In a development of considerable constitutional significance, the Supreme Court of India has referred a batch of petitions challenging the validity of the Uttar Pradesh Gangsters and Anti-Social Activities (Prevention) Act, 1986, along with its Rules, to a three-judge Bench. The move signals that the Court views the issue not as an isolated statutory challenge but as one with far-reaching implications for similar legislative frameworks governing organised crime across India.
The reference emerged in proceedings arising from a plea filed by Samajwadi Party leader Irfan Solanki, where a Bench comprising Chief Justice Surya Kant and Justices Joymalya Bagchi and Vipul M. Pancholi ordered that all pending petitions raising similar constitutional questions be tagged and heard together.
Recognising the broader impact, the Court also directed that Advocate Generals of multiple States including Maharashtra, Gujarat, Karnataka, and the National Capital Territory of Delhi be heard, given the existence of parallel anti-organised crime statutes in these jurisdictions.
This consolidation reflects a judicial effort to avoid fragmented constitutional interpretation and instead evolve a coherent doctrine governing special criminal laws targeting organised crime. A central constitutional issue raised in the petitions is whether the Gangsters Act is repugnant to Section 111 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, which now defines and regulates “organised crime” at the national level.
Petitioners contend that Parliament, through the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), has occupied the legislative field comprehensively, thereby rendering overlapping state enactments unconstitutional under the doctrine of repugnancy.
The Court’s decision to implead the Union of India underscores the seriousness of this contention. The outcome could clarify the constitutional limits of concurrent legislative competence in criminal law particularly where central codification overlaps with state-specific penal regimes.
Beyond repugnancy, the petitions raise classical constitutional challenges under Articles 14 and 21. Critics argue that the Gangsters Act employs vague and expansive definitions of “gang” and “gangster,” enabling wide executive discretion with minimal procedural safeguards.
Such overbreadth, it is contended, risks arbitrary application—bringing individuals within the fold of stringent penal consequences without a clear nexus to organised crime. The Supreme Court has consistently held that arbitrariness is antithetical to equality, and the present challenge could test the application of that principle to specialised criminal statutes. A deeper constitutional concern lies in the functional character of the legislation. Petitioners argue that, although framed as a penal statute, the Act operates in a manner akin to preventive detention through prolonged incarceration, stringent bail conditions, and procedural prioritisation.
This raises a doctrinally complex question: can the State achieve preventive detention outcomes through ordinary criminal law without adhering to the stricter safeguards mandated under Articles 21 and 22? The answer could reshape the jurisprudential boundary between punitive and preventive state power.
Another layer of challenge concerns the potential violation of Article 20(2) (double jeopardy). Petitioners argue that the same factual substratum is often prosecuted under both general penal laws (now under the BNS) and special statutes like the Gangsters Act, effectively subjecting individuals to a harsher regime for identical conduct.
This raises the question whether constitutional protection against double jeopardy should be interpreted formally (same offence in law) or substantively (same underlying facts). The Court’s ruling may provide clarity on this unsettled dimension of criminal jurisprudence. Importantly, the Court has acknowledged that the Uttar Pradesh law is not an outlier but part of a broader legislative trend across States to combat organised crime through stringent statutory frameworks.
Statutes such as Maharashtra’s MCOCA and Gujarat’s GUJCTOC operate on similar structural logic expanded definitions, enhanced penalties, and procedural departures from ordinary criminal law. The present adjudication, therefore, has the potential to serve as a constitutional template, either validating or recalibrating this entire class of legislation.
The reference also builds upon earlier judicial unease regarding the operation of the Gangsters Act. The Supreme Court has previously described aspects of the law as “draconian” and cautioned against its misuse, particularly where individual liberty is at stake.
Such observations indicate that the Court is already sensitised to the tension between state security objectives and civil liberties—an axis that will likely define the contours of the forthcoming adjudication.
The decision to place these challenges before a three-judge Bench marks a critical moment in Indian constitutional law. At stake is not merely the validity of a single statute, but the legitimacy of an entire legislative approach that prioritises security through exceptional legal frameworks.
Three key constitutional questions emerge: Can special criminal laws dilute procedural safeguards in the name of efficiency? Where does the balance lie between central criminal codification and state legislative autonomy? Does the Constitution permit expansive, preventive-style penal regimes without explicit safeguards?
The forthcoming adjudication may well define the future trajectory of criminal law in India determining whether the fight against organised crime can coexist with the constitutional commitment to liberty, fairness, and non-arbitrariness.

