Life can be a continual series of balancing acts, in which behaviors that are acceptable up to a point can become unacceptable once that point is passed. When an interest in someone else becomes a fascination, then goes further into an obsession that can lead the object of the attention to feel threatened. This is the subject of multiple Kentucky statutes.
Stalking is either a misdemeanor or a felony, depending on the nature of the stalking activities as well as additional circumstances (the existence of a protective order, or that the behavior includes the use of a deadly weapon).
In this state, “stalking” is defined as a course of conduct directed at a specific individual that would cause a reasonable person in his or her situation to suffer substantial mental distress. Note that the law requires a person to cross multiple thresholds before the activities qualify as stalking behaviors:
Anyone accused of stalking behavior who in fact did not intend to do so has multiple avenues open to challenge any criminal charge of stalking; even someone whose behavior meets the minimum threshold can still offer a defense to reduce the possible penalty to a misdemeanor instead of a felony. The difference between acquittal and conviction, or a felony as opposed to a lesser offense, can depend heavily on the selection of defense counsel experienced with criminal defense cases.
"*" indicates required fields