Imagine your brother phones at midnight to say four men in plain clothes have taken him to the local police station. You rush there. The officer on duty refuses to tell you why he was picked up, hands you no paper, and says you will “find out tomorrow.” Your brother himself was never told the reason for his arrest. This is not just unfair. After the Supreme Court ruling in Vihaan Kumar v. State of Haryana, 2025 INSC 162 (decided 7 February 2025), an arrest made without communicating the grounds is unconstitutional, and the remand that follows can be struck down.
This article explains, in plain terms, the right to be told the grounds of arrest, the timeline the police must follow, how to record a violation, and how all of this connects to bail and release.
Use these steps as a general guide. They are based on settled law, not advice for any one case.
Key point: The burden is on the police, not on you. If the arrested person says the grounds were never communicated, the investigating officer has to prove that they were. Diary entries written inside the police station, with no document shown to the arrested person, are not enough.
The case was decided by Justices Abhay S. Oka and N. Kotiswar Singh. The Court read Article 22 1 of the Constitution, which says no arrested person shall be detained without being informed, as soon as may be, of the grounds for the arrest. The judges held that this is a mandatory constitutional requirement, not a formality.
The core findings:
This builds on earlier rulings such as Pankaj Bansal v. Union of India, 2023 INSC 866, where the Court held that grounds of arrest should be furnished in writing.
Two clocks run after an arrest, and both matter.
If either clock is breached, the detention becomes legally questionable. The grounds failure goes to the legality of the arrest itself; the 24-hour breach goes to illegal detention.
The right flows from the Constitution and is repeated in the criminal procedure statutes.
So the duty is not new. What Vihaan Kumar did was make clear that breaking it has a hard consequence: the arrest and remand do not survive.
This is where the ruling becomes practical. If the grounds were never communicated, the defence can argue that the very foundation of the custody is unconstitutional. The Court in Vihaan Kumar ordered release once the Article 22 breach was shown, rather than treating it as a minor lapse.
In a live matter, this gives a person two distinct lines of argument. The first is the regular bail plea on the merits of the case. The second is a challenge to the legality of the arrest and remand itself, based on the failure to communicate grounds. The second line, where the facts support it, can lead to release independent of the strength of the prosecution case. A drafted, well-documented record of the violation is what makes that argument credible.
For background reading on rights around arrest and the procedure that follows, see The RTI Playbook. To put together a written request for records such as the arrest memo, station diary entry, or remand papers, the AI RTI Drafter can help you frame the application.
Take a general illustration. A young man named Arjun is picked up from his home in a district town. No reason is given, and no relative is informed. He is produced before the Magistrate the next day. His lawyer points out that the grounds of arrest were never communicated, and that no arrest memo recording the grounds exists. The lawyer cites Vihaan Kumar. The prosecution can only show internal diary entries, with nothing handed to Arjun. On these facts, following the Supreme Court's reasoning, the arrest stands on weak ground, and the remand can be challenged. The lesson is simple: silence by the police, properly recorded by the family, becomes the strongest evidence of the violation.
The constitutional right under Article 22 1 applies to arrests in general, with a narrow carve-out for some preventive detention situations that have their own rules. For ordinary criminal arrests, the police must communicate the grounds.
The Supreme Court has stressed that communication must be meaningful and effective. In Pankaj Bansal the Court held grounds should be furnished in writing. Asking for the grounds in writing, and recording any refusal, protects the arrested person.
The arrest becomes illegal. Under Vihaan Kumar, the arrest and the remand that follows can be set aside, and the Court can order release. The burden is on the investigating officer to prove the grounds were communicated.
No, not without a Magistrate's order. Article 22 2 requires production before the nearest Magistrate within 24 hours of arrest, excluding travel time. Holding someone beyond that without authority is illegal detention.
The State. If the arrested person alleges that the grounds were not given, the investigating officer or agency must prove compliance. A mere internal diary note, with nothing shown to the arrested person, was held not to be enough.
No. The Court held that once an arrest is unconstitutional for breach of Article 22 1, filing a charge sheet later cannot validate it.
Reviewed by Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak. This article is general legal information, not legal advice for any specific case.