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Sex Offenses

A sex crime accusation changes everything before a single charge is filed. Careers end. Families fracture. Reputations are damaged by the allegation alone. And if a conviction follows, the consequences extend far beyond prison time — California’s sex offender registration requirements can impose lifelong restrictions on where you live, work, and travel. At the Law Office of Nic Cocis, we defend individuals facing sex offense charges in Murrieta and throughout Southwest Riverside County with the seriousness these cases demand. Nic Cocis has handled sex crime cases — from misdemeanor indecent exposure to felony charges — since 1999, and his background inside a prosecutor’s office shapes how he builds every defense.

How California Sex Crime Law Works

The Range of Charges and What They Mean

California’s sex offense statutes cover a wide spectrum of conduct, and the distinction between charges matters enormously for what a defendant is actually facing — both in terms of criminal exposure and the registration consequences that follow.

Sexual battery under Penal Code § 243.4 involves non-consensual touching of an intimate part for sexual gratification, arousal, or abuse. As a misdemeanor, it carries up to six months in county jail. As a felony — which applies when the victim is unlawfully restrained, institutionalized, or otherwise unable to consent — it carries two, three, or four years in state prison and mandatory sex offender registration. The line between misdemeanor and felony depends on specific factual circumstances that are always contested.

Rape under Penal Code § 261 encompasses sexual intercourse accomplished by force, fear, fraud, or incapacity. It’s a felony carrying three, six, or eight years in state prison, with enhancements for prior convictions and aggravating circumstances. Charges involving minors escalate dramatically — lewd acts with a child under 14 under § 288 carry three, six, or eight years for a first offense, and consecutive sentencing is common when multiple counts are charged.

Child pornography offenses under Penal Code § 311 and related federal statutes carry some of the most severe penalties in the criminal code, including mandatory federal minimum sentences that leave courts with limited discretion. Any case with a federal dimension — particularly those involving internet communications, device searches by federal agencies, or allegations crossing state lines — requires immediate and specialized attention.

Sex Offender Registration: What Tier Means in Practice

California’s Sex Offender Registration Act, revised under Senate Bill 384 effective January 1, 2021, established a three-tier registration system under Penal Code § 290.

Tier 1 registrants — typically those convicted of lower-level offenses — must register for a minimum of ten years. Tier 2 covers mid-range offenses, with a minimum registration period of twenty years. Tier 3 — reserved for the most serious offenses — requires lifetime registration. The tier designation is determined by the specific conviction, not by a court’s discretion in most cases.

Registration imposes ongoing obligations: annual registration at the local law enforcement agency, registration within five working days of changing address, and compliance with residency restrictions in many jurisdictions. Failing to register under § 290 is itself a crime — a misdemeanor or felony depending on the underlying offense. The practical restrictions on where a registrant can live, work, and spend time are substantial, which makes the specific charge, and the possibility of reducing it, critically important from the start.

How We Can Help with Sex Crime Charges

The defense in a sex crime case is built on evidence, credibility, and timing. Early investigation matters. Witnesses’ memories fade. Digital evidence can be preserved or lost. Physical evidence has a chain of custody that must be examined. Nic Cocis begins every sex crime defense by moving quickly to understand the facts before the prosecution’s narrative solidifies.

Our sex offense defense services include:

Investigating the facts and circumstances of the alleged offense independently of the prosecution
Challenging the credibility and consistency of accuser statements
Examining digital evidence, communications, and forensic reports
Contesting consent as a defense where legally applicable
Challenging the admissibility of evidence obtained through unlawful searches or seizures
Evaluating plea options that minimize or avoid registration requirements where possible
Defending against federal charges in cases with an internet or interstate dimension

Why Early Defense Action Matters

In sex crime cases, law enforcement often continues building its case after an arrest. Detectives conduct follow-up interviews. Digital forensics are analyzed. Accusers may be interviewed multiple times, and inconsistencies between early and later statements can be critical for the defense — but only if they’re identified and preserved. We move quickly to document what exists, identify what the prosecution intends to use, and find the weaknesses before the case gets to court.

What to Expect When You Work with Us

01

 Immediate Consultation and Strategy

If you’ve been arrested or are under investigation for a sex offense, the time to act is now — not after charges are formally filed. We assess the situation, advise you on what not to say to investigators, and begin independent fact-gathering from the first call.

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02

Evidence Review and Investigation

We examine police reports, forensic evidence, digital records, and the accuser’s statement history. Inconsistencies in how a story has been told over time — to family members, to police, across multiple interviews — are among the most powerful tools in a sex crime defense.

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03

Legal Motions and Suppression

If the investigation involved unlawful searches of your devices, home, or communications, we file motions to suppress that evidence. Evidence obtained without a valid warrant or in violation of your Fourth Amendment rights doesn’t belong in court.

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04

Negotiation or Trial

Some sex crime cases resolve through negotiation — sometimes to a charge that does not trigger registration. Others require trial. In either scenario, you need an attorney who has handled these cases before and knows exactly how the prosecution presents them to juries.

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Facing Sex Crime Charges in Murrieta or the Surrounding Area?

The stakes in a sex crime case — criminal, professional, and personal — are among the highest in the legal system. Contact the Law Office of Nic Cocis for a confidential consultation. We serve clients in Murrieta, Temecula, Menifee, Lake Elsinore, Wildomar, Winchester, Canyon Lake, French Valley, and throughout Southwest Riverside County.

Why Choose the Law Office of Nic Cocis?

Former DA’s Office Intern

Knows how sex crime prosecutions are built — and where they’re vulnerable

Over 25 Years of Criminal Defense

Extensive experience with the full range of sex offense charges

Southwest Justice Center Experience:

Familiar with local prosecutors and judicial standards

Multilingual Services

English, Romanian, and Spanish available

Frequently Asked Questions

Contact an attorney immediately — before you speak to investigators again. Police interviews of suspects in sex crime cases are not neutral information-gathering exercises. They are evidence-building sessions, and anything you say can be used against you. The fact that you haven’t been charged yet doesn’t mean you can talk your way out of the situation. It usually means the opposite. We advise clients under investigation on exactly what to say, what not to say, and how to handle contact from law enforcement.

Yes, in cases where consent is legally cognizable. Adult complainants who freely and voluntarily agreed to sexual contact present a genuine consent defense. However, consent is not available as a defense when the alleged victim is under the age of consent in California (18 for most purposes), when the victim was unconscious or incapacitated, or when the victim was institutionalized or otherwise legally incapable of consenting. Where consent is a viable defense, we build the record — communications, prior relationship history, and witness accounts — that supports it.

No. Registration is a consequence of conviction, not arrest or charge. An acquittal at trial means no registration obligation. A dismissal — whether through motion practice, lack of evidence, or a diversion program — also avoids registration. This is why the outcome of the case itself matters so much, and why plea agreements must be evaluated carefully for their registration consequences. Some plea arrangements resolve the criminal charge but still trigger registration. We examine every option with registration exposure squarely in view.

California has extended or eliminated statutes of limitations for many sex offenses, particularly those involving minors. As of January 1, 2017, most felony sex offenses against minors have no statute of limitations — meaning charges can be filed at any point after the alleged offense. For adults, the limitation period varies by offense but has also been extended in recent years. The fact that an alleged offense occurred years ago does not mean prosecution is time-barred, and we evaluate any limitations argument early in every case where timing is a factor.

Cases involving alleged offenses against family members, students, patients, or others in a position of trust or authority carry enhanced exposure under California law. Penal Code § 288.7, covering sexual acts with a child under 10, carries a mandatory minimum of 25 years to life. Positions of trust are also relevant to bail conditions, to how the prosecution presents the case to a jury, and to sentencing if conviction occurs. These cases require experienced, serious representation from the beginning.

Areas We Serve

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