The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

House bill offers 2nd chance to sexting teens

- By Angie Wang The Associated Press

CINCINNATI » The punishment for teenagers caught sharing sexually explicit images could be lessened in Ohio.

A House bill would allow first-time offenders who are 18 or younger a chance to have their charges dismissed upon completion of a program that explains the impact of sexting.

Through the program, teens would review relevant laws, examine how sharing explicit material affects personal relationsh­ips and learn about the longevity of content posted online.

Such diversion programs already are in use in some counties, but the proposed legislatio­n would require all local courts to implement them. Firsttime offenders are eligible for the program only if the minor involved is older than 13 and less than four years younger than the accused.

“The goal is a second chance,” said Republican state Rep. Brian Hill, a co-sponsor of the bill. “It gives young people who did something stupid one chance to wake up.”

The bill was introduced in the Senate on July 5. The Senate should take it up this fall. If signed into law, the bill would standardiz­e how teen sexting cases are handled across the state.

Judge Adolfo Tornichio described the state’s current treatment of such cases as “inconsiste­nt” in March. He said minors caught sharing sexually explicit images can be labeled as sex offenders in some counties but not in others.

Hill said the suicide of 15-year-old Camden Ross prompted him to propose the legislatio­n.

Camden’s mother, Claudette Ross, said the local sheriff’s office called that day with questions about his involvemen­t in the circulatio­n of explicit photos.

At the time, Camden was a freshman at Tri-Valley High School in Muskingum County, which already offers a diversion program for teens caught sexting.

Ross said the program was mentioned to her but she had no idea what it meant for her son.

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