Protection from Unlawful Detention in Maharashtra
Reviewed by the Commoner Law Editorial Team. Sourced from Indian central (Union) law — Constitution of India, central Acts of Parliament, and Supreme Court decisions. State-level information reflects each state's own Acts and High Court rulings. Written in plain language for general understanding — this is educational content, not legal advice. Our editorial standards
What is this right?
The 24-hour production rule is one of the few hard limits the Constitution places on police power — and the courts have meant it.
- 24-hour rule (BNSS s. 57): an arrested person must be produced before the nearest magistrate within 24 hours of arrest, excluding genuine travel time. Past that, the detention is illegal.
- No custody without magistrate order: beyond the first 24 hours, the police can only hold you if a magistrate signs off on remand.
- Remand limits: total police custody is capped at 15 days for most offences. Judicial custody before the charge-sheet is filed is capped at 60 days (offences with sentence under 10 years) or 90 days (10 years and above).
- Habeas corpus: if someone is being held without lawful authority, the High Court or Supreme Court can be moved by writ — and will order production and release if the detention doesn't stand up.
- Compensation: in Rudul Shah v. State of Bihar (1983), the Supreme Court awarded money damages under Article 21 for prolonged unlawful detention. That door has stayed open.
When does it apply?
- You have been at the police station more than 24 hours without seeing a magistrate.
- A relative is missing and you suspect they are being held without a formal arrest entry.
- You were granted release on remand but the police have not actually let you out.
What to Do If Someone Is Being Unlawfully Detained by Police in India
- Note the exact time of arrest — yours or your relative's. The 24-hour clock starts from that moment.
- File a habeas corpus petition in the High Court (or Supreme Court) if release isn't happening. A family member or lawyer can move it on your behalf.
- File a parallel complaint with the State Human Rights Commission or the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC).
- Reach out to a Legal Aid clinic or call NALSA on 15100 — same day.
What should you NOT do?
- Don't treat custody and disappearance as the same problem. If you cannot locate the person, file a missing-person report and a habeas corpus petition together.
- Don't sit on a habeas corpus. Courts move on these because of urgency — delay makes them harder to win.
- Don't assume one remand order covers everything. Each extension is a separate order with separate limits.
How Maharashtra differs from central law
In Maharashtra, any person detained beyond 24 hours without being produced before a magistrate is unlawfully detained, as per the BNSS, 2023. The Bombay High Court has been vigilant in protecting against unlawful detention and has issued several important habeas corpus orders.
Maharashtra also has the National Security Act, 1980 (NSA) and the Maharashtra Prevention of Dangerous Activities Act, 1981 (MPDA Act), commonly known as the 'Externment Act,' under which preventive detention orders can be passed. Under the MPDA Act, a person can be detained for up to 12 months if they are found to be a bootlegger, dangerous person, drug offender, immoral trafficking offender, or slum lord. However, such detention orders must follow strict procedural safeguards, and the detained person must be informed of the grounds of detention within 5 days and given an opportunity to make a representation to an Advisory Board within 3 weeks.
Additional Steps in Maharashtra
If you or someone you know is unlawfully detained, file a habeas corpus petition immediately in the Bombay High Court. Contact a lawyer or MSLSA at 022-22023040. Report to the Maharashtra State Human Rights Commission at mshrc.maharashtra.gov.in. You can also file a complaint with the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) at 011-24663333.
Relevant Law: BNSS, 2023, Section 187; Maharashtra Prevention of Dangerous Activities Act, 1981, Sections 3-12; Constitution of India, Article 22
Common Questions
When does protection from unlawful detention apply?
You have been at the police station more than 24 hours without seeing a magistrate.A relative is missing and you suspect they are being held without a formal arrest entry.You were granted release on remand but the police have not actually let you out.
What should I do if a family member has been detained by police in India for more than 24 hours without being produced before a magistrate?
Note the exact time of arrest — yours or your relative's. The 24-hour clock starts from that moment.File a habeas corpus petition in the High Court (or Supreme Court) if release isn't happening. A family member or lawyer can move it on your behalf.File a parallel complaint with the State Human Rights Commission or the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC).Reach out to a Legal Aid clinic or call NALSA on 15100 — same day.
What mistakes should I avoid with protection from unlawful detention?
Don't treat custody and disappearance as the same problem. If you cannot locate the person, file a missing-person report and a habeas corpus petition together.Don't sit on a habeas corpus. Courts move on these because of urgency — delay makes them harder to win.Don't assume one remand order covers everything. Each extension is a separate order with separate limits.
Protection from Unlawful Detention in other states
Same topic, different jurisdiction. Pick the one that applies to you.