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Delaware may be next state to pass ‘revenge porn’ legislation

DOVER, Del. — Delaware is poised to make “revenge porn” a crime when the state’s General Assembly returns next week.

Rep. Andria Bennett, D-Dover

Rep. Andria Bennett, D-Dover, has introduced legislation that would make it a crime to disseminate video or photos of a person who is nude or engaged in sexual acts without his or her consent.

“In today’s world of social media and digital communication, it has become very easy to share information with many people in a short amount of time,” Bennett said in a statement on Delaware House Democrats’ website. “As a result of that, this type of behavior has become more and more common — and more and more hurtful to the victims.”

Bennett-sponsored H.B. 260 expands the existing crime of violation of privacy to include revenge porn or “intimate partner harassment.” Violators who circulates revenge porn would be guilty of a Class B misdemeanor, which could be increased further to a Class G felony if the material was originally obtained without the victim’s consent, distributed for profit, or includes identifying information.

“This isn’t like the days where an embarrassing photo is passed around a class of 30. These intimate photos and videos are posted online and shared around the world – sometimes even with the victim’s name and personal information included,” Bennett said.”This is the sort of thing that may have seemed harmless before the days of Facebook and Twitter, but which is now capable of severely harming a victim’s quality of life.”

Legislatures in Georgia, Arizona, Washington, Maryland, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Rhode Island and Maryland have considered implementing similar laws. California and New Jersey already have enacted revenge porn laws.

Delaware’s H.B. 260
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  • Good on them. The sooner they get the law passed and enforced, the better. As an ethical pornographer, I despise revenge porn and those who make it. It doesn't deserve free speech protection because it's not speech, it's assault with a camera.

    • Agreed, except I feel some of these laws are a bit over-broad. I fear the over criminalization of certain acts: do we really want to convict a jealous teen of a felony?

      • No more than they should be charged with trafficking in kiddie porn for peer sexting. I recognize that laws of this type can be applied abusively and should be written with care to define varying levels of culpability, as many laws are. But I still see the need for them. A felony conviction can certainly ruin a young person's life, but so can the dissemination of images and information that will make them targets of bullying and rejection.

        I distrust any legislation drafted in haste to address some issue-of-the-week and have no doubt that some of the revenge porn laws recently enacted will be examined in court cases with modifications made as a result, but we live in an age in which privacy is a vanishing commodity and what we can do to safeguard what's left of it we're obligated to attempt.

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