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Should Watching Child Porn In Private Be A Criminal Offence? SC Judgment Monday

Shambhu Datta Mishra
Browse all articles by Shambhu Datta Mishra
·1 year ago·2 min read
Should Watching Child Porn In Private Be A Criminal Offence? SC Judgment Monday

Key Points

As per the causelist published on the website of the apex court, the judgment, authored by Justice JB Pardiwala, will be pronounced September 23

In March this year, CJI DY Chandrachud-led Bench issued a notice on a plea challenging the Madras High Court order which had held that downloading and possessing child pornography does not amount to any offence

The Madras High Court in its impugned judgment had quashed the FIR and criminal proceedings against a 28-year-old Chennai man, holding that watching child pornography in private would not fall within the scope of the POCSO Act

New Delhi, Sept 22: The Supreme Court will pronounce Monday its verdict on the question if watching child pornography in private should constitute an offence under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act. 

As per the causelist published on the website of the apex court, the judgment, authored by Justice JB Pardiwala, will be pronounced September 23.

In March this year, CJI DY Chandrachud-led Bench issued a notice on a plea challenging the Madras High Court order which had held that downloading and possessing child pornography does not amount to any offence.

The Madras High Court in its impugned judgment had quashed the FIR and criminal proceedings against a 28-year-old Chennai man, holding that watching child pornography in private would not fall within the scope of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act.

A bench of Justice N. Anand Venkatesh reasoned that the accused had merely downloaded the material and watched the pornography in privacy and it was neither published nor transmitted to others.

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"Since he has not used a child or children for pornographic purposes, at best, it can only be construed as a moral decay on the part of the accused person."

The Chennai police registered an FIR under Sections 67 B of the Information Technology Act and Section 14(1) of the POCSO Act after it seized the phone of the accused and discovered that he had downloaded and possessed child pornography.

In India, both the POCSO Act 2012 and the IT Act 2000, along with other laws, criminalise the creation, distribution, and possession of child pornography.

(IANS)

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