Legacy Article 130 Sex Offense Defense
New York Criminal Sexual Act in the Third Degree Lawyer
This page addresses the former New York Criminal Sexual Act in the Third Degree statute for pre-September 1, 2024 allegations. New York amended Article 130 in 2024, so current-law allegations may now be charged under the rape statutes.
Important 2024 Article 130 Update
Effective September 1, 2024, New York changed Article 130 terminology and repealed the separate criminal-sexual-act statutes. Similar current-law allegations may now be prosecuted under amended rape statutes. If the allegation involves conduct before September 1, 2024, the former criminal-sexual-act statute may still be central to the case.
For current-law allegations, review the current rape in the third degree page.
What Was Criminal Sexual Act in the Third Degree in New York?
Before the September 1, 2024 Article 130 amendments, criminal sexual act in the third degree generally involved oral or anal sexual conduct under theories involving incapacity to consent, an age-based allegation, or lack of consent under the totality of circumstances.
The first defense question is often not just what prosecutors allege, but when the conduct allegedly occurred. That date can affect the statutory language, jury instructions, legal elements, plea posture, and how the defense should explain the case.
Elements Prosecutors Had to Prove Under the Former Statute
For the former Criminal Sexual Act in the Third Degree charge, prosecutors generally had to prove:
- An alleged act of oral or anal sexual conduct under the former statute.
- One of the former statutory theories, such as incapacity to consent, age-based contact, or lack of consent under the totality of circumstances.
- Identity, timing, jurisdiction, and the specific statutory subdivision charged.
- Whether the alleged conduct date places the case under pre-amendment law or current Article 130 law.
Example
A non-graphic example is an allegation from before September 1, 2024 where prosecutors claim oral or anal conduct occurred without legally sufficient consent. The defense would examine the alleged date, communications, witness context, capacity issues, digital evidence, and whether the former statutory theory can be proven.
Potential Sentencing and Consequences
Under the former statute, criminal sexual act in the third degree was generally treated as a class E felony. New York class E felony sentencing can involve up to four years in prison, and these cases may also carry SORA, immigration, employment, licensing, education, and reputational consequences.
Because these allegations can involve SORA registration, immigration consequences, career and licensing issues, school or university discipline, family consequences, and long-term reputational harm, early defense work is especially important.
Potential Defenses
Legal and Proof Issues
- The alleged conduct date may place the case under a different version of Article 130.
- The prosecution may not be able to prove the former statutory subdivision charged.
- Age, capacity, consent, or lack-of-consent evidence may be disputed.
- Forensic, medical, digital, or location evidence may not support the prosecution theory.
Procedure and Strategy Issues
- Statements, device searches, identifications, or seized evidence may be suppressible.
- Grand jury advocacy may narrow or prevent charges.
- Expert review may be needed for forensic, medical, digital, or intoxication evidence.
- The case may require coordination with Title IX, licensing, immigration, or employment concerns.
Related Current and Legacy Sex Offense Pages
Because the Article 130 law changed, the best related page depends on the date and theory of the allegation.
How Lebedin Kofman LLP Approaches Criminal Sexual Act in the Third Degree Cases
Lebedin Kofman LLP starts by identifying the alleged conduct date, the statute charged, the exact subdivision, and the current or former law that applies. The defense then focuses on preservation of evidence, communications, forensic and medical review, witness context, suppression issues, and collateral consequences.
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 criminal sexual act in the third degree
Sex offense allegations require fast, careful defense work. The alleged date, exact statutory language, available communications, forensic evidence, police procedure, SORA risk, and collateral consequences can all affect the strategy.
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.
Criminal Sexual Act in the Third Degree FAQ
Is criminal sexual act in the third degree still a current New York charge?
For conduct on or after September 1, 2024, New York amended Article 130 and folded former criminal-sexual-act concepts into the rape statutes. For older alleged conduct, the former Criminal Sexual Act in the Third Degree statute may still matter, so the alleged date must be reviewed carefully.
What is the current-law page related to criminal sexual act in the third degree?
For current-law allegations involving similar conduct, see the current rape in the third degree page. The correct page and strategy depend on the alleged conduct date and charging language.
What defenses may apply to criminal sexual act in the third degree?
Potential defenses may involve the alleged date, statutory theory, consent or incapacity evidence, age or capacity proof, identity, timing, forensic evidence, medical proof, communications, witness reliability, suppression issues, and whether the charged degree matches the facts.
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.