An FIR in Pakistan is filed against you, and the next few hours can define everything that follows. Most people either freeze in fear or rush to the police station without any legal protection. Both choices are dangerous.
Here is the truth, an FIR is an accusation, not a conviction. The law presumes you are innocent. But that presumption only protects you if you know your rights and act immediately.
This guide is for those who want to understand the process in depth, for lawyers and advocates looking for a practical reference, and most importantly, for every citizen in Pakistan who deserves to face the legal system with confidence, not fear
A First Information Report (FIR) is the written document police prepare when they receive information about a cognizable offence — a serious crime where police can arrest without a court warrant.
It is governed by Section 154 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (CrPC). Once an FIR is registered, the formal machinery of Pakistan’s criminal justice system begins moving.
What an FIR contains:
1-Name and address of the complainant
2-Date, time, and place of the alleged incident
3-Nature of the offence and relevant law sections
4-Name or description of the accused
5-Names of witnesses, if any
Critical point: An FIR is not evidence of guilt. Superior courts of Pakistan have consistently held that an FIR is only the “first version” of events, nothing more. It must be tested through investigation, witnesses, and cross-examination in court.
Before anything else, you must know what type of offence the FIR is based on.
Cognizable Offences are serious crimes, such as murder (Section 302 PPC), robbery (Section 392 PPC), kidnapping (Section 365 PPC), rape (Section 375 PPC), where police can arrest without a court warrant and investigate without court permission. An FIR is mandatory for these.
Non-Cognizable Offences are less serious minor assaults, public nuisance, and certain fraud cases below a threshold where police cannot arrest without a magistrate’s warrant. These are handled through a complaint in court, not an FIR at a police station.
Why does this matter to you? The nature of the offence determines whether the crime is bailable or non-bailable, and that controls your entire legal strategy from the very first hour.
What you do in the next few hours matters more than anything that happens later in court. Here are seven steps to protect you from the very start.
The moment you learn that an FIR has been filed against you, your first action should be to obtain a copy of the FIR.
Under Section 154(2) CrPC, every accused person has the legal right to receive a free copy of the FIR. You do not need to pay anything. You do not need anyone’s permission.
Read every word carefully. Look for:
Real-world example: A businessman in Karachi receives a call that an FIR has been registered against him under Section 489-F PPC (dishonoured cheque). He obtains the FIR copy within two hours. His lawyer immediately identifies the offence as non-bailable on its face and files a pre-arrest bail application in the Sessions Court the same afternoon. He is never arrested.
This is not optional. This is the rule.
Under Article 10 of the Constitution of Pakistan, you have the constitutional right to consult and be defended by a legal practitioner of your choice. Exercise this right before you say a single word to any police officer.
Why silence protects you: Under Article 39 of the Qanoon-e-Shahadat Order, 1984, any confession made to a police officer is inadmissible in court. However, informal statements and “off the record” conversations can still be used to build a case against you. Your lawyer speaks; you do not.
What not to do in the first 24 hours:
This single question shapes every decision you make next.
If the FIR is for a bailable offence, bail is your right, not a favour from the court. The police station itself must release you on bail; no court order is needed. Examples include simple theft below a certain value, minor assault, and mischief.
Here, bail is at the court’s discretion. The court examines the evidence on record, the severity of the offence, and your personal circumstances. You must file a formal bail application before the Sessions Court or High Court.
Key grounds courts consider for bail:
If you have not yet been arrested, this is your most powerful legal shield.
Pre-arrest bail, also called anticipatory bail, is filed before the Sessions Court or High Court of Sindh/Punjab/KPK/Balochistan. It prevents police from arresting you while the court hears your application. In urgent cases, interim protection can be granted the same day of filing.
Courts grant pre-arrest bail when the accused shows:
After FIR registration, the police begin an investigation under Chapter XIV of CrPC. Here is what happens behind the scenes:
. Section 161 CrPC Witness Statements: Police record statements of potential witnesses. These are not sworn testimony but form the foundation of the prosecution’s case. Witnesses can be cross-examined when the case reaches trial.
. Section 164 CrPC Statement Before Magistrate: If you choose to make a voluntary statement, it must be recorded before a Magistrate, never at a police station. A Magistrate-recorded statement is admissible as evidence and carries full legal weight.
Arrest and Remand: If arrested, you must be produced before a Magistrate within 24 hours under Article 10 of the Constitution. Police may seek physical remand (custody for interrogation) ordinarily not exceeding 15 days. Challenge the unnecessary remand extension through your lawyer immediately.
. Section 173 CrPC Final Challan: After completing the investigation, the police submit a challan (final report) to the court. A “positive challan” recommends trial. A “cancellation report” recommends closure. Your lawyer can influence this stage through proper representation during the investigation.
Pakistan’s Constitution guarantees powerful rights to every person accused of a crime. These are not formalities; they are enforceable in court.
Article 9 Right to liberty no detention except by law
Article 10 Right to know grounds of arrest; consult a lawyer; appear before a Magistrate within 24 hours
Article 10-A Right to fair trial and due process
Article 13 Protection against self-incrimination you cannot be forced to confess
Article 14 Right to dignity, no torture to extract evidence
Article 25 Equality before law , no discrimination
If police violate any of these rights, your lawyer can approach the High Court or Supreme Court for immediate relief through a constitutional petition.
False FIRs are a serious and widespread problem in Pakistan. They are filed to harass business rivals, settle property disputes, gain advantage in matrimonial cases, or apply political pressure.
Many people are unaware that Pakistani law offers effective remedies for these situations. You are not powerless; you have options ranging from quashing the FIR entirely to filing a criminal case against the person who made false statements. Here are all the ways the law allows you to fight back.
File a constitutional petition or criminal miscellaneous application before the High Court. The court can quash an FIR entirely if it is satisfied that:
Filing a false FIR is itself a criminal offence. Under Section 182 PPC, giving false information to a public servant is punishable. Under Section 211 PPC, falsely charging a person with an offence carries up to 7 years’ imprisonment in serious cases. Your lawyer can file a counter-complaint to put legal pressure on the false complainant.
For example, consider this real case a landlord in Lahore filed a false robbery FIR against his tenant simply to force him out of the property The tenant’s lawyer filed a counter-complaint under Section 211 PPC, produced rent receipts and witness statements proving the accusation was fabricated, and within weeks the Sessions Court not only dismissed the original FIR but initiated proceedings against the landlord himself turning the entire case around.
In Pakistan, divorce and custody battles frequently spill into criminal courts. Common FIRs in family disputes include:
Strategy: Seek pre-arrest bail immediately. Pursue the civil remedy (Family Court) simultaneously. A strong civil case often weakens the criminal narrative significantly.
Section 489-F PPC (dishonoured cheque) is the most misused criminal provision in Pakistan’s commercial world. It carries non-bailable implications, making it a favourite harassment tool.
Strategy: Challenge the FIR if the underlying dispute is purely commercial. File for pre-arrest bail. Explore settlement 489-F cases are routinely resolved through payment and compromise without proceeding to trial.
FIRs under the Anti-Terrorism Act 1997 are the most serious category. Bail is heavily restricted, and cases are tried in special Anti-Terrorism Courts (ATCs). If you face an ATA FIR, engage a High Court advocate with specific ATA experience immediately. Do not attempt to handle this without specialized legal representation.
MAH & Co. is one of Karachi’s established criminal law practices, representing individuals, families, and businesses across all stages of FIR-related proceedings. The firm’s criminal law team brings courtroom experience from Karachi’s City Courts and Sessions Courts to the High Court of Sindh, handling pre-arrest bail, post-arrest bail, FIR quashing, ECL removal, and counter-FIR filings under one roof. What sets MAH & Co. apart is not just legal knowledge, but the speed and strategic clarity the team brings to every case from the very first consultation. Because when a criminal case begins, every hour counts.