New York Sex Crimes Defense
New York Rape in the Third Degree Lawyer
Rape in the third degree is a New York felony that can involve incapacity to consent, age-based allegations, or lack of consent under the amended Article 130 framework.
What Is Rape in the Third Degree in New York?
Rape in the third degree is a New York felony that can involve incapacity to consent, age-based allegations, or lack of consent under the amended Article 130 framework.
These cases require careful, fact-specific defense work. The same allegation can involve criminal court, grand jury practice, orders of protection, SORA exposure, immigration concerns, professional licensing problems, school discipline, Title IX issues, and intense reputational harm.
Current Article 130 Note
New York amended Article 130 effective September 1, 2024. The current rape statutes now cover vaginal, oral, and anal sexual contact theories. Older allegations may involve pre-amendment statutes, so the alleged date and charging language must be reviewed carefully.
Elements Prosecutors Must Prove
For rape in the third degree, prosecutors generally must prove one of the statutory theories in Penal Law 130.25:
- Vaginal, oral, or anal sexual contact with a person incapable of consent for a reason other than being under seventeen.
- A person twenty-one or older engaging in vaginal, oral, or anal sexual contact with a person less than seventeen.
- Vaginal, oral, or anal sexual contact without consent where the lack of consent is based on a factor other than incapacity to consent.
- Identity, jurisdiction, timing, and the required lack-of-consent or age-based theory.
Statutory Theories and Subsections
Penal Law 130.25 now includes vaginal sexual contact, oral sexual contact, and anal sexual contact theories. The exact subdivision matters because age, incapacity, and lack-of-consent theories raise different proof and defense issues.
Example
A non-graphic example is an allegation that two people had contact after a social encounter and prosecutors claim lack of consent based on the totality of the circumstances. The defense would examine communications, witness context, intoxication evidence, surveillance, timeline issues, and whether the charged statutory theory can be proven.
Potential Sentencing and Consequences
Rape in the third degree is a class E felony. New York felony sentencing law generally permits a class E felony sentence of up to four years, with sex-offense registration, immigration, licensing, employment, education, and reputation consequences also requiring early attention.
Sex offense cases can also involve SORA risk, professional consequences, school or university discipline, immigration exposure, family impact, digital-device searches, online evidence, and long-term reputational damage.
Potential Defenses
Proof and Evidence Defenses
- The prosecution cannot prove the exact contact theory charged.
- Age, capacity, or lack-of-consent evidence does not support the charged degree.
- Communications, surveillance, location data, or witness context undermine the allegation.
- Forensic, DNA, medical, or toxicology evidence is incomplete, overstated, or inconsistent.
Procedure and Strategy Defenses
- Statements, identifications, device searches, or seized evidence may be suppressible.
- The case may be overcharged under the wrong statutory theory.
- Grand jury advocacy may prevent or narrow felony charges.
- Expert review may be needed for medical, forensic, digital, or intoxication evidence.
Related Sex Offense and Defense Pages
Sex offense allegations often overlap with other Article 130, Article 263, Title IX, and broader criminal-defense issues.
How Lebedin Kofman LLP Approaches Rape in the Third Degree Cases
Lebedin Kofman LLP focuses on early factual development, careful review of the charged subdivision, preservation of communications and video, forensic and medical review where appropriate, and strategic communication with prosecutors when it may help the client.
Depending on the facts, the defense may involve immediate intervention, grand jury advocacy, suppression motions, expert consultation, mitigation work, negotiation, or trial preparation from the outset.
See our representative cases and media coverage and client reviews for additional context about the firm’s work. Every case is different, and past outcomes do not guarantee a similar result.
Talk to a New York Sex Crimes Defense Lawyer About rape in the third degree
Sex offense allegations can affect bail, orders of protection, SORA registration, immigration, employment, licensing, education, family relationships, and reputation. Early defense work can preserve communications, identify witnesses, evaluate forensic issues, and shape the case before assumptions harden.
Lebedin Kofman LLP represents clients in New York City, Nassau County, Suffolk County, and federal matters around the United States. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.
Rape in the Third Degree FAQ
Is rape in the third degree a felony in New York?
Rape in the Third Degree is class e felony under Penal Law 130.25. The potential sentence, registration consequences, and collateral exposure depend on the facts, the subdivision charged, criminal history, and defense strategy.
What changed in New York Article 130 in 2024?
Effective September 1, 2024, New York updated Article 130 terminology and folded former criminal-sexual-act concepts into the rape statutes. That makes it important to identify the alleged date and the exact statutory theory charged.
What defenses may apply to rape in the third degree?
Potential defenses may involve consent or lack-of-consent proof, age or capacity evidence, identity, timing, forensic testing, medical proof, digital communications, witness reliability, suppression issues, and whether the charged degree matches the evidence.
Why People Call Lebedin Kofman LLP
When a criminal allegation, DWI arrest, federal investigation, Title IX matter, or high-stakes accusation can affect your freedom, license, job, education, immigration status, or reputation, you should be able to speak with a defense lawyer quickly and get a clear plan.
- Speak with a lawyer about an arrest, investigation, court date, order of protection, license consequence, or federal exposure.
- Get early guidance before speaking with police, prosecutors, school investigators, insurers, agencies, or employers.
- Review defense options including dismissal, reduction, suppression issues, trial posture, negotiation strategy, and collateral consequences.