Offences under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, 2012 (POCSO) are not isolated or impulsive crimes but are often rooted in power imbalance, access, control, and opportunity. In most cases, the accused is a person who enjoys familiarity, trust, or authority over the child, such as a neighbour, relative, teacher, caretaker, vendor, or employer. This proximity enables repeated access and reduces the immediate risk of detection.
The accused typically exploits the physical, emotional, and psychological vulnerability of the child, who may lack the maturity, vocabulary, or courage to report the abuse.
One of the most dominant theories applicable to POCSO cases is the Power-Control Theory, wherein the accused derives gratification not merely from the sexual act but from exerting dominance over a weaker individual. Children, due to their age and dependency, become easy targets.
The accused often:
This theory explains why many offenders continue the abuse over a period of time rather than committing a single act.
According to Routine Activity Theory, crime occurs when three factors converge:
In POCSO cases, the accused often arranges situations where:
This theory explains why many offences occur during ordinary daily activities and familiar surroundings rather than in secluded or unfamiliar locations.
A significant number of POCSO offences involve grooming, where the accused gradually builds trust before committing the offence. Grooming may include:
This psychological conditioning weakens the child’s ability to resist or report the abuse and delays disclosure, which is often misconstrued as “delay in FIR” but is well-recognised by courts as a natural reaction of a child victim.
Unlike accidental or spontaneous crimes, POCSO offences reflect a clear criminal intent. The repeated nature of abuse, concealment efforts, inducement, and threats clearly establish mens rea, which courts treat with utmost seriousness.
The accused often:
Such conduct establishes continuity of offence, aggravating culpability under Sections 5 and 6 of the POCSO Act (Aggravated Sexual Assault).
Empirical studies and judicial observations indicate that:
Courts have repeatedly rejected the defence of “lack of intention” or “misunderstanding”, recognising that children cannot consent and that the accused is expected to understand the illegality of their conduct.
Indian courts rely on the following legal principles while analysing the accused’s conduct:
Accused persons often raise defences such as:
Courts have consistently held that such defences cannot override statutory presumptions and child protection principles, unless proved beyond reasonable doubt.
From a criminological and legal standpoint, offences under POCSO reflect systematic exploitation rather than isolated misconduct. The accused’s actions demonstrate deliberate abuse of trust, authority, and opportunity. Modern judicial interpretation treats such offences as grave violations of human dignity and childhood itself, warranting strict punishment and limited judicial leniency.
The law, therefore, consciously prioritises child safety over the accused’s technical defences, recognising the long-term psychological and social damage inflicted upon victims.