Dayton Daily News

‘Cellphone had more rights than me’

Bill would make posting explicit images without permission a crime.

- By Laura A. Bischoff

COLUMBUS — Nine months ago, Katelyn Bowden was shocked and humiliated to find intimate photos of her from her ex-boyfriend’s stolen cellphone landed on dozens of websites.

Bowden reported it to the police, only to be told the only crime committed was the cellphone theft.

“I was told that in the state of Ohio, the cellphone had more rights than me, a human being,” said Bowden, of Youngstown. “I was hurt. I was depressed. I felt ashamed for taking photos within the confines of a trusting relationsh­ip.”

Bowden-co-founded BADASS, a grassroots movement to help victims of revenge porn, and is now advocating for Ohio legislatio­n that would make it a crime to share sexually explicit photos of videos of someone without consent.

States en. Joe Schiavoni, D-Boardman, said he will soon

introduce legislatio­n that would make posting explicit images without permission a criminal misdemeano­r punishable by up to six months in jail. He said his bill will also provide protection­s against job or scholarshi­p loss for victims.

“You have people everyday that are being victim- ized, whether it be a voluntary picture or video that was sent to one individual that then is turned over to one of these sites like ‘myex. com’ or one of these revenge sites in order extort money from the victim and victim- ize them over and over or if it’s a situation where you have a hack,” he said. Even lost or stolen phones can be the source of intimate images publicly posted without per- mission, Schiavoni said.

Revenge porn is the vernacular term for non-con- sensual distributi­on of sexually graphic images of peo- ple — photos or videos that were obtained without consent or with consent in the context of an intimate relationsh­ip, according to the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative.

“It’s an attack. It’s an assault. It’s a way of humiliatin­g and shaming some- body, by exposing them to millions of people on the internet without their per- mission,” Bowden said. “I decided I didn’t want anyone else to feel that way.”

Bowden contacted other victims, worked to get pho- tos taken down and founded “Battling Against Demeaning and Abusive Selfie Sharing.”

Bowden said the group now counts 650 victims among its members, including 200 in Ohio.

Schiavoni said 38 states and the District of Columbia adopted laws specifical­ly targeting revenge porn activities.

Aurora Police Det. Dan Kalk, who is also an attorney, said it’s challengin­g to use existing laws against telecommun­ications harassment and extortion to prosecute revenge porn actions. Schiavoni’s bill would make it easier to go after those responsibl­e for such behavior, he said.

Schiavoni introduced a similar bill in September 2016, but it failed to make it out of committee before the legislativ­e session ended in December 2016.

 ??  ?? Katelyn Bowden
Katelyn Bowden

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