
Unlawful Intercourse With a Minor in California — What the Charge Means and How It's Defended
Penal Code § 261.5 — commonly called statutory rape — is unique among California sex offenses in one important respect: consent is not a defense. A minor under 18 cannot legally consent to sexual intercourse under California law, regardless of their expressed willingness. The charge is based entirely on age, and a defendant's belief that the minor was older — even a reasonable, good-faith belief — is not a complete defense under California's current framework. At the Law Office of Nic Cocis, we defend § 261.5 charges in Murrieta and Southwest Riverside County with a clear-eyed analysis of what the statute requires and where the defense actually lives.
How California Charges Unlawful Intercourse With a Minor
The Age Gap Determines the Charge Level
Section 261.5 makes it unlawful for any person to engage in sexual intercourse with a person under 18 who is not the spouse of the defendant. Unlike most California sex offenses, § 261.5 is not a registration offense — a conviction does not automatically trigger sex offender registration under § 290. That distinction matters significantly in evaluating the consequences of a charge.
The specific charge and penalty depend on the age difference between the parties:
Both parties are minors, or the age difference is less than three years: § 261.5(b) — misdemeanor only. This is the provision that applies when a 17-year-old and a 15-year-old are involved, for example. No felony exposure.
The defendant is 21 or older and the minor is under 16: § 261.5(d) — straight felony. Two, three, or four years in state prison. This is the most serious state-only configuration under the statute.
The age difference is more than three years (and neither party is under 16): § 261.5(c) — wobbler. Chargeable as a misdemeanor or a felony. Up to one year in county jail as a misdemeanor; 16 months, two, or three years in state prison as a felony.
Civil penalties also apply under § 261.5(e): up to $2,000 if the minor is under 16 and the adult is 21 or older; up to $25,000 if the minor is under 16 and the defendant is 21 or older and the relationship is more than three years. These are civil assessments, not criminal fines, but they’re part of the overall consequence picture.
The Age Mistake Question
California courts have held that a reasonable, good-faith mistake about the minor's age is not a complete defense to § 261.5 in most circumstances — a position that differs from some other states. The California Supreme Court's analysis in People v. Hernandez (1964) allowed the mistake-of-age defense in some circumstances, but subsequent case law has narrowed it. Whether mistake of age remains viable depends on the specific facts, the age gap, and the circumstances of the parties' meeting and communication. We assess the mistake-of-age argument in every case where the facts potentially support it.
How We Can Help
The defense in a § 261.5 case focuses on the age gap determination, the specific charge level, the evidence of the sexual act, and — where relevant — the circumstances surrounding the parties' relationship.
Contesting the prosecution’s evidence of age and the age gap calculation
Evaluating the mistake-of-age defense where the facts support it
Pursuing misdemeanor treatment for wobbler charges
Addressing civil penalty exposure alongside the criminal charge
Evaluating immigration consequences for non-citizen clients
Pursuing diversion where available for first-time offenders
What to Expect When You Work with Us
Why Choose the Law Office of Nic Cocis?
Age Gap and Charge Level Analysis
Understands the statutory structure and its sentencing consequences
Wobbler Defense Experience
Has pursued misdemeanor treatment in § 261.5(c) cases
Registration Consequence Awareness
Advises on the no-registration status of § 261.5 and how it affects plea evaluation
Multilingual Services
English, Romanian, and Spanish available
Frequently Asked Questions
Facing Unlawful Intercourse 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.




