Co-Founding Partners
Texas Bar verified. Reggie London (Texas Bar No. 24043514) and Njeri London (Texas Bar No. 24043266) are the co-founding partners of L and L Law Group, PLLC — based at 5899 Preston Rd, Suite 101 in Frisco, Texas (Collin County), with many 5-star Google reviews, and available 24/7 for criminal defense consultations.
Quick answer
Aggravated Sexual Assault in Texas is defined under Penal Code § 22.021. Aggravated sexual assault under Texas Penal Code § 22.021 — definition, punishment, registration consequences, and defense strategies. Below: the controlling statute, the punishment range, and the defenses we use at L and L Law Group.
If you have been charged with Aggravated Sexual Assault in Texas, the criminal defense team at L and L Law Group, PLLC handles cases like yours every day across Collin County, Dallas County, Denton County, and Tarrant County. Co-founding partners Reggie London (Texas Bar No. 24043514) and Njeri London (Texas Bar No. 24043266) take cases personally — there is no associate or paralegal screening clients out before you speak with a lawyer.
On this page
- What is the current Texas law about Aggravated Sexual Assault?
- What is the penalty for Aggravated Sexual Assault in Texas?
- What defenses are available?
- What is the statute of limitations?
- Can you get probation?
- What level of crime is Aggravated Sexual Assault?
- What happens after arrest?
- Why hire L and L Law Group?
- Frequently asked questions
- Legal references
What is the current Texas law about Aggravated Sexual Assault?
L and L Law Group's criminal defense lawyers provide the current law defining Aggravated Sexual Assault in Texas Penal Code § 22.021, as follows[1]:
A person commits aggravated sexual assault if the person commits sexual assault as defined in §22.011 and the person, by acts or words, places the victim in fear of imminent bodily injury or death, uses or exhibits a deadly weapon, the victim is younger than 14 years of age, or other aggravating circumstances apply.
This statutory language controls every Aggravated Sexual Assault prosecution in Texas. Each element — the act, the mental state (mens rea), the result, and any jurisdictional element — must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt by the State. The defense lawyer's job is to identify where the State's proof falls short of any required element.
What is the penalty for Aggravated Sexual Assault in Texas?
Aggravated Sexual Assault is classified into the following punishment categories under Texas law[2]:
| Circumstance | Classification | Punishment range |
|---|---|---|
| Aggravated sexual assault (general) | 1st-degree felony | 5-99 years or life; up to $10,000 fine |
| Against child under 6 | 1st-degree felony | 25-life (minimum 25 years under §22.021(f)) |
| Against child under 14 with serious bodily injury | 1st-degree felony | 25-life (minimum 25 years) |
| Repeat sex offender with prior | 1st-degree felony | Mandatory life under §12.42(c)(2) |
The actual punishment imposed on any given case can be substantially less than the maximum — through plea negotiation, deferred adjudication, probation, or pretrial diversion. We routinely negotiate punishment well below the statutory maximum and, in many cases, achieve dismissal or pretrial diversion outcomes.
What defenses are available to a Aggravated Sexual Assault charge?
Defenses to Aggravated Sexual Assault fall into three categories: factual defenses (the alleged act did not happen, or did not happen as alleged), legal defenses (a justification or excuse recognized by law), and constitutional defenses (the State obtained evidence in violation of the defendant's rights). The most common defenses we raise in Aggravated Sexual Assault cases:
- False allegation — particularly important in family/relationship disputes
- DNA exclusion or contamination
- Consent (where age-appropriate)
- Mistaken identity
- Constitutional violations (Miranda, Fourth Amendment)
- Inadequate investigation/forensic interview issues
The right defense depends on the specific facts and the specific evidence the State has. We evaluate every case for all three categories of defense before plea conversations begin.
What is the statute of limitations for Aggravated Sexual Assault?
The Texas statute of limitations for Aggravated Sexual Assault is governed by Code of Criminal Procedure Article 12.01[3]. Limitations periods range from 2 years for Class C misdemeanors to no limitation at all for capital felonies and certain offenses against children. Most felonies fall into a 3-year or 5-year window from the date of the offense. After limitations runs, the State cannot prosecute — limitations is an absolute bar.
Can you get probation for Aggravated Sexual Assault in Texas?
Probation eligibility depends on the classification, the defendant's criminal history, and whether the offense is on the 42A.054(a) (formerly "3g") aggravated-offense list under Code of Criminal Procedure Chapter 42A. For most Aggravated Sexual Assault cases, both straight probation and deferred adjudication are available subject to the State's plea offer and the judge's discretion. For a complete framework on how probation works in Texas, see our punishment range page.
What level of crime is Aggravated Sexual Assault?
Texas classifies criminal offenses on a continuum from Class C misdemeanor (fine-only) to capital felony (life without parole or death). Aggravated Sexual Assault can be classified at multiple levels depending on the circumstances — see the table above for the specific classification that applies to your case. For background on what each Texas criminal classification means, see our felony classification overview and misdemeanor classification overview.
What happens after arrest for Aggravated Sexual Assault?
The Texas criminal process has predictable stages. After arrest, you appear before a magistrate within 48 hours, where bond is set (see bond conditions). The DA's office then makes a charging decision; for felonies, the case goes to a grand jury (see active investigations). At arraignment, you enter a plea. Discovery, motions, and plea negotiation follow (see fighting a charge). Most cases resolve before trial — but the cases that resolve favorably are the cases where the defense was genuinely ready to try the case if necessary.
Why hire L and L Law Group for a Aggravated Sexual Assault case?
L and L Law Group, PLLC handles Aggravated Sexual Assault cases personally — Reggie London (TX Bar 24043514) and Njeri London (TX Bar 24043266) appear in court on every case we accept. We do not refer cases to associates or use junior attorneys to make first appearances. The same attorney you meet at the consultation is the attorney who handles your case.
We serve clients across DFW including:
- Collin County — Plano, Frisco, McKinney, Allen, Wylie
- Dallas County — Dallas, Garland, Irving, Mesquite, Carrollton
- Denton County — Denton, Lewisville, Flower Mound, Carrollton, Highland Village
- Tarrant County — Fort Worth, Arlington, Grand Prairie, Mansfield, North Richland Hills
Call (972) 370-5060 for a free, direct-to-attorney consultation. Email info@landllawgroup.com if calling is not safe right now.
Charged with Aggravated Sexual Assault? Time matters. The first 48 hours often shape the entire case.
Speak with an attorney Call direct(972) 370-5060 Email usinfo@landllawgroup.comFrequently asked questions about Aggravated Sexual Assault in Texas
Is Aggravated Sexual Assault a felony in Texas?
It depends on the specific circumstances. See the classification table above — Aggravated Sexual Assault can range from a Class C misdemeanor to a 1st-degree felony depending on facts. Even an offense that "looks like" a misdemeanor on its face can be enhanced by priors, victim category, deadly weapon, or other aggravators.
What is the maximum sentence for Aggravated Sexual Assault?
The maximum depends on the classification. The most serious circumstance category in the table above shows the highest available punishment for Aggravated Sexual Assault in Texas. For specific cases, enhancement paragraphs (priors), 3g/42A.054(a) findings, or deadly-weapon findings can change the analysis.
Can Aggravated Sexual Assault charges be reduced?
Sometimes yes. Reductions usually happen through plea negotiation — the State agrees to dismiss the original charge in exchange for a plea to a lesser offense (lesser-included or a different statute). We negotiate reductions in many cases when the State's evidence has weaknesses or when significant mitigation is presented.
Can a Aggravated Sexual Assault charge be dismissed?
Yes — dismissals happen through successful motions (suppression, dismissal for insufficient evidence), pretrial diversion completion, deferred adjudication with successful probation completion, or plea negotiation where the State agrees to dismiss in exchange for a plea to a different charge.
Can I get Aggravated Sexual Assault expunged from my record?
Only if the case ended favorably — dismissal, acquittal, no-bill, or Class C deferred completion. If you were convicted or completed deferred adjudication, the remedy is non-disclosure under Government Code §411, not expunction. See our expunction vs. non-disclosure page for the full framework.
Will a Aggravated Sexual Assault conviction affect my immigration status?
Possibly. Many Texas convictions trigger immigration consequences under federal law — particularly crimes of moral turpitude, aggravated felonies, and offenses involving controlled substances. The analysis is specific to your immigration status and the specific facts. We work with immigration counsel when a case has immigration implications.
Does Aggravated Sexual Assault require registration as a sex offender?
Most Texas charges do not. The reportable offenses under Code of Criminal Procedure Chapter 62 are specific — primarily sex offenses, child abuse offenses, and certain kidnapping offenses with sexual motivation. See our sex offender deregistration page for the registration framework if applicable.
How much does a Aggravated Sexual Assault defense cost?
Fees depend on the complexity of the case, the level of charge, and the projected work. Most cases are handled on a flat fee. We discuss fees during the consultation and provide written engagement agreements.
Legal references
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