Sections 29 and 30 of the POCSO Act, 2012, create a mandatory "reverse burden of proof," requiring special courts to presume the accused is guilty of sexual offences (Section 29) and possessed a culpable mental state (Section 30). The accused must prove their innocence, rather than the prosecution proving guilt, departing from traditional criminal jurisprudence.
- Application: Applies to offences under Sections 3, 5, 7, and 9 (sexual assault, aggravated assault).
- Requirement: The Special Court shall presume the accused committed, abetted, or attempted the offence.
- Rebuttal: The accused must prove the contrary to overcome this presumption.
- Limitation: Courts have held that this presumption is not absolute; the prosecution must first establish foundational facts (i.e., that the act actually occurred).
- Requirement: The court will presume a "culpable mental state" (intention, motive, knowledge) on the part of the accused.
- Burden: The burden lies on the accused to prove they had no such mental state.
- For the purposes of this section, a fact is said to be proved only when the Special Court believes it to exist beyond reasonable doubt and not merely when its existence is established by a preponderance of probability.
- Not a Replacement for Prosecution Evidence: While these sections shift the onus, the prosecution must still prove "foundational facts" to trigger the presumption.
- Purpose: These provisions aim to protect vulnerable children from the trauma of prolonged trials and rigorous cross-examination, reflecting the need for swift justice in child abuse cases.