Reading a chargesheet like a senior advocate requires legal insight, attention to procedural details, and strategic thinking. A chargesheet (as per Section 173(2) of CrPC / BNSS) is the final police report after investigation, and it lays the foundation for prosecution.
Here’s a step-by-step guide to help you read a chargesheet like an expert:
1. Read the FIR Carefully First
- Note FIR number, date, police station.
- Identify:
- Sections invoked (IPC, special laws).
- Name and role of complainant and accused.
- Brief narrative – motive, place, time, method.
➡️ Compare this with the chargesheet narrative.
2. Check the List of Accused and Their Roles
- See who is named as accused, and whether:
- Any accused is absconding (shown as PO).
- Any accused is shown as “Not Sent Up” (NSU) – i.e., insufficient evidence.
- Any new accused is added (u/s 319 CrPC possible later).
➡️ Are charges uniform or individualized?
3. Examine the List of Witnesses (Annexure)
- Check witness types:
- Eye-witness
- Police/investigating officer
- Panch witness (for recovery/seizure)
- Expert witness (forensic, medico-legal)
- Are key witnesses missing?
- Any hostile witness indicators?
➡️ Match witness names to their statements (161 CrPC).
4. Read Section 161 Statements
- Read each statement carefully:
- Consistency with FIR?
- Are there contradictions?
- Any signs of improvement or exaggeration?
- Common plot or vague/inconsistent accounts?
➡️ This is crucial for later cross-examination strategy.
5. Analyze Medical & Forensic Evidence
- Medical report (MLC / Postmortem report)
- Time, injury nature, weapon type, healing, etc.
- FSL report (fingerprints, DNA, drugs, cyber data)
- Weapon or object sent for forensic testing?
➡️ Does it support or contradict the prosecution version?
6. Look at Recovery & Seizure Memos (Panchanama)
- What was recovered? (weapon, phone, stolen property)
- Date, time, and location of recovery.
- Any delay or lack of independent witnesses?
➡️ Is recovery under Section 27 Evidence Act?
7. Spot Procedural Irregularities
- Was the arrest legal and timely?
- Any delay in forwarding accused to magistrate (u/s 57 CrPC)?
- Was Section 41A notice issued?
- Are FSL reports or call data certificates (65B Evidence Act) filed properly?
➡️ Any irregularity can help in discharge/quashing later.
8. Cross-Verify with Supporting Documents
- CCTV footage, WhatsApp chats, call logs, etc.
- Are 65B certificates attached?
- Compare timings, locations, phone tower dumps (especially in cyber/POCSO cases).
➡️ Check for fabrication or tampering signs.
9. Study Final Opinion of IO
- The last page of chargesheet contains the conclusion by IO.
- “Charge-sheeted” vs. “Untraced” vs. “Closure”
- Based on evidence sufficiency, not proof beyond doubt.
➡️ IO’s conclusion is not final – court takes cognizance independently.
10. Apply Strategic Thinking
- Is this a fit case for discharge? (under S. 227/239 CrPC)
- Should you challenge the chargesheet in High Court under S. 482 CrPC / BNSS 2023?
- Or wait for framing of charge and go for quashing later?
- Any ground for anticipatory bail or regular bail?
➡️ Your legal strategy flows from your chargesheet reading.
Bonus Tip:
Make a summary table:
| Point | Observation |
| FIR vs. 161 Contradictions | … |
| Role of Accused X | … |
| Independent Witnesses | … |
| Forensic Consistency | … |
| Delay in FIR / Arrest | … |
| Possible Defense Angles | … |


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