If you are facing a CSAM investigation or charge in Fairfax County, one of the first questions you probably have is what the penalties are. That is understandable. These cases are serious, and people want to know what kind of punishment they might be looking at.
The problem is that the answer depends on what the government is alleging you did. Possession and distribution are not the same thing, and the consequences are very different depending on the charge. Our Stafford County, VA loliporn defense lawyer can help you understand exactly what the charges are and what the penalties might be.
Under Virginia law, knowing possession of child pornography is a Class 6 felony under § 18.2-374.1:1. A second or subsequent possession offense is a Class 5 felony.
Virginia law separately addresses more serious conduct involving:
Those distribution related allegations carry a punishment range of five years to twenty years in a state correctional facility.
It’s important to understand this – people sometimes use the words possession and distribution loosely. Legally, they are not interchangeable.
A possession case usually focuses on whether the person knowingly possessed the material.
A distribution case may involve claims that something was sent, shared, transmitted, displayed, purchased, or made available to others.
The defense questions are different depending on which allegation is being made.
In Virginia, a Class 6 felony can carry one year to five years in prison, or at the discretion of the court or jury, up to twelve months in jail and a fine. A Class 5 felony can carry one year to ten years in prison, or at the discretion of the court or jury, up to twelve months in jail and a fine. A Class 4 felony can carry two years to ten years in prison.
Those ranges are general felony punishment ranges, and specific CSAM statutes may have their own punishments.
A conviction also creates registration consequences. Virginia’s Sex Offender and Crimes Against Minors Registry statute includes certain CSAM related offenses, including possession and distribution related provisions. Having to register as a sex offender affects people’s lives in enormous ways. These cases have to be handled with the long term consequences in mind, not just the immediate court date.
For many people, the hardest part is not just the sentencing range. It is the impact on their life. A CSAM charge can affect employment, family relationships, housing, professional licenses, reputation, and every part of a person’s future.
CSAM cases cannot be treated like routine felonies. The consequences are too serious, and the defense must be built carefully from the beginning. The defense must understand exactly what the government claims happened before deciding how to respond.
The focus next shifts to the evidence:
The next job is to analyze the warrant, the devices, the forensic evidence, the account information, and any statements made during the investigation. If there are legal issues, those need to be developed. If there are forensic issues, those need to be understood.
Even when a CSAM case appears difficult or the evidence looks strong at first glance, the outcome is not predetermined. Over the course of handling serious criminal cases, we have consistently found ways to challenge, mitigate, reduce, and in some cases resolve matters far more favorably than clients initially expect.
If you are facing CSAM possession or distribution charges, you should not wait to get answers. Call Noorishad Law, P.C. at 703-542-4500 to schedule a free consultation with a Fairfax County, VA sex crimes defense lawyer.