Recording of Statements and Confessions by Magistrate
The Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898
( ACT NO. V OF 1898 )
Power
to record statements and confessions
164.(1) Any Metropolitan Magistrate, any
Magistrate of the first class and any Magistrate of the second class specially
empowered in this behalf by the Government may, if he is not a police-officer
record any statement or confession made to him in the course of an
investigation under this Chapter or at any time afterwards before the
commencement of the inquiry or trial.
(2) Such statements shall be recorded in such of
the manners hereinafter prescribed for recording evidence as is, in his opinion
best fitted for the circumstances of the case. Such confessions shall be recorded
and signed in the manner provided in section 364, and such statements or
confessions shall then be forwarded to the Magistrate by whom the case is to be
inquired into or tried.
(3) A Magistrate shall, before recording any
such confession, explain to the person making it that he is not bound to make a
confession and that if he does so it may be used as evidence against him and no
Magistrate shall record any such confession unless, upon questioning the person
making it, he has reason to believe that it was made voluntarily; and, when he
records any confession, he shall make a memorandum at the foot of such record
to the following effect:-
"I have explained to (name) that he is not
bound to make a confession and that, if he does so, any confession he may make
may be used as evidence against him and I believe that this confession was
voluntarily made. It was taken in my presence and hearing, and was read over to
the person making it and admitted by him to be correct, and it contains a full
and true account of the statement made by him.
(Signed)
A.B.
Magistrate."
Explanation-It is not necessary that the
Magistrate receiving and recording a confession or statement should be a
Magistrate having jurisdiction in the case.
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