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Is indecent exposure a felony in Arizona?
Quick answer: Usually it is a Class 1 misdemeanor, but it becomes a Class 6 felony if a minor under 15 was present and a Class 4 felony with a prior felony sex offense. Felony versions can trigger sex-offender registration.
On This Page
- Overview
- What Is Indecent Exposure? (A.R.S. 13-1402)
- Penalties for Indecent Exposure: Prison, Probation & Fines
- Will You Have to Register as a Sex Offender?
- How the State Builds a Indecent Exposure Case
- How We Defend a Indecent Exposure Charge in Phoenix
- The Phoenix Court Process & Timeline
- Where Your Case Is Heard & What To Do Now
- FAQs
Both Sides
Former Prosecutors · Law Enforcement · Public Defenders
When you call Tamou Law Group, you reach a firm that handles criminal defense exclusively, with serious experience defending sex crime cases across Arizona. Our team includes former prosecutors and law enforcement officers, so we know exactly how the State builds these cases, and where they fall apart.
At many large firms, the name on the building is a marketing figurehead, you rarely get them on the phone and your case goes to a junior associate. When you hire Tamou Law Group, your case is handled by a full team of attorneys, not associates, including Michael Tamou.
What Is Indecent Exposure? (A.R.S. 13-1402)
The starting point of any defense is understanding exactly what the State has to prove, and what it does not.
Under A.R.S. 13-1402, indecent exposure is exposing your genitals or anus (or a female areola) when another person is present, reckless about whether that person would be offended or alarmed.
What the State Must Prove
- An exposure of the genitals, anus, or female areola.
- Another person was present who would reasonably be offended or alarmed.
- The defendant was reckless about that reaction.
Every one of these elements must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt. If any one fails, the charge fails.
Related & Lesser Charges
Related to public sexual indecency (13-1403) and disorderly conduct. The felony triggers are a minor under 15 or a prior felony sex offense.
Penalties for Indecent Exposure: Prison, Probation & Fines
Sex-crime sentencing in Arizona is severe, and for child-victim offenses it is mandatory and stacks per count.
Indecent exposure is a Class 1 misdemeanor in most cases. It becomes a Class 6 felony if exposed to a minor under 15, and a Class 4 felony if the defendant has a prior felony sex offense. Felony versions can trigger registration.
What Changes Your Sentence
Arizona sex-crime sentencing is driven by a handful of factors, and small differences in the facts can mean the difference between probation and decades in prison:
- The alleged victim’s age, the single biggest driver of the charge class and whether it is a Dangerous Crime Against Children.
- The number of counts, which for child-victim felonies run consecutively (stacked), not concurrently.
- Prior convictions and any position of trust.
- Aggravating and mitigating factors, which move the term up or down within the range.
Penalty Ranges at a Glance
General guidance only. Your actual exposure depends on the specific facts, the exact charges, and your record, which is why an early case review matters.
Will You Have to Register as a Sex Offender?
For many sex offenses, registration is the consequence that outlasts the sentence.
Whether registration applies depends on the specific facts, particularly any felony version of this charge.
Registration is not a footnote to the sentence, for many people it is the harshest part. It requires you to report and continually update your address, employer, and vehicles with the sheriff, often for life. Under A.R.S. 13-3825 you are assigned a community-notification level, and a higher level means active notice to neighbors and schools and public online listing. It restricts where you can live and work and follows you between states.
Because registration is triggered by the offense of conviction, the time to fight it is during the case, before any plea. See fighting sex offender registration for how we work to avoid it, or, where eligible, petition to end it.
How the State Builds a Indecent Exposure Case
Knowing how the State will try to prove the case is the first step in dismantling it.
Understanding how the State will try to prove a indecent exposure case is the first step in taking it apart. Often a single witness account, so identity, intent, and whether anyone was actually present are at issue. In a typical prosecution the evidence falls into a few categories, and every one has weaknesses we exploit:
- The accusation and your statements, the accuser’s account and anything police pulled from you, including through a recorded “confrontation call.”
- The forensic interview, in child cases a recorded interview that can be tainted by leading, suggestive, or repeated questioning.
- Forensic evidence, DNA, a SANE exam, or medical findings, which prove far less than juries assume.
- Digital evidence, phones, computers, chats, and account records, often obtained by warrant or questionable “consent.”
Each of these is a place to fight, on how it was gathered, what it actually shows, and whether it is even admissible.
How We Defend a Indecent Exposure Charge in Phoenix
An accusation is not a conviction. These are the tools we use, layered together.
An accusation is not a conviction. We challenge recklessness, identity, and whether a felony enhancement truly applies. A complete indecent exposure defense layers several strategies together, and each one below is its own discipline, click any to see exactly how we do it:
- Attacking Credibility & Motive
- Challenging the Forensic Interview
- Scrutinizing Digital Evidence
- Testing DNA & Medical Forensics
- Suppressing Unlawful Evidence
- Fighting Sex Offender Registration
We also bring the right experts, from forensic-interview and DNA specialists to digital-forensics examiners, to dismantle the State’s evidence and tell your side of the story.
The Phoenix Court Process & Timeline
There are opportunities to change the outcome at every stage, especially early.
A Phoenix indecent exposure case moves through a defined process, and there are opportunities to change the outcome at every stage:
- Investigation, often weeks or months before any arrest. This is the most important, and most overlooked, time to involve a lawyer.
- Charging, the State files a complaint or takes the case to a grand jury for an indictment.
- Arraignment, you enter a plea and the court sets release conditions.
- Disclosure & investigation, we obtain the State’s evidence and run our own independent investigation.
- Pretrial motions, including motions to suppress unlawful statements and searches, which can gut the case.
- Plea negotiation, where we push for a dismissal, a reduction, or a non-registerable resolution.
- Trial, if the case does not resolve favorably, where the State must prove every element beyond a reasonable doubt.
Felony sex-crime cases often take a year or more. The earlier we are involved, the more of this process we can shape, sometimes enough to keep charges from being filed at all.
Where Your Case Is Heard & What To Do Now
Acting early, and saying nothing, protects your future.
A misdemeanor charge is heard in Phoenix Municipal Court or the local justice court, while a felony version goes to the Maricopa County Superior Court. Many sex crimes are investigated for weeks or months before any arrest, so the time to build your defense is the moment you know you are a suspect, not after charges are filed.
What To Do Right Now
- Do not talk to police or detectives. “Clearing it up” is how innocent people talk themselves into charges.
- Do not take a recorded “confrontation call” from the accuser, and do not consent to any search of your phone or home.
- Preserve your evidence, texts, emails, and anything showing the relationship, timeline, or a motive to lie.
- Call a defense lawyer immediately, ideally before charges are even filed, so we can shape the investigation.
The Experts We Bring to Sex Crime Cases
Sex crime cases are built on interviews, forensics, and digital evidence. We bring the specialists who take them apart.
Forensic Interview Experts
Child Suggestibility
Analyze recorded child interviews for leading, suggestive, or repeated questioning that can taint the entire account.
DNA & Serology Analysts
Independent Testing
Re-examine the lab’s raw data, mixtures, and statistics, and show what the DNA does and does not actually prove.
Forensic Nurse / SANE Reviewers
Medical Findings
Show that “no injuries” is normal and that findings labeled “consistent with abuse” often mean nothing.
Digital Forensics Examiners
Devices & Files
Review extractions, metadata, and access logs to attack who actually possessed the files, and how they were found.
Private Investigators
Motive & Witnesses
Uncover the motive to fabricate, the inconsistencies, and the witnesses the police never bothered to interview.
Psychologists & Memory Experts
False Memory
Explain to a jury how suggestion, coaching, and repeated questioning can create a false but sincere account.
Awards & Recognition
Our recognition for Phoenix sex crime defense is independently verified, click any award to confirm it:
- National Trial Lawyers Top 100
- National Trial Lawyers Top 40 Under 40
- Elite Lawyer 2026 – Criminal Defense
- Super Lawyers – Southwest
- National College for DUI Defense (NCDD)
When you are looking for the best Phoenix sex crime lawyers, these are the independently verified credentials that matter, earned by Founding Attorney Michael Tamou and a full team of attorneys, including former prosecutors.
Phoenix Indecent Exposure FAQs
Quick answers to the questions we hear most.
Is indecent exposure a sex crime that requires registration?
As a misdemeanor it usually does not, but felony indecent exposure (involving a minor or a prior) can require registration, which is why charge level matters so much.
What if the exposure was accidental?
Recklessness is required. A genuinely accidental exposure, with no awareness another would be offended, is a defense.
Can indecent exposure be reduced or dismissed?
Yes. Identity, intent, whether anyone was actually present and offended, and the circumstances are all challengeable.
Will an indecent exposure charge ruin my record?
It can, but a misdemeanor may later be eligible to be set aside or sealed. Avoiding a felony or registration is the priority.
What should I do if I am falsely accused?
Say nothing to police and call a lawyer immediately. Do not try to explain, do not take a recorded confrontation call, and do not contact the accuser. Preserve anything showing motive or timeline. Call 623-321-4699, 24/7.
How long do sex crime investigations take in Arizona?
Often weeks or months before any arrest. If a detective contacts you to “get your side,” you are almost certainly already a suspect. The earlier we are involved, ideally before charges are filed, the more we can do.
Can the charge be reduced to avoid sex offender registration?
Sometimes. Registration is tied to the offense of conviction, so steering toward a non-registerable charge is a central goal of the defense, and must be addressed before any plea.
Will I work with Michael Tamou or a junior associate?
Your defense is handled by a full team of experienced attorneys, not associates, including Michael Tamou. Everything you share is confidential. Call 623-321-4699, 24/7.
Key Takeaways
- Indecent Exposure in Arizona is charged under A.R.S. 13-1402.
- Indecent exposure is a Class 1 misdemeanor in most cases. It becomes a Class 6 felony if exposed to a minor under 15, and a Class 4 felony if the defe…
- Whether registration applies depends on the specific facts, particularly any felony version of the charge.
- Many sex crimes rest on a single accusation, credibility and the forensics are the battleground.
- If a detective contacts you, you are likely already a suspect, say nothing and call 623-321-4699, 24/7.
What Clients Say About Tamou Law
Real Google reviews from clients we have defended across Phoenix and Maricopa County. Every review is from a criminal defense client, never padded with non-legal work.
Two Arizona Offices, One Team
We serve all of Maricopa County and the surrounding area, with free, confidential consultations 24/7 by phone and in-person meetings at either office by appointment.
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.






