I am glad they are taking steps in the right direction. I think it is "overkill" to give a teenager a 10 year sentence for sexting. However I am still concerned that this is a Class A misdemeanor with a one year sentence to a county jail (why not a Class "C"?). My other thoughts on this subject are as follows: Are we sending a message that sex is bad? I listened to the View this morning with Barbara Walters and she made a comment that it is generally the boys who initiate this (I think it is just as much the girls as it is the boys). Kids are kids, and I feel we have too much of a knee jerk reaction over this whole sexting thing.
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Texas officials propose 'sexting' legislation
By Mike Ward, Austin American-Statesman
Published 10 November 2010 09:13 AM
AUSTIN - Moving to curb the growing scourge of "sexting," two top Texas officials announced an effort this week to change state law to crack down on teenagers who send nude cell phone photos of themselves and others.
Attorney General Greg Abbott, a Republican, and state Sen. Kirk Watson, D-Austin, said they were working together to allow the prosecution of minors on Class A misdemeanor charges instead of the third-degree felony charges they face now.
The felony charges can send youths to a state prison and force them to register as sex offenders for the rest of their lives.
"Sexting is real. ... It is morally hazardous," said Watson, who said he plans to file a bill to make the change when the Legislature convenes in January.
"One study shows 1 in 5 teenagers has sent a sexually suggestive picture by text ... and 1 in 3 has received such an image," Watson said. "Our laws have not kept up with our technology."
In a 2008 study by the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, 22 percent of teenage girls who responded said they had been texted or had posed for nude or seminude photos.
Officials said the law that covers sexting was enacted years ago to crack down on child pornography in the possession of adults. It carries a penalty of two to 10 years in prison and up to a $10,000 fine.
Abbott said that in two cases in recent years, a 17-year-old boy was charged with a felony for sending an explicit photo of a 16-year-old girl, and an eighth-grader was jailed overnight for sending suggestive photos. Abbott said he did not know whether either youth went to prison.
Both officials said the change in law would not go easy on sexting but would instead focus prevention and education efforts on teenagers who might not otherwise know how dangerous and harmful the practice is.
Under the proposed change, Watson said, the crime for minors would be punishable by a year in the county jail and up to a $4,000 fine. He and Abbott said probation and restricted cell phone use would be key components for first offenders.
"Studies show that teenaged students are increasingly taking, sending and receiving explicit pictures of themselves on their mobile telephones," Abbott said. "This practice is not just harmful to young Texans, it is potentially illegal."
http://www.dallasnews.com/news/polit...xting-3358.ece