What Is MCOCA?
The Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act, 1999 (MCOCA) is a special law enacted to combat organised crime in Maharashtra. It creates the offence of “organised crime” — requiring a “continuing unlawful activity” committed for material benefit by a member of an “organised crime syndicate.” MCOCA is applied when police allege that a person is part of a criminal gang that has committed offences on multiple occasions.
MCOCA vs Regular BNS — Key Differences
- Confessions — confessions recorded before a police officer of Deputy Superintendent rank or above are admissible as evidence under MCOCA (unlike ordinary criminal law where police confessions are inadmissible).
- Bail — highly restricted. S.21(4) MCOCA: court shall not grant bail unless the Public Prosecutor has been heard AND the court is satisfied that reasonable grounds exist for believing the accused is not guilty.
- Designated courts — MCOCA cases are tried before Special Designated Courts in Maharashtra.
- Punishment — organised crime resulting in death: death or life imprisonment. Otherwise: minimum 5 years up to life.
When Does MCOCA Apply?
For MCOCA to apply, the prosecution must establish:
- The accused is a member of an organised crime syndicate
- The syndicate has committed at least two or more charge-sheets in the preceding 10 years — “continuing unlawful activity”
- The crime was committed for material benefit for the syndicate
The requirement of two prior charge-sheets is a critical vulnerability — if the prosecution cannot establish prior continuing unlawful activity, MCOCA cannot be applied and the case reverts to ordinary criminal law.
Getting Bail in a MCOCA Case
MCOCA bail is extremely difficult but not impossible. Grounds courts have entertained:
- Long incarceration — years without trial completing; Bombay HC has granted bail on this ground
- Weak evidence connecting the accused to the syndicate
- Accused was peripheral, not a leader
- Prior acquittal or discharge in the predicate offences
- Health grounds
Defence Strategy
- Challenge the admissibility of the MCOCA confession — was it voluntary? Was the statutory procedure followed exactly?
- Attack the “continuing unlawful activity” requirement — are prior charge-sheets proven and valid?
- Challenge the “organised crime syndicate” definition — was there a structured group with a defined hierarchy?
- Seek discharge before the Designated Court on grounds that MCOCA ingredients are not made out
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a person with no criminal history be charged under MCOCA?
MCOCA requires two prior charge-sheets against the syndicate, not necessarily against the individual accused. A person can be charged if they are alleged to be a member of a syndicate that has the required criminal history, even if the individual personally has no prior criminal record. This is why challenging the “membership” element is key to the defence.
Are MCOCA confessions always admissible?
No. The confession must be recorded voluntarily before a Designated Officer of DSP rank or above, after following the specific procedure prescribed by MCOCA. If the accused was coerced, if the procedure was not followed, or if the confession was retracted promptly, courts have the discretion to examine its reliability. A skilled criminal lawyer will challenge the circumstances of the confession recording.
Can I challenge MCOCA invocation before trial begins?
Yes. A discharge application before the MCOCA Designated Court arguing that the ingredients of the offence are not made out is a viable strategy. If discharge is rejected, the order can be challenged by way of revision or writ at the Bombay High Court before the trial proceeds further.
MCOCA cases require experienced criminal defence representation. Advocate Akash Chikate handles MCOCA bail and defence at Bombay High Court and MCOCA Designated Courts in Pune. Contact us immediately if charged under MCOCA.