## Correct Answer: A. Psychiatric evaluation In any criminal case involving a homicide, the first and mandatory step is **psychiatric evaluation** of the accused to assess **criminal responsibility** and **fitness to stand trial**. This is a legal and medical imperative under the Indian Penal Code (IPC) Section 84, which provides the insanity defense. Before any trial, sentencing, or guilt determination, the court must establish whether the accused was in a state of mind capable of understanding the nature and consequences of their act, and whether they could exercise control over their conduct at the time of the offense. A psychiatric evaluation determines: (1) presence of mental illness at the time of the crime, (2) fitness to plead and stand trial, (3) capacity to understand legal proceedings, and (4) risk of dangerousness. This assessment is conducted by court-appointed psychiatrists and is foundational to all subsequent legal proceedings. Without this evaluation, the trial itself may be deemed invalid, and justice may be miscarried. The Indian legal system recognizes that criminal responsibility cannot be determined without understanding the mental state of the accused—this is why psychiatric evaluation precedes all other steps in case management. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. Sentenced for murder** — Sentencing is the final step in a criminal trial, not the first. It can only occur after guilt is established through a full trial. Sentencing without prior psychiatric evaluation and trial would violate the accused's right to due process and the principles of natural justice enshrined in the Indian Constitution. This option represents a gross procedural violation. **C. Declared not guilty** — A verdict of guilt or innocence can only be delivered by a court after a complete trial with evidence and legal arguments. Declaring someone not guilty as a first step is illogical and violates the rule of law. This option confuses the final judgment (which comes after trial) with the initial management step. **D. Immediate trial of the case** — While trial is necessary, it cannot be 'immediate' without first establishing the accused's fitness to stand trial and mental state at the time of the offense. IPC Section 84 and the Criminal Procedure Code mandate psychiatric evaluation before trial proceeds. Skipping this step would render the trial procedurally defective and potentially void any conviction. ## High-Yield Facts - **IPC Section 84** provides the insanity defense and mandates psychiatric evaluation before trial to assess criminal responsibility. - **Fitness to stand trial** (not the same as insanity defense) must be established before any criminal proceedings can commence—this is a separate psychiatric assessment. - **Criminal responsibility** requires that the accused understood the nature of the act, its consequences, and had the capacity to control their conduct at the time of the offense. - Psychiatric evaluation in criminal cases is conducted by **court-appointed psychiatrists**, not private practitioners, to ensure impartiality. - **Mental illness at the time of crime** (not before or after) is the relevant timeframe for IPC Section 84 evaluation. ## Mnemonics **FIRST STEP in Criminal Psychiatry** **F**itness to stand trial → **I**nsanity defense (IPC 84) → **R**esponsibility assessment → **S**entencing (only after trial) → **T**rial verdict. Psychiatric evaluation covers the first three before any legal proceeding. **Before Trial: PSY** **P**sychiatric evaluation → **S**tand trial fitness → **Y**es/No to criminal responsibility. Only after these three can trial proceed. ## NBE Trap NBE may trap students who confuse the *sequence* of criminal proceedings—students familiar with trial outcomes (sentencing, verdict) may select those options thinking they are "first steps" without recognizing that psychiatric evaluation is a *prerequisite* to all legal proceedings under Indian law. The trap exploits knowledge of trial stages without understanding the foundational role of psychiatric assessment. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian courts, a psychiatric evaluation report (often called a "competency report") is routinely submitted before trial begins. Many high-profile criminal cases in India have been overturned or retrialed because psychiatric evaluation was skipped or done inadequately—this is why it is the non-negotiable first step, not a formality. _Reference: IPC Section 84; Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC) Section 328; Kaplan & Sadock's Synopsis of Psychiatry (adapted for Indian legal context); Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine (Forensic Medicine section)_
Sign up free to access AI-powered MCQ practice with detailed explanations and adaptive learning.