Archive for 'Sexual Assault' Category
May 8, 2026

If you searched “sexual assault vs. rape,” you’re probably trying to figure out whether these are two different crimes, how the law draws the line between them, and what the consequences look like for each. The short answer is that North Carolina doesn’t actually have a crime called “sexual assault.” The state uses a different […]

May 8, 2026

Most felony sexual assault charges in North Carolina have no statute of limitations. That means the state can bring charges five, ten, or twenty years after the alleged offense — there is no deadline. Because nearly every sexual assault offense in North Carolina is classified as a felony, this rule applies to the vast majority […]

May 8, 2026

Aggravated sexual assault in North Carolina is a first-degree forcible sex offense — a Class B1 felony that carries a mandatory active prison sentence averaging nearly 20 years. North Carolina’s criminal code does not use the exact phrase “aggravated sexual assault.” That creates immediate confusion for anyone trying to understand what they or someone they […]

May 8, 2026

North Carolina law does not use the phrase “sexual assault” as a single criminal charge. Instead, what most people mean when they search this question — non-consensual sexual contact or intercourse — is prosecuted under a set of specific, graduated offenses. These range from a Class A1 misdemeanor to a Class B1 felony. Each is […]

Mar 10, 2026

In North Carolina, allegations of sexual offenses carry significant legal consequences, including the potential for lengthy prison sentences and mandatory lifetime registration on the State Sex Offender Registry. Because of the gravity with which the North Carolina judicial system treats these cases, the initial response to an accusation is a critical component of a legal […]