No sex act ever appears in this film. However, the murder victim is shown wearing a frilly see-through robe. Furthermore, evidence comes out at trial describing the victim as manifestly guilty of adultery, fornication, and promiscuity on a grand and manifold scale. The prosecution advances the theory that the defendant, her husband, killed her in a jealous rage.
A police witness alludes to abortion (described as "illegal operation"). Furthermore, police evidence reasonably establishes the defendant to have had an adulterous relationship with his secretary, causing her to fall pregnant. The defendant, realizing the implications of his act for the first time, desperately pleads with the woman involved NOT to have an abortion. Presumably, she desists from her planning in that direction.
Except for the murder victim (see above), all characters, male and female, adult and child, dress modestly and appropriately for being seen on a public street, a public park, a business office, or a hotel lobby, or in court, or (briefly) in a remote hunting lodge. (But if a judge "looks sexy in his black robe," no costumer could be held responsible for that.)