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Is Revenge Porn a Felony in Arizona? What the Law Actually Says

Is Revenge Porn a Felony in Arizona? What the Law Actually Says

Michael Tamou, Arizona criminal defense attorney

Michael Tamou

Founding Attorney · Sex Crime Defense

5.0 · Sex Crime Defense

A plain-English guide from Tamou Law Group, PLLC, Arizona sex crime defense attorneys available 24/7.

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Michael Tamou, Arizona criminal defense attorney

Michael Tamou

Founding Attorney · Sex Crime Defense

★★★★★ 5.0 · Sex Crime Defense

Written and legally reviewed by Michael Tamou, Founding Attorney of Tamou Law Group, PLLC.

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If a detective has called you about a nude photo, or your ex is threatening to file a police report over an image, you need a straight answer fast. Yes – under Arizona law, revenge porn is a felony. The exact charge, and how much of your future is on the line, depends on how the image was shared and what the State can prove about your intent.

Is revenge porn a felony in Arizona? Yes. The unlawful distribution of sexual images is prosecuted as a felony in Arizona, with the class elevated when the disclosure happens electronically. A conviction does not require sex offender registration, but it carries prison exposure, fines, and lifelong collateral consequences.

Short Answer: Is Revenge Porn a Felony in Arizona?

Yes. Arizona’s revenge porn law – formally the unlawful distribution of sexual images statute – is a felony offense. Under the current statute, it is generally charged as a Class 5 felony, and elevated to a Class 4 felony when the disclosure is made electronically (which, in practice, captures most modern cases involving texting, social media, or online posts). For the statute itself, see the Arizona Revised Statutes, Title 13.

It is not a misdemeanor and it is not a slap-on-the-wrist offense. A conviction creates a permanent felony record, exposes you to prison time, and triggers the standard collateral consequences that follow any Arizona felony – loss of firearm rights, immigration risk, and damaged employment prospects. The good news: the statute has specific elements the State must prove, and several defenses apply when those elements break down.

What Counts as Revenge Porn Under Arizona Law?

Arizona’s revenge porn law does not punish every shared nude. The statute is written narrowly, and the prosecution has to prove each element beyond a reasonable doubt.

In general terms, the State must establish that:

  • The image depicted a specific, identifiable person.
  • That person was shown in a state of nudity or engaged in specific sexual activity.
  • The depicted person had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the image.
  • You disclosed, displayed, distributed, published, advertised, or offered the image.
  • The disclosure was made with intent to harm, harass, intimidate, threaten, or coerce the depicted person.
  • The depicted person did not consent to the disclosure.

That last point trips a lot of people up. Consent to creating the image is not the same as consent to sharing it. A girlfriend who took selfies for her partner did not, by doing so, agree to have those photos forwarded to his coworkers after the breakup. The statute targets the disclosure, not the original act of taking the picture.

The intent element is also doing real work here. Arizona law generally does not criminalize accidental forwards, technical glitches, or images shared for legitimate purposes (medical, law enforcement, journalistic). The State has to show you meant to harm or harass the person depicted.

Charged with a crime in Arizona? Speak with our team before the State builds its case.

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Class 5 vs. Class 4 Felony: When Does the Charge Get Worse?

Arizona’s unlawful distribution of sexual images statute uses a tiered felony structure. A base violation is a Class 5 felony – but if the disclosure is made through an electronic means, the charge is elevated to a Class 4 felony.

Why does that distinction matter so much? Because the elevation captures almost every real-world case. Texting a photo to a third party, posting it on Instagram, uploading it to a porn site, dropping it in a Discord server, AirDropping it at a party – all of that is electronic distribution. A Class 5 charge essentially survives only for the unusual scenario where someone hands out physical printed photos.

The practical takeaway: if you are charged today, you should expect to be looking at a Class 4 felony, not a Class 5. That distinction directly affects the sentencing range you’re exposed to.

Arizona uses a structured felony sentencing framework that sets mitigated, minimum, presumptive, maximum, and aggravated terms for each felony class – with Class 4 carrying meaningfully higher exposure than Class 5. Whether the case is treated as a “first offense” non-dangerous offense (which often makes probation available) or aggravated by prior convictions changes the calculus dramatically. The Arizona Judicial Branch publishes general information on how felony cases proceed.

What Are the Penalties for a Revenge Porn Conviction?

Revenge porn penalties Arizona courts can impose on a conviction include:

  • Prison or jail time – exposure varies based on the felony class and the defendant’s prior record. First-time, non-dangerous Class 4 offenders are often eligible for probation, but the court can impose a prison sentence within the statutory range.
  • Probation – typically with conditions such as no contact with the alleged victim, counseling, and computer/internet usage restrictions.
  • Fines and surcharges – Arizona felony fines can reach into the thousands, and statutory surcharges substantially increase the out-of-pocket total.
  • Restitution – to compensate the depicted person for therapy costs, lost income, or expenses tied to image takedown efforts.

The collateral consequences often hurt more than the sentence itself. A felony conviction in Arizona means losing firearm rights, voting restrictions until rights are restored, immigration consequences for non-citizens (this is the kind of “crime involving moral turpitude” that draws hard immigration scrutiny), professional license review for nurses, teachers, real estate agents, and others, and a permanent presence on background checks.

Does a Revenge Porn Conviction Require Sex Offender Registration?

No. Arizona’s sex offender registration statute lists specific qualifying offenses, and unlawful distribution of sexual images is not on that list. You will not be required to register as a sex offender for a revenge porn conviction in Arizona.

That is genuinely important. Sex offender registration is one of the most punishing collateral consequences in American criminal law, and avoiding it is a major reason a felony revenge porn case is still survivable in a way some other sex-related charges simply are not. That said, if the underlying conduct also involved a minor, or was charged alongside other offenses (sexual exploitation, voyeurism, child-related charges), registration could attach to those other counts. The charging document controls.

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Can a Misdemeanor Charge Apply Instead?

Sometimes – but not under the revenge porn statute itself, which is a felony offense with no misdemeanor version.

However, prosecutors have charging discretion, and related conduct can sometimes be filed under different statutes that carry misdemeanor exposure – harassment, threatening or intimidating, or extortion-type charges, depending on the facts. Whether a mere threat to disclose an intimate image falls within the revenge porn statute itself depends on the statute’s current language and the specific facts; in many cases the conduct is charged under related Arizona harassment or extortion statutes instead.

A skilled defense lawyer will often push, in plea negotiations, for the State to amend a felony revenge porn charge down to a misdemeanor under one of these alternative statutes. Whether that’s realistic in your case depends on the evidence, your record, and the specific prosecutor.

What Are the Common Defenses to a Revenge Porn Charge?

Arizona revenge porn law has narrow elements, and that narrowness is your defense lawyer’s leverage. Michael Tamou and his team, including former prosecutors and law enforcement officers, work these cases by attacking the elements one by one.

Consent. If the depicted person agreed – expressly or by clear conduct – to the disclosure, the State cannot prove its case. Text messages, prior posts by the depicted person, and the history of how the image was shared all matter.

Lack of intent. The statute requires intent to harm, harass, intimidate, threaten, or coerce. An accidental forward, an image shared in a private group as a joke without targeting the depicted person, or a forward made for a non-harassing purpose can defeat the intent element.

Identity / hacking. Digital evidence is rarely as clean as detectives claim. Shared devices, shared cloud accounts, hacked social media, and spoofed numbers all create reasonable doubt about who actually pressed “send.”

No reasonable expectation of privacy. If the image was already publicly posted by the depicted person, taken in a public place, or otherwise outside the privacy zone the statute protects, the prosecution loses a core element.

First Amendment / newsworthiness. Constitutional defenses occasionally apply where the disclosure had a legitimate public-interest purpose. These are narrow and fact-specific.

For a sense of the kinds of outcomes our team has obtained across serious felony cases, see our case results.

What Should I Do If I’m Under Investigation?

If a detective has reached out, or you’ve been told a report has been filed, the moves you make in the next few days matter more than almost anything that happens later.

  1. Do not talk to the detective. Politely decline. “I’d like to speak with my attorney before answering any questions.” That is the entire script.
  2. Do not contact the alleged victim. Any message – even an apology, even an “I didn’t do it” – becomes Exhibit A.
  3. Preserve digital evidence. Do not delete texts, photos, accounts, or chat histories. Deletion can become a separate obstruction or tampering charge and looks terrible to a jury.
  4. Hire counsel immediately. Charging decisions get made early. Pre-charge intervention by an experienced lawyer can sometimes prevent a case from being filed at all.

If you’re facing a revenge porn investigation or charge in Arizona, talk to a Phoenix revenge porn defense lawyer before you talk to anyone else. Tamou Law Group handles these cases throughout Maricopa County. Call 623-321-4699 for a confidential consultation, or learn more about our broader practice as an Arizona criminal defense lawyer.

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Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the law against posting someone’s nudes in Arizona?

Arizona prosecutes posting someone’s intimate images without consent under A.R.S. § 13-1425, the unlawful distribution of sexual images statute, commonly called the revenge porn law. It applies when an identifiable person with a reasonable expectation of privacy is depicted and the image is shared with intent to harm, harass, or intimidate.

How much prison time can you get for revenge porn in Arizona?

A first-offense Class 4 felony conviction for unlawful distribution of sexual images carries a presumptive prison term of 2.5 years, with a range of roughly 1 to 3.75 years, though probation is often available for non-dangerous first offenders. Prior felony convictions increase the sentencing range substantially under Arizona’s framework.

Is it illegal to share nudes your ex sent you in Arizona?

Yes, sharing intimate photos your ex voluntarily sent you can be a felony in Arizona if you distribute them without consent and with intent to harm or harass. Consent to take or send an image is not consent to share it; A.R.S. § 13-1425 targets the disclosure itself.

Do you have to register as a sex offender for revenge porn in Arizona?

No, a conviction for unlawful distribution of sexual images does not require sex offender registration in Arizona. However, it still creates a permanent felony record with prison exposure, fines, loss of firearm rights, immigration consequences, and lasting damage to employment and professional licensing prospects.

Is threatening to post someone’s nudes a crime in Arizona?

Yes, threatening to disclose someone’s intimate images is a crime in Arizona even if you never actually share them; under A.R.S. § 13-1425 the threat itself is charged as a Class 1 misdemeanor. If you follow through and distribute the image electronically, the charge becomes a Class 4 felony.

How long does Arizona have to file revenge porn charges?

Arizona prosecutors generally have seven years to file felony revenge porn charges, because unlawful distribution of sexual images is a Class 4 or Class 5 felony and A.R.S. § 13-107 sets a seven-year limitations period for those classes. A misdemeanor threat charge must be filed within one year.

Can a revenge porn charge be dismissed in Arizona?

Yes, revenge porn charges can be dismissed or reduced in Arizona when the State cannot prove every element, such as intent to harm, lack of consent, or a reasonable expectation of privacy. Accidental forwarding, images already public, and disclosures for legitimate medical, legal, or journalistic purposes are common defenses.

Should you talk to police if a detective calls about a revenge porn allegation in Arizona?

No, you should not answer detective questions about a revenge porn allegation before speaking with a criminal defense attorney, because your statements about intent can become the State’s strongest evidence. Politely decline the interview, preserve any relevant messages, and contact Tamou Law Group immediately. Call 623-321-4699, 24/7.

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Case Results Disclaimer: The results described on this page are based on specific facts and circumstances and do not guarantee or predict a similar outcome in any future case. Every case is different. Past results do not guarantee future results. No attorney-client relationship is formed by viewing this page or submitting a contact form until a written fee agreement has been signed. Tamou Law Group, PLLC is licensed to practice law in the State of Arizona. This website is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.

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