Go to integrated search
contact us

Copyright SJKP LLP Law Firm all rights reserved

Prostitution Charges: What Must Be Proved and What Defenses Apply



Prostitution charges range from misdemeanor solicitation to felony promoting, and defenses including entrapment frequently determine the outcome.

Many people arrested on prostitution-related charges do not understand what the prosecution actually has to prove to secure a conviction or what defenses are available. The arrest feels final. It is not. Prosecutors must establish each element of the specific charge beyond a reasonable doubt, and prostitution cases routinely generate Fourth Amendment suppression issues, entrapment claims, and evidentiary problems that result in charges being reduced or dismissed before trial. The charge category matters enormously: a misdemeanor prostitution conviction and a felony promoting conviction carry consequences that are not even in the same universe.

Prostitution-related charges in New York are codified in Penal Law Article 230, which addresses prostitution, patronizing, promoting, and sex trafficking across a graduated severity structure from Class B misdemeanor through Class B felony depending on the specific conduct and the age of the person involved; federal charges may arise under 18 U.S.C. § 1591 when sex trafficking involves force, threats, fraud, or coercion, or when the victim is under 18; and FOSTA-SESTA's 18 U.S.C. § 2421A targets those who own, manage, or operate interactive computer services with intent to promote or facilitate prostitution, with aggravated penalties when the conduct involves five or more persons or reckless disregard of contribution to sex trafficking.


1. What Prostitution Charges Actually Involve and What the State Must Prove


The term "prostitution charges" covers several legally distinct offenses that differ in their elements, severity, and available defenses. Treating them as interchangeable is one of the most common mistakes people make when evaluating their situation.

Under New York Penal Law § 230.00, prostitution is a Class B misdemeanor defined as engaging or agreeing to engage in sexual conduct with another person in exchange for a fee. The prosecution must prove that the defendant was the person who engaged or agreed to engage, that the conduct was sexual conduct as defined by the statute, and that a fee was involved. An agreement without an act is sufficient: the charge does not require completed sexual conduct. Patronizing a prostituted person at the misdemeanor level requires proving that the defendant paid or agreed to pay a fee to engage in sexual conduct with another person. Both the offer and the acceptance of an offer satisfy the agreement element, and undercover operations frequently arrest individuals at the offer stage before any conduct occurs.

Promoting prostitution covers conduct ranging from acting as a manager or agent for a person engaged in prostitution at the misdemeanor level to controlling or supervising multiple persons engaged in prostitution through management structures at the felony level. The distinction between a Class A misdemeanor and a felony for promoting charges turns on the number of persons involved, the degree of control the defendant exercised, whether the defendant used force or compulsion, and critically, whether any person involved was under 18. A single detail in the factual record can determine which charge applies, and the charging decision made at arrest is not necessarily the charge that governs at trial or plea.



How Prostitution-Related Charges Differ in Severity and What Elevates a Charge to a Felony


The most significant factor in whether a prostitution-related charge becomes a felony is whether the person involved was a minor, and prosecutors and law enforcement treat the age question as the threshold that determines the entire approach to the case.

Patronizing charges escalate from misdemeanor to felony when the person patronized is under 17, under 14, or under 11, with each age threshold corresponding to a higher felony grade under Penal Law Article 230. Promoting charges follow a similar escalation pattern, and promoting prostitution involving anyone under 18 is treated as a higher-degree offense. Sex trafficking under New York Penal Law § 230.34 is a Class B felony applying when a person uses force, fraud, or coercion to compel another person to engage in prostitution or to profit from such compulsion. Sex trafficking of a child under § 230.34-a is also a Class B felony applying when a defendant who is 21 or older intentionally advances or profits from the prostitution of a person under 18, and the statute expressly provides that the defendant's lack of knowledge of the victim's age is not a defense.

The practical consequence of the age-based escalation structure is that conduct that might otherwise produce misdemeanor-level exposure can produce serious felony charges based entirely on the age of the person involved, which the defendant may not have known. A case that begins as a promoting charge can be elevated based on evidence developed after the initial arrest, and the government's access to records, communications, and witness statements obtained during the investigation frequently expands the factual record well beyond what was apparent at the time of arrest.

ChargeNY Penal LawClassificationKey Element That Changes Grade
Prostitution§ 230.00Class B misdemeanorBasic offer or agreement for fee
Patronizing (misdemeanor)Article 230Class B misdemeanorFee paid or agreed
Patronizing (higher degrees)Article 230Class A misdemeanor to Class B felonyAge of victim (under 17, 14, or 11)
Promoting prostitutionArticle 230Class A misdemeanor to Class B felonyControl, number of persons, force, minor victim
Sex trafficking§ 230.34Class B felonyForce, fraud, or coercion
Sex trafficking of a child§ 230.34-aClass B felonyDefendant 21+; victim under 18; age unknown is not a defense


2. How Entrapment and Constitutional Defenses Apply in Prostitution Sting Operations


Law enforcement uses undercover operations to make prostitution arrests, and the specific tactics used in those operations create defense opportunities that do not exist in most other criminal cases.

Entrapment is a complete defense that, if established, results in acquittal regardless of whether the defendant committed the act charged. Under New York Penal Law § 40.05, entrapment applies when a law enforcement officer or agent induced or encouraged the defendant to commit an offense by active persuasion using methods creating a substantial risk that the offense would be committed by a person not otherwise disposed to commit it. The defense requires showing two things: that the government agent actively induced the conduct, and that the defendant was not predisposed to commit the offense independently of that inducement. A defendant who initiated contact, made the first offer, or demonstrated a pattern of prior similar conduct has a difficult entrapment argument. A defendant who was persistently solicited by an undercover officer over multiple contacts, who initially declined, and who agreed only after sustained pressure has a much stronger one.

Fourth Amendment challenges to searches and seizures in prostitution arrests address whether the arrest itself was supported by probable cause, whether any search of the defendant's phone, vehicle, or property was authorized by a valid warrant or lawful exception, and whether statements made at or after arrest were properly preceded by Miranda warnings.

Cell phone searches are a significant source of suppression motions in prostitution and promoting cases, because law enforcement frequently seeks text messages, call logs, payment apps, and social media accounts from phones seized at arrest. Criminal defense strategy in prostitution cases begins with a complete review of the arrest circumstances, the chain of custody of any seized evidence, and the specific conduct the undercover officer engaged in before any plea or trial decision is made.



What Evidence Challenges and Procedural Defenses Accomplish in Prostitution Cases


Beyond entrapment and Fourth Amendment issues, the evidentiary record in prostitution arrests frequently contains problems that a defense attorney can use to weaken or dismiss the case without going to trial.

Corroboration requirements in some charge categories mean that the prosecution cannot always secure a conviction based solely on the undercover officer's testimony, and independent evidence connecting the defendant to the specific conduct alleged is required. An arrest based entirely on the officer's account of a brief verbal exchange, without recorded audio, video surveillance, or physical evidence of any fee exchange, presents a proof problem that can be challenged at the motion stage. Recorded evidence cuts both ways: it confirms or constrains the officer's testimony to what the recording actually shows, which is frequently less definitive than the initial arrest report characterized it.

Identification challenges are relevant when the defendant was arrested based on a description rather than direct officer contact, or when multiple individuals were present and the prosecution must establish that the specific defendant made the offer or agreement at issue. Speedy trial motions under New York Criminal Procedure Law § 30.30 require the prosecution to be ready for trial within specific time periods depending on the charge grade, and delays in the government's case preparation can result in dismissal even when the underlying evidence is otherwise sufficient.



How Online Prostitution Charges Turn Digital Records into Evidence


Online prostitution charges create a separate category of exposure for individuals who used digital platforms to arrange or promote commercial sexual services, and the evidentiary landscape in these cases differs fundamentally from street-level enforcement.

FOSTA-SESTA created 18 U.S.C. § 2421A, which targets owning, managing, or operating an interactive computer service with intent to promote or facilitate prostitution, with aggravated penalties when the conduct involves five or more persons or reckless disregard of contribution to sex trafficking. For individual defendants, the relevant exposure arises from using those platforms in ways that leave a documented digital trail. Text messages, encrypted app conversations, payment records from Cash App, Venmo, or cryptocurrency transactions, and platform account records obtained through subpoena form the evidentiary foundation of online prostitution cases.

The government's ability to retrieve deleted messages and account history through platform cooperation or search warrants means that the evidentiary record in online cases typically extends well beyond what the defendant believes was preserved. A conversation the defendant deleted months before arrest may be recovered through the platform's server-side records or through forensic extraction from the device itself. Online sex crimes and cyber sex crimes defense requires a specific review of what digital evidence the government has obtained, through what legal process, and whether any of that process is subject to suppression before any evaluation of the overall defense strategy is complete.



3. What Prostitution Charges Cost Beyond the Criminal Sentence


A prostitution conviction carries consequences that extend well beyond the fine, probation, or incarceration the court imposes, and those collateral consequences frequently last far longer than the sentence itself.

A criminal conviction for prostitution creates a permanent criminal record accessible to employers, landlords, and professional licensing authorities. Even a misdemeanor conviction can result in the loss of professional licenses, disqualification from certain public housing, and barriers to employment in fields that conduct background checks. For non-citizens, any criminal conviction creates potential immigration consequences that must be evaluated against the specific visa status, grounds of inadmissibility, and deportability rules applicable to the individual's situation. A misdemeanor prostitution conviction that a citizen treats as a minor matter may constitute a crime involving moral turpitude under immigration law depending on the statutory language and how the immigration court applies the categorical approach, with consequences that can include deportation, inadmissibility, and bars to naturalization. Criminal record expungement and clear criminal record proceedings are available for eligible offenses, but New York's sealing statute does not apply to all prostitution-related convictions, and eligibility must be evaluated against the specific charge and disposition.

Sex offender registration may apply in specific circumstances depending on the charge, the conviction, the victim's age, and the court's determination of the appropriate SORA risk level classification. Certain promoting and patronizing convictions involving minor victims can trigger registration exposure, but whether registration is required and at what level turns on the specific statutory charge, the facts of conviction, and the court's individual assessment. Because these determinations are fact-specific and outcome-specific, the registration consequence must be evaluated charge by charge rather than assumed from the category of the offense. The registration consequence, where it does apply, can be more practically damaging than any sentence the court imposes because it creates a publicly searchable record affecting employment, housing, and community participation for the duration of the registration period.



How Human Trafficking Charges Connect to Prostitution Cases and When Victim Protections Apply


Not everyone arrested on a prostitution-related charge is a willing participant in commercial sex. New York law and federal law both provide protections for trafficking victims that can affect how prostitution charges are handled when evidence of victimization is present.

Federal sex trafficking under 18 U.S.C. § 1591 is distinct from state prostitution charges in both structure and severity. The statute applies when a person recruits, entices, harbors, transports, provides, or obtains another person for a commercial sex act using force, threats, fraud, or coercion, or when the victim is under 18 regardless of whether any such means were used. The absence of force or coercion is not a defense when the victim is a minor. Mandatory minimum sentences under § 1591 begin at 10 years for most violations and reach 15 years when the victim is under 14, making federal trafficking prosecution categorically different from the state-level charges it may accompany.

New York's Human Trafficking Intervention Courts, available in several counties, provide an alternative pathway for defendants who can demonstrate that their prostitution conduct resulted from trafficking or exploitation, with the possibility of charges being deferred or dismissed upon completion of program requirements. The existence of a trafficking relationship, documented through records of control by a third party, evidence of force or threats, or indicators that the defendant's proceeds were being taken by another person, can change both the defense strategy and the charging calculus significantly. Federal criminal defense and sex crime defendants require a strategy calibrated to the specific charge level and whether both state and federal exposure exist simultaneously, because the resolution in one jurisdiction does not automatically resolve exposure in the other under the dual sovereignty doctrine.



4. Frequently Asked Questions about Prostitution Charges


Prostitution charge questions arrive from people arrested in undercover operations who want to understand what the government must prove, from individuals who accepted a plea offer years ago and want to know whether the conviction can be sealed, from people concerned about immigration consequences of a pending charge, and from individuals involved in commercial sex under circumstances that may qualify them for trafficking victim protections. Those situations generate the following answers.



What Does the Prosecution Have to Prove to Convict Someone of Prostitution in New York?


For a basic prostitution charge under NY Penal Law § 230.00, the prosecution must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant engaged or agreed to engage in sexual conduct with another person in exchange for a fee, that the defendant was the specific person who made or accepted that offer, and that the agreement or conduct occurred within the jurisdiction. An agreement without completed conduct is sufficient. Evidence in undercover cases typically consists of the officer's testimony, any recorded audio or video, and physical evidence of a fee. The absence of independent corroboration, inconsistencies in the officer's account, or evidence that the defendant was induced by persistent government solicitation each affects the prosecution's case before any defense evidence is considered.



Is Entrapment a Viable Defense in Prostitution Sting Operations?


Entrapment is a complete defense that results in acquittal if established. Under NY Penal Law § 40.05, it requires showing that a government agent actively induced the defendant using methods creating a substantial risk that a person not otherwise disposed to commit the offense would do so. It does not apply when the defendant initiated contact, made the first offer, or was otherwise predisposed to engage in the conduct independently of the government's involvement. The defense is strongest when an undercover officer persistently solicited a defendant who initially declined, or when the solicitation method was designed to appeal to someone in vulnerable circumstances. Prostitution charges involving sustained government solicitation generate the most viable entrapment arguments.



Can a Prostitution Conviction Be Sealed or Expunged in New York?


New York provides for sealing of certain convictions under CPL § 160.59, which allows sealing of up to two convictions, including up to one felony, for eligible individuals who have been free of conviction for ten years after sentencing. Prostitution convictions are not automatically excluded from eligibility, but the specific charge and disposition must be evaluated against the statutory requirements. Sealing removes the conviction from public access while preserving it for law enforcement purposes and does not eliminate it for immigration purposes, certain professional licensing boards, or government background checks that access sealed records under specific statutory exceptions. Prostitution penalties and collateral consequence analysis are important before accepting any plea, because the sealing option's availability depends on what specific charge and disposition are entered.



When Do Prostitution Charges Become Federal Trafficking Charges?


Federal sex trafficking under 18 U.S.C. § 1591 applies when conduct involves force, threats, fraud, or coercion to compel a commercial sex act, or when the victim is under 18 regardless of whether any such means were used. A state prostitution arrest can become the basis for a parallel or subsequent federal investigation, and the state disposition does not preclude federal prosecution under the dual sovereignty doctrine. The statute of limitations for prostitution at the federal level for trafficking offenses is significantly longer than for state misdemeanor charges, meaning federal exposure can persist well after state charges have been resolved.


13 May, 2026


The information provided in this article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Reading or relying on the contents of this article does not create an attorney-client relationship with our firm. For advice regarding your specific situation, please consult a qualified attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.
Certain informational content on this website may utilize technology-assisted drafting tools and is subject to attorney review.

Online Consultation
Phone Consultation