## Correct Answer: B. Consent is invalid as the girl is under 18 years Under the Indian Penal Code (IPC) Section 375, sexual intercourse with a girl under 18 years of age is **statutory rape**, regardless of consent. The law presumes that a minor cannot give valid legal consent due to developmental immaturity and vulnerability to exploitation. The presence or absence of injuries is irrelevant to the legal determination of rape in this case. The girl's subjective statement that the act was consensual does not override the statutory protection afforded to minors. Section 375 IPC explicitly states that penetrative sexual assault on a woman under 18 years constitutes rape, even if she claims consent. The boy's age (23) is immaterial; he is criminally liable for sexual intercourse with a minor. This is a strict liability offense in Indian law—the prosecution need not prove non-consent or force; the age of the victim alone establishes the offense. The Indian judiciary consistently upholds this principle to protect minors from sexual exploitation, recognizing that children and adolescents lack the maturity to give informed consent to sexual acts with adults. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. No punishment since there are no injuries** — This is wrong because statutory rape under IPC Section 375 does not require physical injuries. The law protects minors from sexual exploitation based on age alone, not on the presence of force or bodily harm. Absence of injuries is irrelevant to the legal determination of rape in a minor. This option reflects a dangerous misconception that rape requires visible trauma—a common NBE trap. **C. Parents must prove that the act was non-consensual** — This is wrong because in statutory rape cases, the burden of proof shifts. The prosecution need not prove non-consent or force; the victim's age (under 18) is sufficient to establish the offense. The parents or prosecution do not need to prove lack of consent—the law presumes a minor cannot consent. This reverses the legal burden and misunderstands the strict liability nature of statutory rape. **D. No punishment since the act was consensual** — This is wrong because a minor's consent is legally invalid under IPC Section 375. The law does not recognize a minor's subjective agreement to sexual acts as valid consent. This option conflates factual consent (what the girl said) with legal consent (what the law permits). The entire purpose of statutory rape law is to protect minors from their own perceived consent, which the law deems unreliable due to developmental immaturity. ## High-Yield Facts - **IPC Section 375**: Sexual intercourse with a girl under 18 years is rape, regardless of consent or injuries. - **Statutory rape is strict liability**—prosecution need not prove non-consent or force; age of victim alone establishes the offense. - **Consent of a minor is legally invalid**—the law presumes minors lack capacity to give informed consent to sexual acts. - **Absence of injuries does not negate rape**—statutory rape is defined by age and penetration, not by presence of trauma. - **Age of perpetrator is irrelevant**—any person (adult or near-adult) who has sexual intercourse with a girl under 18 is liable under Section 375. ## Mnemonics **MINOR CANNOT CONSENT (Legal Principle)** **M**inor's consent = **Invalid** | **I**njuries = **Irrelevant** | **N**on-consent = **Not required to prove** | **O**ffense = **Strict liability** | **R**ape = **Regardless of age of perpetrator**. Use this when any question involves sexual contact with a minor—consent and injuries are red herrings. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "no injuries" and "consensual statement" to lure students into thinking statutory rape requires force or visible trauma. The trap is conflating factual consent (what the girl said) with legal consent (what the law permits)—a critical distinction in Indian rape law. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian medicolegal practice, the examining physician must document that a girl under 18 years cannot give valid consent, even if she claims the act was consensual. This documentation is crucial for the prosecution's case and protects the minor from further exploitation. The absence of genital injuries does not exonerate the accused in statutory rape cases. _Reference: IPC Section 375; Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine (Forensic Medicine chapter); Parikh's Textbook of Medical Jurisprudence and Toxicology_
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