Last updated January 2026
Fort Lauderdale Sexting & Internet Sex Crime Defense Lawyer
Accused of sexting a minor in Florida? The consequences can escalate fast.
Even a single image or message can trigger felony charges, device seizures, and β in some cases β sex offender registration.
Florida sexting cases often begin quietly: a school report, a parent complaint, or a seized phone. By the time law enforcement contacts you, investigators may already be building a criminal case.
When sexting involves an adult and a minor, it is treated as a serious sex crime in Florida.Β If both individuals are minors, Florida law handles sexting very differently in juvenile court.Β
For sexting between teens, see Teen Sexting in Florida (Juvenile Cases Explained).
At Michael White, P.A., we defend sexting and internet sex crime allegations throughout Fort Lauderdale and South Florida. As a former prosecutor, I understand how these cases are charged, escalated, and resolved.
π Confidential consultation: (954) 270-0769
βοΈ Is Sexting Illegal in Florida?
It depends on who is involved and what was sent.
Florida law draws a sharp distinction between:
Sexting between minors, and
Sexting between an adult and a minor
Several statutes may apply, including:
§ 847.0141 β Sexting between minors
§ 847.0138 β Transmission of material harmful to minors
§ 847.0135 β Computer solicitation of a minor
The same conduct can be treated as a civil violation, misdemeanor, or felony depending on age, content, and intent.
Because these cases involve electronic evidence, they are often prosecuted as internet sex crimes under Florida law.
π¨ Adult-to-Minor Sexting (Highest Risk)
When an adult (18+) sends or receives sexually explicit messages or images involving a minor, prosecutors may pursue serious felony charges.
Potential allegations include:
Transmitting harmful material to a minor
Using a computer or device to solicit a child
Possession or distribution of child sexual abuse material (CSAM)
Consequences may include:
Felony sex crime charges
Seizure of phones, computers, and cloud accounts
Digital forensic analysis of devices
Prison or jail exposure
Mandatory sex offender registration
Florida prosecutors take adult-to-minor sexting cases extremely seriously — even when:
No meeting occurred
The minor initiated contact
The accused believed the other person was over 18
π§π Sexting Between Minors (Teen Sexting in Florida)
Florida has a specific statute addressing sexting between minors, but the penalties escalate quickly.
Under § 847.0141:
1st offense: Noncriminal violation (fine, school discipline)
2nd offense: First-degree misdemeanor
3rd or subsequent offense: Third-degree felony
β οΈ Important:
If images are saved, shared, forwarded, or used to harass or coerce β even by another minor β prosecutors may bypass the teen sexting statute and file adult sex crime charges instead.
π« Can a Teen Be Labeled a Sex Offender?
Yes — in certain situations.
A juvenile may face registration consequences if:
Prosecuted as an adult
Convicted of felony sex offenses involving a minor
Charged with producing, possessing, or distributing explicit images
Sex offender registration can severely affect:
College admissions
Housing
Employment
Scholarships and licensing
Protecting a minor’s record and future is often the top priority in these cases.
Certain felony sexting convictions can trigger mandatory sex offender registration in Florida, even for first-time offenses.
π‘οΈ Defenses to Sexting Allegations
Every sexting case is fact-specific, but common defense strategies include:
πΉ Lack of Knowledge or Intent
The State must prove intentional conduct — not accidental downloads, auto-saved files, or misunderstood messages.
πΉ Age-Related Defenses
These may include:
Misrepresentation of age
Minor-to-minor context
Tiered offense protections for juveniles
πΉ Entrapment or Police Impersonation
Some cases involve:
Undercover officers
Fake profiles
Sting operations
Entrapment defenses may apply when police induce conduct that would not otherwise occur.
πΉ Illegal Search and Seizure
Sexting cases almost always involve device searches. We challenge:
Warrant defects
Overbroad digital searches
Unlawful phone seizures
Illegally obtained evidence may be suppressed.
β οΈ What to Do If Police or a School Contacts You
If law enforcement or school officials raise sexting allegations:
Do not give a statement
Do not delete messages or images
Do not consent to device searches
Do not contact the alleged recipient
Contact a lawyer immediately
Early intervention often prevents escalation — especially in juvenile cases.
β Frequently Asked Questions
Can I be arrested for sexting if I’m 18 and the other person is 17?
Yes. Florida law generally does not provide age-gap exceptions in adult-to-minor sexting cases.
Will sexting charges require sex offender registration?
Possibly. Registration depends on the charge, conviction, and whether the case is handled as a felony sex offense.
What if no images were ever sent — only messages?
Text-only communications can still lead to charges depending on content and intent.
Can sexting charges be dropped or reduced?
Yes. Early legal intervention, evidentiary weaknesses, and statutory defenses often lead to dismissals or reduced outcomes.
Do I need a lawyer if I haven’t been arrested yet?
Absolutely. Many sexting cases can be stopped before charges are filed.
π Sexting Defense in Fort Lauderdale
Sexting allegations — especially those involving minors — carry lifelong consequences. The earlier you act, the more options you have.
π Call (954) 270-0769 or request a confidential consultation today.

