Probabilistic Truth And Judicial Certainty Mandating Precision – BNSS Forensic Reforms And The Rise Of Ai-Integrated Investigations Ai-Assisted Forensics Under Section 176(3) BNSS And The Future Of Criminal Investigations In India
Arya SinghJul 8, 202610.5281/zenodo.2125805626 pages
India's enactment of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS), 2023 and the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA), 2023 marks a paradigm shift in the architecture of criminal justice - from a confession driven paradigm inherited from colonial law to a forensic integrated model judicially mandated by statute. Section 176(3) BNSS introduces the first binding obligation on investigative agencies to conduct forensic examination for offences punishable by seven years or more, while the BSA elevates electronic records to the status of primary evidence. At the same moment, artificial intelligence (AI) technologies such as spanning DNA probabilistic genotyping, AI-assisted ballistic comparison, facial recognition, and predictive behavioural analytics - from convolutional neural networks for fingerprint analysis to large language models for crime scene triage - are proliferating across forensic workflows worldwide. This paper argues that Section 176(3) BNSS unintentionally establishes the statutory foundation for AI-assisted forensic investigations, yet India's evidentiary framework remains insufficiently equipped to regulate algorithmic evidence. it undertakes a comprehensive techno-jurisprudential analysis of the intersection between BNSS/BSA mandates and AI-integrated forensic investigations, questions the 'black box' opacity problem, algorithmic bias, and Article 21 for fair trial implications, surveys the US Daubert standard and EU AI Act as regulatory models, and proposes a legislative and institutional blueprint - including a codified 'Right to Explanation', mandatory algorithmic audits, and standardised forensic SOPs - to ensure that India's precision-forensics revolution upholds, rather than undermines, the constitutional promise of justice.