ISSN : 2583-8725

CONFESSIONS UNDER THE INDIAN EVIDENCE ACT

The Indian Evidence Act does not define the word Confession, but Confession is a statement made by an accused person who is associated with a crime, which infers that they committed a crime. The Act does not differentiate between the Admission and the Confession, but there is a fragile line difference between Admission and Confession. Confessions are upgrades of Admission, making them unique.

Admission can be judicial or extrajudicial, with judicial Admission admitted at the time of the judicial trial and extrajudicial Admission of facts made during normal day-to-day activities. Judicial admissions or extra judicial admissions are entirely admissible by the court of law under Section 58 and have much higher probative value into substantive any fused against or go against the confessor of the statements, with exceptions to Section 21 of the Indian Evidence Act.

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