An accusation of a sex crime, whether whispered or formalized through an arrest, can dismantle your life before a single charge is filed. Your career, your family, your freedom, and your reputation are at stake from the moment an investigation begins. If you or someone you love is facing allegations, under investigation by federal or state authorities, or has already been charged, the single most important step you can take right now is retaining an trusted criminal defense attorney.
Andrew Russek at Russek Law Group defends individuals in St. Louis and throughout Missouri against the full range of sex crime allegations, including high-stakes federal charges that carry mandatory minimum sentences and lifelong consequences. These cases demand immediate, aggressive, and strategic legal representation. He provides exactly that.
Federal sex crime charges represent some of the most serious allegations the U.S. government can bring against an individual. When federal agencies become involved, including the FBI, Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force (ICAC), or U.S. Postal Inspection Service, the resources, sophistication, and prosecutorial weight behind the case increase dramatically.
Cases are elevated to federal jurisdiction when they involve interstate elements, online communications that cross state lines, federal databases or systems, or conduct occurring on federal property. A single image shared online, a text message sent across state lines, or an investigation originating on a federal platform can transform what might appear to be a state matter into a federal prosecution filed in the Eastern District of Missouri.
Federal sex crime prosecutions are distinguished by:
If you have been contacted by federal agents, received a search warrant, or believe you are the target of a federal sex crime investigation, do not wait. Early intervention by a federal sex crimes lawyer in St. Louis can make a decisive difference in how, and whether, your case proceeds to indictment.
Missouri law defines a broad range of sex offenses, each with its own elements, penalties, and registration implications. Many of these charges carry felony classifications that can result in significant prison sentences and mandatory placement on the Missouri Sex Offender Registry. Andrew Russek defends clients against all state-level sex crime charges in St. Louis and throughout Missouri.
Missouri law distinguishes between first- and second-degree rape and sodomy based on use of force, threat, or the victim’s capacity to consent. First-degree rape, involving forcible compulsion, is a Class A felony punishable by 10 to 30 years, or life imprisonment. These charges frequently involve contested evidence, including credibility of witnesses, DNA analysis, and questions of consent.
Missouri’s statutory rape laws prohibit sexual conduct with individuals under 17 years of age, regardless of consent. Statutory rape in the first degree, involving a victim under 14, is a Class A felony. Where the conduct involved digital communication or crossed state lines, these cases may be escalated to federal jurisdiction under federal minor-related statutes.
Sexual misconduct charges in Missouri range from Class A misdemeanors to Class E felonies depending on the circumstances, including whether the conduct involved a minor or was part of a pattern of behavior. While these charges may appear less severe, a conviction still carries registration requirements and lasting collateral consequences.
Missouri criminalizes the possession, distribution, and production of child sexual abuse material (CSAM) under state law. However, these cases frequently involve digital evidence and interstate file-sharing activity that triggers concurrent federal investigation. State charges may be filed alongside, or supplanted by, federal charges depending on how the investigation develops.
Missouri requires registered sex offenders to comply with strict reporting and residency rules. Failure to register, update registration, or comply with residency restrictions is a criminal offense. Repeated violations or violations involving travel across state lines may constitute a federal SORNA violation.
Federal sex crime statutes are broad, heavily enforced, and carry some of the harshest sentencing structures in the criminal code.
Under 18 U.S.C. §§ 2252 and 2256, the possession, receipt, distribution, and production of child sexual abuse material are federal felonies. Possession carries a mandatory minimum of 5 years; distribution and production can result in 15 to 30 years or more. Federal prosecutors routinely use device forensics, including deleted file recovery, browser history, and peer-to-peer network logs, as the cornerstone of these cases.
Under 18 U.S.C. § 2422(b), using any means of interstate commerce, including text messaging, social media, or email, to entice a minor to engage in sexual activity is a federal crime carrying a mandatory minimum of 10 years. These cases frequently originate from undercover operations conducted by HSI or ICAC task forces.
Sex trafficking charges under 18 U.S.C. § 1591 apply when a person recruits, harbors, transports, or obtains another person for commercial sex through force, fraud, or coercion, or when the victim is a minor. Federal sentences range from 10 years to life, with enhancement provisions that can increase exposure substantially.
Under the Mann Act (18 U.S.C. § 2421), transporting any person across state lines for purposes of illegal sexual activity is a federal crime. This statute applies even when the transportation occurs with the other party’s apparent cooperation, and it is frequently charged alongside other federal sex offenses.
The Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA), codified at 18 U.S.C. § 2250, makes it a federal crime for a convicted sex offender to travel in interstate commerce and knowingly fail to register or update registration. Federal SORNA violations carry up to 10 years in federal prison.
Penalties for Sex Crime Convictions in Federal vs. State Court
Here are the differences in penalties between federal and state court is critical when evaluating the stakes of your case and what an effective defense strategy must accomplish.
Federal sex crime sentences are governed by the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and frequently subject to statutory mandatory minimums that eliminate judicial discretion. There is no parole in the federal system, defendants serve at least 85% of any imposed sentence. Sentences of 10, 15, 20, and 30 years are common, and life sentences are possible in the most serious cases.
Enhancement provisions, based on the number of images, the age of victims, use of a computer, or prior criminal history, can dramatically increase a guideline sentence.
Missouri classifies sex offenses by felony grade:
Missouri does not impose the same mandatory minimums as federal law in all cases, though certain offenses involving minor victims carry statutory mandatory sentencing provisions.
Both federal and Missouri law require convicted sex offenders to register. Missouri’s Sex Offender Registry imposes tiered registration requirements based on offense severity, with some individuals required to register for life. Federal SORNA requirements may impose additional obligations, particularly for individuals who travel across state lines.
Beyond incarceration and registration, a sex crime conviction can result in:
These consequences make the quality of your defense not merely important, it is everything.
The period before formal charges are filed is often the most critical in any criminal case, and in federal sex crime investigations, it can last months or years. What you do, say, and preserve during this window can shape the entire trajectory of your defense.
Warning Signs That You Are Under Investigation
What You Should Do Immediately
Early representation by an attorney experienced in federal sex crime defense can open channels for pre-indictment negotiations, challenge the legality of evidence before it is formally introduced, and potentially avert charges altogether.
Sex crime cases, particularly federal ones, are among the most technically demanding, emotionally charged, and consequential matters in criminal law. They require an attorney who brings not only legal knowledge, but strategic discipline, command of digital forensic issues, and genuine familiarity with how federal prosecutors and investigators build their cases.
Andrew Russek has built his practice around serious criminal defense, including representation of clients facing federal sex crime charges in the Eastern District of Missouri and related state proceedings. His approach is defined by:
If you are facing federal or state sex crime charges in St. Louis or anywhere in Missouri, you deserve representation that matches the seriousness of what is at stake.
A sex crime becomes federal when it involves interstate activity, online communications crossing state lines, federal systems, or federal agency investigations. If the conduct involved the internet, digital devices, or travel across state lines, it may be prosecuted federally in the Eastern District of Missouri regardless of where the alleged conduct physically occurred.
Not all, but most. Missouri and federal law require registration for a wide range of convictions. The tier level, and the duration of registration, depends on the offense. Some individuals are required to register for life. Matt Russel can clarify registration obligations specific to the charge you face.
Yes. Charges can be dismissed through successful suppression of evidence, proof of factual innocence, constitutional violations, or prosecutorial decisions. Charges may also be reduced through negotiation when the evidence is weak or mitigating circumstances are present. Every case is fact-specific.
Retain an attorney immediately. Do not attempt to confront or explain yourself to investigators, the accuser, or anyone else without legal counsel. False accusations can lead to real charges, early legal intervention allows your attorney to begin building your defense before the prosecution’s narrative solidifies.
Federal investigations can last anywhere from several months to several years before an indictment. During this period, agents are building evidence. Retaining counsel during the investigation phase, not just after arrest, is critical.
Both criminalize possession, distribution, and production of child sexual abuse material, but federal charges carry mandatory minimum sentences of 5 years for possession and 15 years for production. Federal prosecution is common when digital evidence suggests interstate transmission, which is present in virtually all online cases.,
The time to act is now, not after charges are filed, not after a search warrant has been executed and ignored, and not after you have made statements to law enforcement without counsel. Sex crime investigations move quickly and quietly. By the time most people realize how serious the situation is, the government has already built a substantial portion of its case. Andrew Russek offers confidential consultations and understands what is at stake, your freedom, your family, and your future. He is available to speak with you now.
Call Russek Law Group office today to speak directly with a St. Louis sex crimes defense attorney, or use the secure contact form to request a confidential consultation. He handles federal and state cases at every stage, from investigation through trial.
Don’t face criminal charges alone. Get experienced legal guidance from Russek Law Group.