Defence of ‘reasonably mistaking’ child’s age in sexual cases to be examined

High Court Reporters
The Supreme Court will consider the legal burden of proof placed on a defendant seeking to establish they were reasonably mistaken about the age of a child with whom they are accused of engaging in a sexual act.
The State is appealing a High Court decision that deemed a section of the 2006 Criminal Law (Sexual Offences) Act unconstitutional as it imposed more than an evidential burden of proof on an accused who wished to invoke a defence that they were reasonably mistaken in thinking the minor had attained 17-years-old.
The appellants will argue the High Court failed to have proper regard to the public interest in the protection of children, to the difficulties involved in prosecuting this particular offence and to the rights of the child.
Ms Justice Siobhán Stack ruled last June that it was not constitutionally permissible to place a legal burden to the civil law standard of “on the balance of probabilities” on an accused in a criminal trial rather than an evidential burden only.
If the accused was only required to meet an evidential burden, they would be acquitted if the jury had a reasonable doubt about the accused having mistaken the child’s age.
The disputed subsection of the 2006 Act, which was amended in 2017, permitted a jury to convict a person even if there was a reasonable doubt, or even a likely doubt, as to whether the accused had been reasonably mistaken about the age.
The judge held that it was necessary for the prosecution to prove the accused had a “guilty mind” regarding the age of the child.
The presumption of innocence is of such fundamental importance to the fairness of a trial that it cannot be subjected to “proportionate restriction” as contended by the State, which pointed to the public policy of protecting children, she said.










