Lewd or Lascivious Battery in Florida

Lewd or Lascivious Battery criminalizes consensual sexual intercourse with a child.

-- Richard Hornsby

Lewd or Lascivious Battery, which is more commonly known as statutory rape, criminalizes consensual sexual intercourse with a child older than 12, but younger than 16.

If accused of Lewd or Lascivious Battery, you want to know the:

Definition of Lewd or Lascivious Battery

In Florida, the crime of Lewd or Lascivious Battery 1 is defined as:

  • Sexual activity with a child older than 12, but younger than 16;
  • OR
  • Encouraging, forcing, or enticing a child older than 12, but younger than 16 to engage in:
    • Sadomasochistic Abuse,
    • Sexual Bestiality,
    • Prostitution, or
    • Any other act involving sexual activity.

Penalties for Lewd or Lascivious Battery

Lewd and Lascivious Battery is a felony of the second degree and is classified as a level 8 offense under Florida's sentencing guidelines.

As a result, a first time offender charged with Lewd and Lascivious Battery would be facing:

  • A maximum sentence of fifteen (15) years in prison, and
  • A minimum sentence sentence of seven and one-half (7½) years in prison.

Mitigating Circumstances

Under certain circumstances, the court can deviate from the minimum prison sentence required under Florida's sentencing guidelines if it can be shown:

  • The child was an initiator, willing participant, aggressor, or provoker of the incident;
  • The defendant requires specialized treatment for a mental disorder (unrelated to substance abuse or addiction) and is amenable to treatment; or
  • The defendant is to be sentenced as a youthful offender before the defendant's 21st birthday.

Civil Consequences

Additionally, if a person is convicted of Lewd or Lascivious Battery, they would be declared a sexual offender and would be forced to comply with sexual offender registration laws throughout Florida and the United States.

Defenses to Lewd or Lascivious Battery

Since both "consent" and "ignorance of the child's age" are prohibited defenses, evidence of false allegations remains the primary affirmative defense to charges of Lewd and Lascivious Battery.

Typical reasons for false allegations include:

  • Jealousy,
  • Manipulation of children by an angry parent,
  • Mental illness of the accuser, or
  • Mentally ill parents influencing a child.

As a result, it is critically important to investigate the accuser and expose any motive that may exist for making a false accusation of Lewd or Lascivious Battery.

Prohibited Defenses to Lewd or Lascivious Battery

Lewd or Lascivious Battery is a strict liability crime - meaning the intent to commit the crime is irrelevant to a determination of guilt.

The reason for holding people strictly liable for their acts is to counteract the common arguments that:

  • The child's real age was unknown, thus they did not intentionally have sex with a child - a defense that allowed people to engage in willful blindness; or
  • That the child consented to the sexual act - thus putting the responsibility to decline the sexual advance on the young child.

As a result, the Florida legislature enacted statutes prohibiting such defenses - thus the sexual act with a child was all that had to be proven.

As a result, the following defenses are statutorily prohibited from being raised at trial:

  1. Consent,
  2. Ignorance of the child's age, and
  3. Proximity in Age.

Instead, such evidence can only be presented as mitigating circumstance in sentencing.

Consent by the child to the sexual act is a statutorily prohibited defense - meaning it cannot even be argued at trial.

Prohibited Defense: Ignorance of Age

Ignorance of the child's age is also a statutorily prohibited defense - meaning it cannot be presented through the defendant at trial.

This means a defendant could not testify that:

  • The child lied about his or her age
    or
  • There was a bona fide belief the child was old enough to consent.

With that said, if it is being argued that the sexual allegation is false; a defendant could elicit testimony that the accuser lied about his or her age - as it goes to the accuser's credibility.

Prohibited Defense: Proximity in Age

A reoccurring problem in Lewd and Lascivious Battery cases is when the accused is also under the age of 16; as the law does not provide for any defense when the participants are close in age.

Example: If a 12 year-old were to have sex with a 14 year-old, either child or both could be prosecuted for the offense.

Instead, proximity in age can only be used as a mitigating circumstance to seek a downward departure from Florida's sentencing guidelines.

Contact Orlando Criminal Defense Attorney

Please contact Sex Crimes Defense Attorney Richard Hornsby immediately if you or a loved one have been charged with Lewd or Lascivious Battery or statutory rape.

I am available any time to advise you of the proper course of action to take. The initial consultation is free and I will respond promptly to provide you with the criminal defense you deserve.

Richard Hornsby Richard Hornsby, Criminal Defense Lawyer | 401 N. Mills Avenue, Suite D, Orlando, FL 32803
For more information, call Work407-540-1551 or visit www.richardhornsby.com