Important: This content reflects Queensland law as of August 20, 2025, and is not legal advice. Always consult a qualified Queensland criminal lawyer promptly.
False accusations of sexual assault can have devastating effects on individuals, families, and communities. In Queensland, Australia, such allegations are taken very seriously, given their potential to harm innocent lives.
The legal framework surrounding sexual assault is designed to protect victims and ensure justice; however, it also provides avenues for those falsely accused to defend themselves.
This article explores the nature of false accusations, their implications, and the legal defenses available in Queensland.
1. What the Prosecution Must Prove
Sexual-offence charges in Queensland are primarily outlined in the Criminal Code Act 1899 (Qld):
- Rape (s 349) – Non-consensual penetration; penalty up to life imprisonment.
- Attempted rape (s 350) and assault with intent to commit rape (s 351) – Related serious offences.
- Sexual assault (s 352) – Includes indecent assault or causing someone to witness gross indecency; maximum penalty of 10 years.
Key legal concepts:
- Consent (s 348) – Must be “free and voluntary.” Absence of resistance doesn’t equal consent, and it can be withdrawn anytime.
- No-consent circumstances (s 348AA) – Lists contexts (e.g., intoxication, unconsciousness, condom tampering) that negate consent outright. Applies only to offences committed after 23 September 2024 (see transitional provision s 761).
2. Proven Defense Strategies (and Supporting Laws)
Honest and Reasonable Mistake of Fact About Consent
Mistake of Fact (s 24) – Exonerates if the accused held an honest and reasonable belief in a plausible scenario, including consent.
- The Queensland Courts Benchbook provides jury-direction guidance, especially for sexual-offence cases involving the newer consent regime (post-23 Sep 2024).
Consent Proven or Reasonable Doubt
Challenge the Crown’s proof on consent elements under s 348 and (for relevant cases) s 348AA. Use digital communications or video evidence to contest claims of incapacity or non-consent.
Alibi
A credible alibi can be decisive—but you must issue it in time as per s 590A. Judges emphasise that late notices undermine fairness.
Forensic and Scientific Challenges
- Under s 590AB and the “always-disclose” list in s 590AH, the prosecution must share all relevant evidence—like forensic and witness materials.
- If your defense relies on expert testimony (e.g., DNA analysis or memory reliability), you must give early notice under s 590B and, for consent-related experts, s 590BA.
Identification and Reliability Attacks
- Cross-examine how a complainant observed the accused, identify any social media cross-contamination, and scrutinise inconsistencies between initial accounts and later statements.
- Hearsay admissibility for children or unavailable witnesses falls under the Evidence Act:
- s 93A – Admits recorded statements from children/persons with impairments.
- s 93B – Applies to unavailable witnesses in criminal proceedings.
Excluding Unfairly Prejudicial Evidence
Use s 590AA to pre-try and exclude hearsay, similar fact evidence, or other prejudicial material. Courts actively manage these rulings pre-trial.
Right to Silence & Police Interviews
The Police Powers and Responsibilities Act 2000 (Qld), s 397, mandates cautioning and preserves your right to silence. Remaining silent cannot be held against you.
Challenging Sexual-History or Tendency Evidence
Queensland strictly curtails sexual-history cross-examination—defence must apply under Evidence Act s 103ZH with specificity and relevance.
3. The “False Accusation” Dimension: Additional Legal Offences
Knowingly false allegations can themselves be criminal offences:
- Attempt to pervert the course of justice (s 140) – Applied to actions knowingly intended to mislead a legal process.
- False declarations (s 194) – Makes knowingly false statutory declarations criminal.
Note: Prosecuting the complainant is rare and usually only pursued once your criminal case concludes—and only with strong evidence.
4. How Consent Law Reforms (Post–23 September 2024) Affect Defenses
Queensland’s Criminal Law (Coercive Control and Affirmative Consent) and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2024 introduced substantial changes:
- Expanded “no-consent” list (s 348AA), including condom tampering (stealthing) and scenarios of silence or incapacitation.
- New mandatory jury directions under Evidence Act Part 6B and s 103ZX, guiding juries to consider consent-twists, delays, inconsistencies, and mistake-of-fact scenarios.
- Transitional rules limit application to offences committed after 23 September 2024—older cases stick with the previous regime (see s 761).
Defense Strategy: Document the exact timing of alleged incidents and adopt the applicable consent rules and jury-direction templates accordingly.
5. Queensland-Specific Defense Checklist
- Immediately: Invoke your right to silence; secure your digital and physical evidence.
- Demand full disclosure under s 590AB / s 590AH.
- Lodge pre-trial motions via s 590AA to tackle admissibility issues early.
- Serve required notices:
- s 590A (alibi)
- s 590B / s 590BA (expert evidence)
- Develop a robust consent or mistake-of-fact theory, customised to pre- or post-September 2024 law.
- Examine every witness account and use inconsistencies to challenge reliability.
- If warranted (after acquittal), explore remedies related to false allegations (e.g., s 140, s 194).
6. Courtroom Realities to Anticipate
- Strict bans on sexual-history evidence (s 103ZH) require strategic, narrow applications.
- Expect strong case-management by the court—especially through s 590AA procedures.
- Judges will usually follow updated Benchbook jury directions around consent, mistakes, and inconsistencies in post-reform cases.
7. Key Statutes & Resources
- Criminal Code (Qld): sections 24, 348, 348AA, 349, 352, 350, 351, 590A, 590B, 590BA, 590AA, 590AB, 590AH, 140, 194.
- Evidence Act (Qld): sections 93A, 93B, 103ZH, Part 6B, 103ZX.
- Police Powers and Responsibilities Act (Qld): section 397.
- Queensland Courts Benchbook: chapters on sexual offences, mistake of fact, consent, and jury directions.
In Summary
In Queensland, overcoming false accusations involves a layered approach:
- Use statutory disclosure rights and pre-trial tools.
- Serve statutory notices on alibis and expert witnesses.
- Build a defense tailored to the specific consent regime that applies.
- Rigorously test the credibility of evidence and witnesses.
- Understand false-accusation-related offences—but proceed cautiously and often only after your own matter concludes.