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Concealing Design to Commit an Offence – A Complete Legal Guide

  Using Design to Commit a Crime: A Comprehensive Legal Guide  One of the most important and most misinterpreted concepts in criminal law is the idea of hiding a plan to commit an offence. It focuses on people who purposefully conceal, hide, or disguise plans related to the commission of a criminal act rather than the actual criminal. Despite their seeming passivity, these individuals are crucial in facilitating crime by taking advantage of quiet, concealment, or deceit. Concealing a criminal design is treated nearly as strongly as aiding and abetting under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) and the Indian Penal Code (IPC) since it keeps the authorities from acting promptly, which ultimately leads to illegal activity. This page offers a thorough, authoritative, and in-depth description of the offence, including its definition, components, penalties, examples, judicial opinions, and defences. "Concealing Design to Commit an Offence": What Does It Mean? It describes a cir...

POCSO Act 2012

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Defamation Laws in India 2025: IPC 499 vs BNS 356 (Legal Guide)

Defamation Laws in India: A Comprehensive Legal Guide (2025 Edition) Today, a single social media post can reach millions of users in mere seconds, making the line between 'Freedom of Speech’ and 'Character Assassination’ thinner than ever. In India, the right to reputation is protected by virtue of the right to life under article 21 of the constitution.   This guide discusses in detail the current legal landscape of defamation in India, including the recent shift from the Indian Penal Code (IPC) to Bhartiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS).   1. What is Defamation?   Defamation refers to the communicating a false statement of fact about a person that is damaging to that person's reputation. In India, it is unique in that it is considered a civil wrong (Tort) and also a crime.   The Legal Definition   Defamation can be civil or defamation, and in both, a statement must satisfy three fundamental elements:   The Statement must be Defamatory: ...