New Mexico Attorney General Would Rather See Sexting Teens Treated As Sex Offenders Than See His Funding 'Jeopardized'
from the christ,-what-an-asshole dept
Teens sexting can't be addressed by existing laws. Law enforcement -- which far too often chooses to involve itself in matters best left to parents -- bends child pornography laws to "fit" the crime. They often state they're only doing this to save kids from the harm that might result by further distribution of explicit photos. How exactly turning a teen into a child pornographer who must add his or herself to the sex offender registries is less harmful than the imagined outcomes cited by law enforcement is never explained.
Over in New Mexico, legislators are making an honest attempt to keep sexting teens from being treated like sex offenders. And it's law enforcement that's leading the opposition to the proposed changes. The bill would continue to uphold harsh penalties for actual child pornographers while decriminalizing sexting between teens.
The New Mexico Attorney General is having none of it, as Reason's Robby Soave reports:
"I cannot support an amendment that weakens protections for teenagers from predatory activity, creates a dangerous new child exploitation loophole, and places New Mexico's federal Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force funding in jeopardy,” said Attorney General Hector Balderas in a statement, according to the Alamogordo Daily News.This statement is not only ridiculous, but it shows the AG is more interested in budget lines than the future of teens who do the sort of things teens are inevitably going to do. Balderas is explicitly stating that he's willing to sacrifice young lives in order to secure his task force's funding. That's just sickening. In Balderas' world, sexting teens are nothing more than a revenue stream.
As Soave points out, the legislation still contains harsh punishments for child pornographers and does nothing to create a "loophole" for accused offenders. What it would do is keep teens from being charged for exchanging explicit photos with their peers by carving out an exception for photos exchanged by teens ages 14-17.
There's nothing logical about applying sexual predator/child pornography laws in this way. But Balderas has helpfully explained why many law enforcement officials are more than happy to do exactly that. There's good money in chasing down child pornographers -- a criminal act reviled by a majority of their constituents. Anything that might jeopardize these funds -- like treating sexting teens as a disciplinary/educational problem rather than a criminal one -- is to be rejected out of hand.
Soave notes Balderas was so incensed by this threat to his funding that he and his staff walked out of the hearing in a show of outrageously stupid, callously self-centered solidarity. Balderas may want to play hardball with child pornographers, but he's also shown he's more than willing to fuck a few kids himself when there's money on the line.
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Filed Under: funding, hector balderas, law enforcement, new mexico, sex offenders, sexting
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WOW. That…that isn’t something you read on Techdirt every day.
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Hey Tim
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Response to: S. T. Stone on Mar 9th, 2016 @ 2:10pm
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It'll be interesting to read the cease & desist/take down demand when it (inevitably) gets sent to Techdirt and is subsequently posted.
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Far to often the elected elite cause more trouble than is solved with all of their new laws!
Fuck this Balderas guy!
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Screwing kids to save the cash flow.
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well..
(Screamin fuckin eagles protecting children)
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Dangerous Territory
Any student could bring down any adult by the simply act of that child sending that adult a photo.
Most children would not but there are definitely some that would.
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Re: Dangerous Territory
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Justice: Serving the truth
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Once it becomes the norm, it will mean nothing
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Re: Re: Dangerous Territory
But if that individual is associated with, say, education or works with kids in any way, an accusation/investigation is often sufficient to destroy the individual's career, family life, etc.
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Silly rabbit...
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Pretty much every single day there's a police officer or bureaucrat found to have child porn or have assaulted a child
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I'd say both are equally hideous.
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This is how you make a law enforcement official stop complaining about how evil encryption is.
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Go figure
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Age limit
Kids younger than 14 should still be charged as sex offenders? Or are they already exempt?
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Sometimes you have to destroy the village in order to save it.
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They're not innocent if they broke the law.
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The reason of course, is because his political party was not mentioned. Party affiliation is only mentioned when the politician criticized is a Republican.
That is no different than most other journalist, though.
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So, he's saying someone can't be charged with creating something they didn't create? That sounds reasonable to me.
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Huh?
Let me get this straight. It would be illegal for someone under 14 to distribute kiddy porn. Then, for a period of 4 years of their life (age 14 - 17), it would suddenly become legal for them to do so. Then, upon turning 18, it would just as suddenly become illegal again.
Sounds pretty screwy to me.
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No, he's saying they can't be charged with anything, including possession.
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Re: Dangerous Territory
Most children would not but there are definitely some that would."
Let's hope one that would reads this...
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There is no equivalence in this case. Sexting is not "sexual abuse" and the potential for long-term harm to minors from sexting is far less than the harm from being forcefully dragged through the legal system and coming out the other side as a registered sex offender.
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Re: Dangerous Territory
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Best sentence of the week award, definitely. :)
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