Swami Avimukteshwaranand gets bail: The Allahabad High Court (HC) on Wednesday granted anticipatory bail to Swami Avimukteshwaranand and his disciple Mukundanand Brahmachari in a case pertaining to the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, citing inconsistencies and legal grounds. Justice Jitendra Kumar Sinha delivered the order, who had earlier reserved judgement after hearing arguments from both sides. 




[caption id="attachment_1652" align="alignnone" width="1200"]Swami Avimukteshwaranand Swami Avimukteshwaranand[/caption]

Swami’s arrest had been stayed earlier


Earlier on February 27, 2026, the court had stayed the arrest of the seer, directing that he should not be taken into custody until the final verdict was delivered. During the proceedings, the applicants had been instructed to cooperate with the ongoing investigation. The case stems from a First Information Report (FIR) registered at a police station in Prayagraj, following directives from a POCSO Court. The complaint accused Swami and his disciple of sexually exploiting several female minor disciples, commonly referred to as ‘batuks.’ 



Court questions unusual conduct of victims


The bench, in its 22-page order, raised concerns over what it termed ‘unusual’ behaviour by the alleged victims. It noted that the minors reportedly confided in the first informant, Ashutosh Brahmachari, rather than their natural guardians. It further observed that the reasoning provided, that the informant was a regular visitor who showed reverence to the seer, did not align with typical human conduct. 



Swami Avimukteshwaranand gets bail: Presumption cannot be applied at pre-arrest stage, rules court


[caption id="attachment_1653" align="alignnone" width="1200"]Allahabad HC Allahabad HC[/caption]

The court then rejected the State’s contention invoking statutory presumption of guilt under Section 29 of the POCSO Act, clarifying that such presumption cannot apply at the pre-arrest stage before the charges are framed. Additionally, the HC junked objections regarding the maintainability of the anticipatory bail plea. It ruled that ‘special and extraordinary circumstances’ justified directly approaching the high court, given that the FIR was registered on directions of a Special POCSO Judge under provisions of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita. 



Court points out delay in reporting incident


Furthermore, the court pointed out a significant delay in reporting the alleged offences. While the victims were said to have informed the complainant on January 18, 2026, the police were apprised of the case only six days later, a gap the bench noted while assessing the case.


Also read: Goa nightclub inferno case: Court grants bail to co-owner Ajay Gupta amid ongoing probe
Man Climbs Electric Pole in Bhopal in Protest, Sparks Police Action
 Ukraine Launches Largest Drone Attack On Moscow In Two Years
Mumbai is facing a worsening water crisis. The City Has Just About A Month Left.
Cyber cheats dupe INOX Executive of Rs 10.4 cr by impersonating as company director; 4 held from Delhi
Delhi Records Highest Crime Among Indian Metros in 2024 Despite Drop
“MP Govt guided by spirit of Ram Rajya”: CM Dr Yadav at Balaji Dham’s consecration ceremony in Nagda
“Cyber crooks are parasites”: SC denies bail to cyber fraud accused, calls for tougher laws against digital offenders
Thieves Strip 33 KV Transformer in Berasia, Disrupt Water Supply and Cause Losses Worth Lakhs