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Prostitution Charges in Murrieta — the Law, the Consequences, and Your Defense

California's prostitution statutes criminalize both the act and the solicitation — and a conviction under Penal Code § 647(b) carries consequences that extend beyond the fine and the jail exposure. A second conviction within five years triggers mandatory jail time. Subsequent convictions escalate further. And in any case involving a minor, the charges shift into a completely different legal category with dramatically higher penalties. At the Law Office of Nic Cocis, we defend prostitution-related charges in Murrieta and throughout Southwest Riverside County, including cases arising from law enforcement sting operations and online solicitation investigations.

How California Prostitution Law Works

Penal Code § 647(b) — What It Covers

Section 647(b) makes it unlawful to engage in, agree to engage in, or solicit another person to engage in an act of prostitution. The statute covers three separate acts: the completed act, the agreement, and the solicitation. None of the three requires that money actually change hands — an agreement to exchange sex for something of value, without completion, is sufficient for a charge.

First offense:

misdemeanor, up to six months in county jail, fines, and informal probation. Mandatory AIDS education program under § 1001.2 Penal Code in many cases.

Second conviction within five years:

misdemeanor, but with a mandatory minimum of 45 days in county jail — not negotiable as community service.

Third or subsequent conviction within five years:

mandatory minimum of 90 days in county jail.

Within 1,000 feet of a school or in a vehicle with a minor present:

enhanced penalties apply.

Prostitution convictions do not require sex offender registration under § 290 in most circumstances — a distinction from other sex offense charges that is sometimes misunderstood. The exception is when the conduct involves a minor, which triggers the full weight of California's child sex offense statutes and mandatory registration.

Sting Operations and How They Work

A significant portion of prostitution arrests in California arise from law enforcement sting operations — both street-level and online. In online operations, officers post advertisements on platforms typically used for escort or adult services, communicate with defendants through text or phone, and arrange meetings that culminate in arrest. In street-level stings, undercover officers pose as either buyers or sellers and make contact with defendants in areas known for prostitution activity.

The entrapment defense — that law enforcement induced the defendant to commit an offense they would not otherwise have committed — applies to sting cases but is difficult to establish. California's entrapment standard asks whether the government's conduct would have induced a normally law-abiding person to commit the offense. The defense requires more than showing that an officer offered the opportunity; it requires showing the officer used undue pressure, coercion, or persuasion that overcame the defendant's resistance.

More commonly, sting-related defenses focus on the specific elements of the charge: whether the communication constituted a solicitation under the statute, whether the defendant's understanding of the proposed arrangement actually matched the prosecution's characterization, and whether the evidence establishes the requisite intent.

How We Can Help

The defense in a § 647(b) case depends on the specific facts — the communication record in an online case, the officer's account in a street-level arrest, and whether the elements of agreement or solicitation are actually established by the evidence.

Examining the specific communications or conduct alleged to constitute solicitation
Evaluating entrapment claims in sting operation cases
Challenging the sufficiency of the solicitation evidence
Pursuing diversion under Penal Code § 1001.2 where available
Addressing immigration consequences for non-citizen clients
Advising on the mandatory minimums for second and subsequent offenses

What to Expect When You Work with Us

01

Communication and Evidence Review

In online cases, we examine the full communication record between the defendant and the investigating officer — not just the excerpts the prosecution plans to use. Context matters, and ambiguous communications can be characterized in ways that don't establish the elements of solicitation.

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02

Diversion Evaluation

Penal Code § 1001.2 provides a diversion pathway for certain prostitution offenses — completion of an education and treatment program in lieu of prosecution. Eligibility varies by court and circumstances, but diversion that avoids a conviction entirely is always the first option we evaluate.

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03

Immigration Impact Assessment

A § 647(b) conviction is a crime involving moral turpitude under federal immigration law for non-citizen clients, with potential deportability consequences. We assess immigration exposure in every prostitution case involving a non-citizen and advise on plea options that minimize that risk.

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Why Choose the Law Office of Nic Cocis?

Sting Operation Experience

Has defended prostitution cases arising from both street-level and online sting operations

Immigration Consequence Awareness

Evaluates deportability exposure in every applicable case

Diversion-First Approach

Pursues non-conviction outcomes before any plea recommendation

Multilingual Services

English, Romanian, and Spanish available

Frequently Asked Questions

The solicitation element of § 647(b) doesn't require an explicit agreement — courts have found that implicit communication about an exchange of sex for money, without stating it directly, can satisfy the statute. But the ambiguity of the communication is a real defense. If the conversation was genuinely ambiguous, if no specific terms were discussed, or if the defendant's intent wasn't clearly to arrange a prostitution transaction, the solicitation element may not be established. We examine the full communication record in every sting case.

Generally no — a standard § 647(b) conviction does not trigger § 290 registration. This is a meaningful distinction from many other sex-related charges. The exception is when a minor is involved, which changes the charge and triggers mandatory registration. We confirm the registration status of any charge before any plea is entered.

A § 647(b) conviction is generally considered a crime involving moral turpitude (CIMT) under federal immigration law, which can affect visa eligibility, green card applications, naturalization, and in some cases trigger deportability. The immigration consequences of a prostitution conviction are a serious concern for non-citizen clients, and we factor them into every case evaluation. In some situations, the criminal charge can be resolved in a way that avoids a formal conviction — through diversion or dismissal — which eliminates the immigration consequence.

Facing Prostitution Charges in Murrieta?

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.

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