Types of Bail in India
- Regular Bail (S.483 BNSS / S.439 CrPC) — applied after arrest for non-bailable offences. Filed at Sessions Court or High Court.
- Anticipatory Bail (S.482 BNSS / S.438 CrPC) — applied before arrest when arrest is apprehended.
- Default Bail (S.187 BNSS / S.167 CrPC) — automatically available if police fail to file a charge sheet within the stipulated 60 or 90 days while the accused is in custody.
- Interim Bail — temporary bail granted while a full bail application is being heard.
Bailable vs. Non-Bailable Offences
- Bailable offences — the arrested person has a right to bail. Police or Magistrate must grant bail if sufficient surety is offered.
- Non-bailable offences — bail is at the court’s discretion. The Magistrate or Sessions Court considers gravity of offence, criminal antecedents, flight risk, and risk of evidence tampering.
How to Apply for Bail After Arrest in Pune
- Contact a criminal lawyer immediately. The lawyer can appear on the day of remand and seek bail at the first opportunity.
- Remand hearing (within 24 hours) — police must produce the arrested person before a Magistrate. Your lawyer argues against police custody and seeks bail or minimum judicial custody.
- Bail application filed — at the Magistrate Court (for less serious offences) or Sessions Court (for serious non-bailable offences).
- Prosecution opposes — the Public Prosecutor argues against bail; your lawyer counters.
- Order — if granted, the accused is released upon executing a bail bond and providing the required surety.
What Is Surety?
A surety is a person who stands guarantee for the accused — they promise the court that the accused will appear at all future hearings. The surety must produce documents showing property ownership or stable income equivalent to the bail amount. Courts in Pune generally prefer local (Maharashtra-based) sureties.
Realistic Bail Timelines at Pune Courts
- Bailable offences — same day or within 24–48 hours
- Non-bailable offences at Sessions Court — typically 2–7 days for listing and hearing
- Serious offences at High Court — 1–4 weeks; interim bail may be obtained faster
- NDPS / MCOCA / POCSO — weeks to months; these face special statutory restrictions on bail
Common Bail Conditions at Pune Courts
- Surrender passport
- Report to the police station on specified days
- Not to leave Maharashtra without court permission
- Not to contact witnesses or the complainant
- Maintain a local address
Violating bail conditions can result in bail cancellation and re-arrest. Comply strictly with every condition imposed by the court.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can bail be cancelled after it is granted?
Yes. The prosecution or the victim can apply for bail cancellation if: the accused violates bail conditions, tampers with evidence or witnesses, commits a new offence while on bail, or if new material comes to light making bail grant inappropriate. Courts take bail condition violations seriously — compliance is essential.
What if I cannot arrange a surety for bail?
Your lawyer can apply for Personal Recognizance (PR) bail — where the accused is released on their own undertaking without surety — in appropriate cases. Courts may also accept reduced surety amounts if the accused has no flight risk. For those who genuinely cannot arrange surety, Legal Aid (DLSA) can also assist.
Can someone from outside Maharashtra provide surety for bail in Pune?
Courts generally prefer local sureties as they are easier to verify and trace. An out-of-state surety is not automatically rejected but the court may require additional verification of the surety’s property or financial standing. Consult your lawyer on what the specific court will accept in your matter.
For bail after arrest in Pune — including urgent cases — contact Advocate Akash Chikate. We attend remand hearings and handle bail applications at Pune Sessions Court and Bombay High Court.