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Minnesota Criminal Law

Defenses and Evidence Rules in Minnesota Criminal Sexual Conduct Cases


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At a Glance
  • Shield:limits sexual-history evidence.
  • Defenses:identity, consent, facts.
  • Gone:some old defenses.
  • Rules:favor the prosecution.

Defending a criminal sexual conduct case in Minnesota means working within specific evidence rules — including the rape-shield law — and understanding which defenses still exist and which the Legislature has eliminated. Some defenses people assume are available are not, and a few important evidentiary rules shape how these cases are tried. This page explains the current landscape.

The Rape-Shield Law (Minn. Stat. § 609.347 and Rule 412)

Minnesota's rape-shield law sharply limits the use of evidence about a complainant's prior sexual history. As a general rule, evidence of the victim's previous sexual conduct is not admissible, subject to narrow statutory exceptions. One recognized exception, for example, allows evidence of specific prior conduct in limited circumstances such as showing the source of semen, pregnancy, or disease. Courts also must weigh a defendant's constitutional confrontation rights, but the default strongly favors exclusion.

What this means for you: The instinct to "put the complainant's history on trial" generally won't work in Minnesota. Effective defense focuses elsewhere — on the elements, the evidence of the specific incident, and the reliability of the allegation.

Two Rules That Favor the Prosecution

Minnesota law contains two provisions defendants are often surprised by:

  • No corroboration required. The testimony of the complainant need not be corroborated. A case can proceed — and result in a conviction — on the complainant's testimony alone, without physical evidence or additional witnesses.
  • No resistance required. The state does not have to show that the complainant physically resisted.

Defenses That No Longer Exist

This is critical, because outdated sources still describe defenses that Minnesota has eliminated:

  • The "voluntary relationship" / marital exception is gone. Former § 609.349, which shielded certain conduct between spouses or cohabiting partners, was repealed in 2019. Marriage or an ongoing relationship is not a defense.
  • Consent is not a defense to age-based charges. Where a charge rests on the complainant's age, the complainant's consent is not a defense.
  • Mistake about age is generally not a defense for those same age-based charges.

Defenses That May Be Available

Depending entirely on the facts, defenses in a CSC case can include:

  • Consent — in cases not based on age or incapacity, whether there was a freely given present agreement (as the statute defines consent) is often the central dispute.
  • The conduct didn't occur / mistaken or false allegation — challenging whether the act happened or whether this defendant was involved.
  • Identity — particularly where identification is uncertain.
  • Failure of proof on a specific element — for example, the absence of force, coercion, injury, a qualifying relationship, or the required age gap.
  • Constitutional challenges — such as unlawful search, interrogation, or identification procedures, which can lead to suppression of evidence.
  • The medical-purposes exclusion (§ 609.348) — the CSC statutes do not apply to legitimate medical procedures.

Statute of Limitations

Minnesota has expanded the time allowed to bring CSC charges, and for some offenses the time limit has been eliminated entirely. Because the rules depend on the offense, the date, and the facts, the limitations period in any particular case should be checked carefully rather than assumed.

Victim Identity Confidentiality (Minn. Stat. § 609.3471)

Certain records that could reveal the identity of a victim are confidential, which affects how information is handled during a case.

Key Terms

  • Rape-shield law: The rule (§ 609.347 / Rule 412) generally barring evidence of a complainant's prior sexual conduct.
  • No-corroboration rule: The complainant's testimony need not be corroborated.
  • Repealed marital exception: The former voluntary-relationship defense, eliminated in 2019.
  • Suppression: Excluding evidence obtained in violation of constitutional rights.

How Rule 412 evidence is litigated before trial

Rule 412 is usually fought as a pretrial evidentiary motion. The accused must make a motion before trial, unless there is good cause for a later request, and the motion must set out the offer of proof with particularity.

If the offer is sufficient, the court holds a hearing outside the jury's presence and decides whether the evidence is admissible under Rule 412. The court's order controls whether, and how far, the defense may refer to prior-sexual-conduct evidence at trial.

For the broader motion framework, see pretrial motions and evidentiary hearings in Minnesota criminal cases.

Updated May 18, 2026 · Law verified as of May 29, 2026. This article is general information about Minnesota law, not legal advice.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use the complainant's sexual history as a defense?

Generally no. Minnesota's rape-shield law bars evidence of a complainant's previous sexual conduct except in narrow, specific situations.

Is marriage a defense to a CSC charge in Minnesota?

No. The voluntary-relationship/marital exception was repealed in 2019, so marriage or an ongoing relationship is not a defense.

Can I be convicted on the accuser's word alone?

Yes. Minnesota law provides that the complainant's testimony need not be corroborated, so a conviction can rest on that testimony.

Is it a defense that I didn't know the person's age?

For age-based charges, generally no. Neither mistake about age nor the complainant's consent is a defense in those situations.

What defenses might actually apply?

Depending on the facts: consent (in non-age, non-incapacity cases), challenging whether the act occurred, identity, failure to prove a required element, and constitutional challenges leading to suppression.

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The information on this article is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Reading this article does not create an attorney-client relationship.

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