Several members of some Hindu organisations tried to enter a church in Rohtak District of India's Haryana State, claiming that forcible religious conversions were being performed there.
However, when police reached the place it found no evidence of the alleged religious conversions.
"Police have conducted the probe and found nothing like that (religious conversions)," Deputy Commissioner Captain Manoj Kumar told reporters.
"For around six years, people have been holding prayer meetings at the church on Sundays and Thursdays," Kumar added.
Meanwhile, many media reports suggest that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-ruled Haryana state is now considering implementing a law against religious conversion.
The BJP-ruled states like Uttar Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, and Madhya Pradesh already have implemented laws to stop forcible religious conversion, whereas Karnataka state will adopt it in the upcoming assembly session starting from 13 December.
The offence of illegal conversion under all three states' laws is non-bailable, which means an arrest can be made without a warrant, and bail is granted only at the judge's discretion.