A sexting incident at The Lovett School in Atlanta is being investigated by police.
From vsbtv.com:
Police told Channel 2 Action News reporter Richard Elliot that a female eighth-grade student sent an inappropriate photo of herself to a male eighth-grade student, who in turn forwarded the picture to his friends. Investigators said those friends then sent the photo to other students at Lovett during the week of Feb. 22.
Sexting is when a kid sends a naughty picture of himself or herself to someone else. Basically, the kid is victimizing herself by producing child porn. The fact that the victim and the perpetrator are the same person is immaterial to a government bureaucracy. They only know that the perpetrator must be punished.
Of course, the recipient of the picture is immediately in possession of child porn and, when he sends it to someone else, he is then distributing child porn.
Atlanta police are investigating whether any laws were broken.
Actually, what they’re probably investigating is whether prosecuting someone in this case is so stupid that it might embarrass the city.
When Elliot spoke to Atlanta police about the incident, authorities said that “every student who passed the inappropriate photo to another could be charged with misdemeanor child pornography.”
[...]
Sexting can result in charges of criminal solicitation and corruption of a minor, in addition to possession of child pornography. People convicted of sexting could be sentenced to prison.
Georgia complies with the 2006 Adam Walsh Act which requires juvenile convicted of sex crimes to register as sex offenders. Misdemeanor crimes are Tier 1 which puts them in the registry for 15 years. In fact, in Georgia, you don’t even have to be a sex offender to get on the list.
All “for the children“, of course.
Credit for the link goes to theagitator.com.
