not need approval to arrest. Most offences are cognizable, so registration is mandatory. If a station refuses, complain in writing to the Superintendent of Police.
Under Rule 7 of the SC and ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Rules, 1995, the case must be investigated by an officer not below the rank of Deputy Superintendent of Police. The investigation is to be done on top priority and the charge sheet filed within sixty days.
Under Rule 12(4) and Annexure I of the Rules (as amended in 2016), relief follows a scheduled scale ranging from a minimum of ₹85,000 up to ₹8,25,000, depending on the offence. It is paid in stages: a part at the FIR stage, more when the charge sheet is filed, and the balance on conviction. This is separate from any other compensation you can claim.
Section 14 of the Act designates a Court of Session in each district as a Special Court, with Exclusive Special Courts for faster trials, so these cases are heard by a dedicated court rather than the regular criminal docket.
Yes. Relief is not held back until conviction. Rule 12(4) requires immediate relief within seven days, and Annexure I releases a share at the FIR stage and a further share when the charge sheet is filed, with the rest paid on conviction.
Act on three things at once: file the FIR at any police station and collect a free copy, ask in writing that the case be investigated by a DSP-rank officer under Rule 7, and apply to the District Magistrate or District Social Welfare Officer for relief under Rule 12(4) and Annexure I. Keep every document. The law is written to protect you, and knowing its exact provisions is how you make it work.
Sources: The Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989 (Sections 3, 14, 18A); the SC and ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Rules, 1995 (Rules 7 and 12), as amended by the SC and ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Amendment Rules, 2016 (Gazette notification G.S.R. 424(E), 14 April 2016, Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment); and Section 173 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023.