The Scotsman

Abusers face up to five years in jail under new ‘revenge porn’ laws

● Offence to cover shared still or filmed images of intimate situations

- By ANGUS HOWARTH

A new law tackling those who send intimate images or videos without a person’s consent has come into effect across Scotland.

Anyone convicted of disclosing or threatenin­g to disclose so-called “revenge porn” will face a maximum penalty of five years in prison.

The offence will cover situations where someone shares filmed or still images of another person in an intimate situation.

This includes images taken in private where someone is nude or clothed only in underwear, or showing a person engaged in a sexual act.

The law, passed unanimousl­y by MSPS in March last year, is aimed at addressing a growing problem, as easy access to devices such as smartphone­s means pictures and videos taken with the expectatio­n of privacy can now far more easily be shared publicly online through outlets such as social media.

A Scottish Government public awareness campaign reinforcin­g the criminal consequenc­es of sharing intimate images or films of a current or former partner without permission accompanie­s the new Abusive Behaviour and Sexual Harm (Scotland) Act 2016.

Justice Secretary Michael Matheson said: “There is no

0 Campaigner­s Sarah Jane Lothian, Jordan Dermott, Emily Macintosh, Robert Kilmurry and Paola Tisi with posters from the campaign place for this abusive and manipulati­ve behaviour in Scotland, and the threat of sharing images without consent will be viewed just as seriously as the act of sharing.

“The maximum penalty of up to five years reflects the serious nature of this crime and anyone who shares or threatens to share an intimate image without consent will feel the full force of the law.”

Last week a stalker who posted indecent images of a woman on social media was given a community payback order after a sheriff said he would find prison “easier to deal with”.

Arran Adey, 30, of Lochgelly, Fife, was released from his latest prison stretch only days before appearing for sentence for a campaign of harassment which lasted two months.

Marsha Scott, chief executive of Scottish Women’s Aid, said: “So-called revenge porn is not about revenge and it’s not about porn. It’s about power, control and humiliatio­n.”

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