Jovan FELICIANO, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
Nancy A. Daniels, Public Defender, Kathleen Stover, Assistant Public Defender, Jamie Spivey, Assistant Public Defender, *819 and Leonard Holton, Assistant Public Defender, Tallahassee, for Appellant.
Charlie Crist, Attorney General, and Sheron Wells, Assistant Attorney General, Tallahassee, for Appellee.
BENTON, J.
On appeal from his conviction for violating section 794.05, Florida Statutes (2003), Jovan Feliciano argues that the "statutory rape law" is facially unconstitutional, in that it violates due process for failure to require proof that the defendant knew the minor's age. We affirm.
Mr. Feliciano was twenty-six years old by the time the brief liaison concluded. When they began having sexual intercourse, she was only two months beyond her seventeenth birthday. Given the disparity in their ages, his conduct violated section 794.05(1), Florida Statutes (2003), which provides:
A person 24 years of age or older who engages in sexual activity with a person 16 or 17 years of age commits a felony of the second degree[.]
The statute does not require the State to prove the defendant's knowledge of the minor's age. To the contrary, section 794.021, Florida Statutes (2003), provides that ignorance or belief as to a victim's age is no defense.
When, in this chapter, the criminality of conduct depends upon the victim's being below a certain specified age, ignorance of the age is no defense. Neither shall misrepresentation of age by such person nor a bona fide belief that such person is over the specified age be a defense.
In keeping with the statute, the jury instructions did not require any finding that Mr. Feliciano knew her age. No objection to these instructions was lodged. But the defense had filed and the trial court had denied a motion to dismiss, urging the unconstitutionality of the statute for failure to require scienter.
Cases appellant cites concerned with whether, in construing a criminal statute that is silent on the subject, a mens rea requirement should be inferred, are inapposite. See Staples v. United States,
Even in jurisdictions where statutes are written so that courts must decide whether legislatures intended to make knowledge of the minor's age an element of the offense, decisions on the point have gone overwhelmingly against defendants. See generally Colin Campbell, Annotation, Mistake or lack of information as to victim's age as defense to statutory rape,
As the court recognized in Hodge v. State,
[T]he legislature left no doubt as to its intention that this offense be treated as a strict liability crime for which the State was not required to prove criminal scienter . . . . Section 794.021, Florida Statutes (2000), unequivocally provides that ignorance or mistake of the victim's age is not a defense to the crime[.]
Appellant does not, indeed, argue that the statute is equivocal or doubtful in disallowing ignorance of age as a defense.
Because the Legislature has spoken to this issue with such clarity, statutory construction is not necessary. See Perkins v. State,
A question concerning the requisite knowledge arose century before last. See Holton v. State,
The present case differs importantly from B.B. v. State,
Unemancipated minors are under a statutory disability that precludes consent to sexual activity with adults. See *821 B.B.,
Affirmed.
PADOVANO and LEWIS, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[*] The version of section 794.05 at issue in B.B. provided:
(1) Any person who has unlawful carnal intercourse with any unmarried person, of previous chaste character, who at the time of such intercourse is under the age of 18 years, shall be guilty of a felony of the second degree. . . .
§ 794.05(1), Fla. Stat. (1991). Section 794.05 was amended in 1996 so that only persons over the age of twenty-four, instead of "any person," could be guilty of violating the statute. See Ch. 96-409, § 1, at 2937, Laws of Fla.
