At Grabel & Associates, we have built our statewide reputation on standing shoulder to shoulder with people whose freedom, families, and futures are threatened by sex crime allegations. Monroe County prosecutors move quickly and aggressively in these cases. So do we. When your reputation and liberty are at stake, having an experienced sex crimes attorney on your side is critical.
From the moment our Monroe criminal defense team joins a case, our singular focus is on safeguarding your presumption of innocence, exposing weaknesses in the government’s evidence, and charting a path toward dismissal, acquittal, or a favorable plea outcome, if that is the best result for you.
Michigan law groups most felony sex offenses under the umbrella of Criminal Sexual Conduct (CSC). First- and second-degree CSC (MCL 750.520b and MCL 750.520c) cover alleged nonconsensual penetration or contact that involves force, coercion, or aggravating circumstances such as a victim younger than 13 years old. Third- and fourth-degree CSC (MCL 750.520d and MCL 750.520e) involve nonconsensual penetration or contact without aggravators. However, a conviction still carries prison time, mandatory sex offender registration, and registration-related parole restrictions.
Other Monroe County sex crime charges we routinely fight against include child sexually abusive activity, possession or distribution of child sexual abusive material (CSAM), child enticement, accosting a minor for immoral purposes, Internet luring and “sting” computer-based crimes, human trafficking, indecent exposure, aggravated indecent exposure, prostitution-related offenses, and felony domestic sexual assault. The stakes are uniformly high, and the collateral damage to professional licenses, gun rights, housing, employment, and reputation can be lifelong.
All felony sex cases originating in Monroe County start in the 1st District Court, located at 106 E. First Street, Monroe, MI 48161. Preliminary examinations and misdemeanor trials happen here. Felonies “bound over” move to the 38th Circuit Court, 125 E. Second Street, Monroe, MI 48161, where jury selection, motion practice, plea hearings, and felony trials occur.
Because we appear in these courtrooms every week, we are familiar with the judges’ evidentiary preferences, the probation department’s sentencing tendencies, and the prosecutors’ negotiating patterns. That insight enables us to tailor our defense strategy, whether that means contesting probable cause at the district court level, filing a suppression motion to challenge a warrantless search of a cellphone, or presenting expert testimony on DNA transfer at a circuit court trial.
In Monroe County, we frequently defend clients against the following sex offense charges:
Each statutory charge requires a defense tailored to its unique elements, scientific evidence, and potential affirmative defenses, such as consent, fabrication, or mistaken identity. Our first job is to deconstruct the prosecution’s theory, count by count, and identify where reasonable doubt exists or where it can be created with expert analysis, rigorous cross-examination, and the persuasive representation of alternative narratives.
A first-degree CSC conviction can bring life imprisonment. A second-degree conviction carries a penalty of up to 15 years in prison. Even fourth-degree CSC, a misdemeanor, risks two years’ incarceration, two additional years of discretionary probation, and mandatory sex offender registration. Child pornography convictions can mean 20 years or more, plus consecutive sentences for multiple images. A felony Internet solicitation conviction may trigger a 25-year to life mandatory minimum if someone under the age of 13 is involved.
Beyond prison and fines, those charged with sex crimes confront potential loss of parental rights, immigration problems, professional licensing consequences, firearm prohibitions, no-contact orders, and the stigma that accompanies any sex crime accusation, often before guilt is determined. Our mission is to limit or eliminate those outcomes through early intervention, targeted negotiations, creative sentencing advocacy, and, when necessary, exhaustive trial litigation.
In 2021, the Legislature overhauled the Sex Offenders Registration Act (SORA) (MCL 28.721 et seq.), eliminating most school safety zone restrictions and clarifying in-person reporting duties. The legal landscape remains fluid. In early 2025, U.S. District Judge Mark A. Goldsmith, a federal judge in Michigan, struck down lifetime-registration extensions imposed retroactively on roughly 17,000 people and invalidated mandatory disclosure of online identifiers, finding the provisions unconstitutional.
We monitor these developments daily because a registration requirement can be more punitive than a jail sentence. When the law shifts, we file motions for relief from onerous SORA conditions, pursue removal where eligibility exists, and protect clients from inadvertent failure-to-comply prosecutions.
If Monroe County investigators have contacted you or a loved one about an alleged sex offense, invoke your right to remain silent and call us before speaking with police. Consensual polygraphs arranged through counsel can sometimes head off charges. But a single lawyer-less interrogation can bury you before you know what happened. We have stopped arrests outright by intervening during the pre-charge phase, presenting exculpatory evidence, and persuading prosecutors that the case cannot be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
Our approach is proactive. Before accounts disappear, we secure and preserve electronic evidence, text messages, Snapchat captures, TikTok metadata, and more. Our sex crimes lawyers retain independent forensic experts to evaluate DNA mixtures, perform image-hash analysis on alleged CSAM, and audit chain-of-custody procedures. We issue investigator subpoenas for school disciplinary records, CPS files, and prior inconsistent statements that may impeach the credibility of a complaining witness. Every document we collect is one less surprise at trial.
Digital investigations often rely on IP address attribution, geolocation logs, and records from social media providers. We challenge defective search warrant affidavits, argue for suppression under the Fourth Amendment and the Michigan Constitution, and expose the staleness of warrants based on outdated downloads.
In child forensic interview cases, we scrutinize adherence to the Michigan Forensic Interviewing Protocol and cross-examine interviewers on suggestive questioning techniques likely to taint a child’s memory. When the state relies on SAKI (Sexual Assault Kit Initiative) DNA backlog testing, we bring our experts to question lab-validation rates and probabilistic genotyping.
When trial is the best, or only, option, we craft persuasive opening statements grounded in themes jurors understand: mistaken identity, unreliable memories, delayed disclosure, coercive interrogation tactics, or scientific uncertainty. Our cross-examinations are meticulous, highlighting contradictions between preliminary examination and trial testimony, exposing undisclosed benefits to cooperating witnesses, and dismantling the government’s forensic narrative piece by piece. We supplement witness testimony with demonstrative exhibits, call upon our forensic analysts, and ensure that jurors hear a complete and balanced story.
If a conviction or plea deal is unavoidable, we shift instantly to damage-control mode. Our sentencing memoranda leverage psychological evaluations, polygraph results, sex offender-specific risk assessments, and letters of community support to argue for probation, Holmes Youthful Trainee Act (HYTA) status, or delayed sentencing. After sentencing, we preserve appeal issues, such as jury instruction errors, the admission of improper character evidence, and Confrontation Clause violations, and, if necessary, file motions for a new trial in the 38th Circuit Court or appeals to the Michigan Court of Appeals and the Michigan Supreme Court.
Grabel & Associates has defended thousands of felony sex cases statewide, but our Monroe practice is unique. We are familiar with the assistant prosecutors assigned to special-victim cases, the judges who preside over preliminary conferences, and the probation agents who prepare presentence investigation reports. Our sex crimes defense team comprises former county prosecutors, appellate specialists, and investigators who are trained in trauma-informed interviewing. We operate on a collaborative model; every attorney, legal researcher, and expert on your defense team contributes to strategy sessions, ensuring that we never miss a weakness in the prosecution’s case.
Our results speak for themselves:
We pour that same energy into every Monroe client we represent.
Sex crime allegations can shatter reputations overnight, but an accusation is not a conviction. The sooner we become involved, the more options you have, whether persuading law enforcement not to file charges, negotiating a plea to a non-registerable offense, or presenting a compelling case to a Monroe County jury.
Contact Grabel & Associates 24/7 for a free, confidential consultation. We will listen without judgment, explain your rights, and outline immediate steps to protect your freedom. Let us put our decades of experience, statewide resources, and unwavering commitment to client-centered advocacy to work for you today.