Right to Information Wiki

Police departments are the largest RTI rejecters in 2025

Police departments are the single largest invokers of §8 exemptions in 2025. Drilling into the data, the patterns, and applicant counter-strategies.

Police departments are the largest RTI rejecters in 2025

The CIC Annual Report 2024-25 confirms what activists have long suspected: police departments are the single largest invokers of §8 exemptions — accounting for ~22% of all rejections.

The breakdown

  • §8(1)(g) — informant safety: 42% of police rejections.
  • §8(1)(h) — investigation interference: 31%.
  • §8(1)(j) — third-party privacy: 18%.
  • §24 — schedule-listed agency: 9%.

State patterns

  • Maharashtra Police — top rejecter; ~5,400 rejections in 2024-25.
  • Delhi Police — ~3,800.
  • UP Police — ~3,200.
  • Karnataka Police — relatively low rejecter.

Common rejection patterns to counter

  1. “Investigation pending” indefinitelycounter with: file §156(3) magistrate complaint and force update.
  2. “Informant identity” — RTI for closed/disposed matters; identity protection lapses.
  3. “Third-party” — frame ask for anonymised institutional data instead.

What is winning

  • Lalita Kumari (2014) + Bhagwant Singh (1985) + Jiju Lukose (2014) trilogy is winning FIR-disclosure appeals.
  • D.K. Basu (1997) for arrest-records disclosures.
  • NCRB statistics — public, can be used to triangulate police data.

Practical strategy

  1. File initial RTI for statistical/aggregate data (FIR types, conviction rates) — usually disclosable.
  2. For specific cases, await closure/disposal, then file with closure reference.
  3. For misconduct, file directly to SP/DGP with cc to State Human Rights Commission.

Sources

  1. CIC Annual Report 2024-25.
  2. NCRB Crime in India 2024.
  3. Lalita Kumari (2014); D.K. Basu (1997).

Last reviewed: 25 April 2026.