The Delhi High Court allowed the appeal in part, modifying the Appellant’s conviction from Section 6 of the POCSO Act (aggravated penetrative sexual assault) to Section 4 of the POCSO Act (penetrative sexual assault), as the Prosecution failed to establish circumstances constituting an aggravated offence. Consequently, the Court reduced the Appellant’s sentence to the period of imprisonment already undergone (approximately nine years), while maintaining the original fines and compensation orders.
Factual Background
- The Incident: On 7th June 2017, the Prosecutrix (a minor aged 13/14 years) was sexually assaulted by the Appellant, who resided in the same premises. The victim informed her sister immediately, and the matter was reported to the police.
- Trial Court Verdict: The Trial Court convicted the Appellant under Section 376(2)(i) of the Indian Penal Code and Section 6 of the POCSO Act, sentencing him to life imprisonment and imposing fines/compensation.
Key Issues and Findings
- Age of the Prosecutrix: The Appellant challenged the victim’s age for the first time during the appeal. The High Court rejected this, noting that school records produced by PW-2 established her minor status, and this fact remained unchallenged throughout the trial.
- Scientific and Medical Evidence: The Appellant argued that the chain of custody for biological samples was broken and that the FSL report was unreliable. The Court rejected this, citing evidence from PW-11 and PW-15 confirming the seals remained intact and noting that the DNA profile from the Appellant’s clothing matched samples from the victim.
- Legal Modification: The Court observed that while the conviction for penetrative sexual assault was sound, the Prosecution provided no material to prove the incident fell under Section 5 of the POCSO Act (aggravated penetrative sexual assault). Therefore, the conviction under Section 6 was unsustainable and was modified to Section 4.
Final Order
- Sentence: Given the modification of the conviction, the Appellant’s sentence was reduced to the period already undergone.
- Financial Directions: The fines and the requirement to pay compensation to the Prosecutrix as ordered by the Trial Court remain in force.
- Release: The Appellant was ordered to be released forthwith, provided he is not required in any other case.
2026 DHC 5597
Sudhir @ Lukka v. State (NCT of Delhi) (D.O.J. 14.07.2026)




