Possible Defenses for Soliciting a Minor
A variety of possible defenses may be applicable to your case in the state of Texas. These include:
Legal conduct
The law in Texas explicitly allows for a defense if you are married to the minor OR if you are not more than three years older than the minor and the minor consented to the conduct.
Freedom of speech
The “right to free speech” has been a compelling defense argument in Texas courts. In the July 2015 case of Texas v. Paquette, Judge Kelly W. Case of the 9th District Court deemed the state’s solicitation of a minor law “unconstitutional” and in violation of the right to free speech.
The defendant, 35-year-old Daniel Paquette, was arrested and charged with using Craigslist email correspondence to solicit sex with a 14-year-old in exchange for money. He was arrested in an undercover sting when he traveled to a Montgomery County apartment with cash and a condom in his pocket.
The defense team successfully argued that some internet users engage in sexual fantasy “age-play,” where one or more participants pretends to be under-aged children.
Statute of limitations
In the case of Texas v. Thompson, Timothy Thompson was deemed a “registered sex offender” following a sexual assault charge from 2000. Investigators later charged him with solicitation of a child, believed to be under 14 years of age, in 2006.
Following an initial life sentence passed down in 2009, the Court of Criminal Appeals ordered Timothy Thompson’s case back to the 9th state District Court in Montgomery County to dismiss his indictment.
Though his life sentence will be overturned, the Huntsville resident still faces three third-degree counts of criminal attempt and one second-degree count of online solicitation of a minor.
His defense will contend that the statute of limitations ran out for the alleged crime. In the state of Texas, plaintiffs have up to three years to file a formal complaint under Texas Code of Criminal Procedure article 12.01(7).
Entrapment
A defendant targeted in a sting operation can potentially use “entrapment” as a legal argument. It is allowable for officers to provide the opportunity for a crime to occur or to misrepresent their age, gender and identity while chatting online. A solid case for entrapment includes evidence that the officers:
- Used force to coerce you into committing the crime
- Used bribes or sexual favors to encourage you to commit the crime
- Repeatedly attempted to persuade you to commit the crime
Successful entrapment defense arguments could result in all criminal charges being reduced or dropped. Any information gathered by officers will be deemed inadmissible in court and you may even pursue charges against the officers who committed the wrongdoing.