
Defending Stalking Allegations in Murrieta and Southwest Riverside County
Stalking
California’s stalking statute — Penal Code § 646.9 — covers a wide range of conduct, from following someone to repeated electronic communications, and requires that the contact caused the victim to experience substantial emotional distress and that a credible threat was made. Each of those elements is a potential point of challenge. At the Law Office of Nic Cocis, we defend stalking charges at the Southwest Justice Center and throughout Southwest Riverside County, with a focus on the specific elements the prosecution must establish and where those elements are genuinely contested.
How Penal Code § 646.9 Defines Stalking
Section 646.9 requires three things: the defendant willfully, maliciously, and repeatedly followed or harassed another person; the defendant made a credible threat against that person; and the defendant intended to place the victim in reasonable fear for their safety or the safety of their immediate family.
Each element has definition and limits.
Harasses means a knowing and willful course of conduct directed at a specific person that seriously alarms, annoys, torments, or terrorizes them, and that serves no legitimate purpose. A course of conduct requires more than a single act — two or more acts are required.
Credible threat means a verbal or written threat, including electronically transmitted, or a threat implied by a pattern of conduct, made with the apparent ability to carry it out that causes the target to reasonably fear for their safety. The threat can be implied rather than explicit — which broadens the statute considerably and creates more room for factual dispute about whether a “threat” was communicated at all.
Substantial emotional distress is defined as significant mental suffering or anguish that may require medical or professional treatment, though treatment is not required. What constitutes substantial emotional distress is a fact-specific determination that the defense can contest.
Misdemeanor § 646.9 — first offense without aggravating circumstances: up to one year in county jail.
Felony § 646.9 — when the defendant made a credible threat with the intent to place the victim in reasonable fear of death or great bodily injury, or when there is a prior stalking conviction or an existing restraining order: 16 months, two, or three years in state prison.
Electronic Communications and the Modern Stalking Case
A significant number of § 646.9 cases today involve electronic conduct — repeated text messages, emails, social media contact, or online monitoring. The course of conduct element can be established through electronic communications alone, and the implied threat element is applied to patterns of contact that the victim experienced as threatening even without explicit threatening language. We examine the full electronic record — not just the messages the prosecution selected — for context, tone, and whether the communication pattern actually satisfies the statute’s elements.
How We Can Help with Stalking Charges
Facing Stalking Charges in Murrieta?
Contact the Law Office of Nic Cocis for a consultation. We serve clients in Murrieta, Temecula, Menifee, Lake Elsinore, Wildomar, Winchester, Canyon Lake, French Valley, and throughout Southwest Riverside County.
Why Choose the Law Office of Nic Cocis?
Electronic Evidence Analysis
Reviews the complete communications record for context the prosecution may have omitted
Element-Based Defense
Challenges each statutory element of § 646.9 independently
Relationship Context Experience
Has defended stalking charges arising from ended relationships and custody disputes
Multilingual Services
English, Romanian, and Spanish available





