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Ohio Criminal Defense Laws

Ohio classifies criminal offenses as felonies (first through fifth degree) and misdemeanors (first through fourth degree, plus minor misdemeanors). Ohio uses a combination of indefinite sentencing for first and second-degree felonies (since 2019) and definite sentencing for lower-degree felonies. Record sealing is available for many offenses, though OVI convictions and sex offenses requiring registration are excluded.

Last verified: 2026-02-25

Statute of Limitations

No limit for murder; 6 years for most felonies; 2 years for misdemeanorsOhio Rev. Code § 2901.13

Murder and aggravated murder have no statute of limitations. Rape and sexual battery must be charged within 25 years. Most other felonies within 6 years. Misdemeanors within 2 years. Minor misdemeanors within 6 months.

Exceptions

Sex Offenses25 years for rape/sexual battery; 20 years for other sexual offensesOhio Rev. Code § 2901.13

Rape and sexual battery charges must be brought within 25 years. Other specified sexual offenses, robbery, and burglary must be charged within 20 years.

Key Ohio Statutes

Felony Sentencing RangesOhio Rev. Code § 2929.14

First-degree felonies carry an indefinite term with a minimum of 3–11 years. Second-degree felonies carry a minimum of 2–8 years. Third-degree felonies: 9–36 months. Fourth-degree: 6–18 months. Fifth-degree: 6–12 months. First-degree misdemeanors carry up to 180 days in jail.

Record Sealing / ExpungementOhio Rev. Code § 2953.32

Eligible offenders may apply to seal their criminal record. Timing varies: 1 year after final discharge for most eligible offenses, 3 years for third-degree felonies. Not eligible: first/second-degree felonies, sex offenses requiring registration, OVI convictions, and offenses of violence with prison time.

OVI (DUI) PenaltiesOhio Rev. Code § 4511.19

Ohio uses a 10-year lookback period (20 years if chemical test was refused). BAC limit is 0.08%. First offense: 3 days to 6 months jail, $375–$1,075 fine, 1–3 year license suspension. OVI convictions cannot be sealed or expunged.

The Ohio Constitution guarantees the right to counsel in criminal prosecutions. Indigent defendants are entitled to appointed counsel through the county public defender or court-appointed counsel.

Official Sources

Not Legal Advice

This page summarizes publicly available statutes and rules for informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is created by viewing this content. Laws change — always verify with the primary source or consult a licensed attorney in Ohio.

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