Some excellent quotations from attorney Larry Walters in this in-depth interview: When Sex and Cell Phones Collide: Inside the Prosecution of a Teen Sexting Case, touching on a number of key points absent in most mainstream media coverage of sexting:
1. Sexting is normal for teens. It’s not a trend, a plague, a disease, or a shocking deviant act.
The idea that teens and kids would be creating child pornography themselves and distributing it by cell phone was never contemplated at the time [child pornography] laws were originally passed. Now, with the influx of technology, we have kids doing things that they were not doing before – creating content, creating pictures, and sending pictures – and, frankly, allowing that technology to be a part of their lives to the extent where it’s even a part of their sex lives. Kids in our current culture allow technology to infiltrate everything they do. They express themselves, whether it’s anger, love, hate, or intimacy, through technology.
2. Teens have few legal rights and protections, especially in schools.
Students are losing constitutional rights – the right to privacy and their expectation of privacy on school grounds. Their cell phones areย getting seized more often and inspected,ย and these pictures are being found. School officials think nothing of saying, “Give me that cell phone,” and paging through it. The courts aren’t doing much about it. Every once in a while you’ll have a brave judge that will stand up and say, “That’s wrong.” The information is coming to light more often as those constitutional rights are being whittled away.
3. Charging a teen with producing child pornography is unnecessary and unfair, even if you want to use the legal system to address a case of nonconsensual sexting.
A lot of this is a problem with prosecutorial discretion and simple humanity. There are statutes like disorderly conduct, harassment, and stalking – catch-all provisions that police officers and prosecutors always use when they don’t what to charge somebody with when there’s a new behavior at issue. There’s an annoying communication law in Florida. Certainly, there are numerous other options out there for law enforcement.
4. Teens are expected to meet unrealistic ideals for sexual behavior.
I think we’re holding kids to a higher standard for similar behavior than we do adults. When adults send pictures of themselves engaged in sexual activity to each other – a common thing – there’s no crime committed, it’s commonplace, it’s enjoyable and everybody goes on. Kids do exactly the same thing with other kids – they have the same desires and the same erotic feelings – but they’re held to a higher standard. All of a sudden, it’s this horrible crime. It strikes me as odd that we’re holding kids to a higher standard than adults.
What a find! These quotes are fantastic and I am so thrilled to have discovered the paper you linked to. It’s so refreshing to hear lawyers speak sanely about young people, and especially about the widespread sexual adultism that teens are so often oppressed by.
Thank you, thank you, thank you, for highlighting these quotes!
thanks for pointing me to your blog–great stuff. I am re-posting the link re: Witsell suicide. Thanks!