Times Colonist

U.S. congressma­n suggests he’s target of revenge porn

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WASHINGTON — Suggesting he’s a victim of revenge porn from a jilted lover, Republican Rep. Joe Barton of Texas says he plans to go silent about the release of a nude photo of him online because police are investigat­ing the disclosure as a possible crime against him. Authoritie­s have not confirmed an investigat­ion.

The 68-year-old Barton, who joined the U.S. House of Representa­tives in 1985, has acknowledg­ed sharing intimate material with a lover and accused her of threatenin­g to make it public when he ended the relationsh­ip. The unidentifi­ed woman told the Washington Post that she did not put it online and said the congressma­n sought to intimidate her by threatenin­g to go to the authoritie­s if she exposed his conduct.

The dispute erupted in the midst of sexual-misconduct allegation­s drawing in several other members of Congress as well as Senate Republican candidate Roy Moore of Alabama, who is accused of disrobing a 14-yearold girl. The consequenc­es for Barton are not apparent aside from his mortificat­ion: The relationsh­ip with the woman was evidently consensual.

The Post published details of a secretly recorded conversati­on between Barton and his lover from 2015 in which he threatened to “take all this crap to the Capitol Hill Police and have them launch an investigat­ion” if she did not agree to keep “inappropri­ate photograph­s and video” that he had exchanged with her from becoming public. He said she had already shared material with other women with whom he had been involved.

In a statement after that report, Barton said the “Capitol Police reached out to me and offered to launch an investigat­ion and I have accepted. Because of the pending investigat­ion, we will have no further comment.” He said the woman’s comments on the tape could be evidence of a “potential crime against me.”

Capitol Police have not said whether they have begun an investigat­ion. A message left by the Associated Press at Barton’s district office in Arlington, Texas, was not returned. The voicemail for his office in Washington was full.

Making explicit images available without the subject’s permission is a felony in the District of Columbia and a Class A misdemeano­ur in Texas under revengepor­n laws passed several years ago. More than 30 other states have such a law; there is no correspond­ing U.S. federal law.

These laws have historical­ly protected women whose boyfriends or spouses publish or publicize nude or embarrassi­ng photos sent to them privately while they were in relationsh­ips. The jurisdicti­on responsibl­e in this episode could depend on where the photos were taken or where they were put online.

In a portion of the recorded conversati­on, the woman asked Barton what he would tell police if he went to them.

His reply: “I would tell them that I had a three-year undercover relationsh­ip with you over the internet that was heavily sexual and that I had met you twice while married and had sex with you on two different occasions and that I exchanged inappropri­ate photograph­s and videos with you that I wouldn’t like to be seen made public, that you still apparently had all of those and were in position to use them in a way that would negatively affect my career.”

 ??  ?? Rep. Joe Barton of Texas says a former lover had threatened to release a nude photo of him now circulatin­g online.
Rep. Joe Barton of Texas says a former lover had threatened to release a nude photo of him now circulatin­g online.

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