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Bill Would Make "Revenge Porn" Illegal In Ohio, Similar To Bans In 38 Other States

Sen. Joe Schiavoni (D-Boardman) talks with Katelyn Bowden (center), founder of the BADASS Army, along with members Jacklyn Lefevers of Cincinnati and Belinda Berry of Pittsburgh.
Karen Kasler
Sen. Joe Schiavoni (D-Boardman) talks with Katelyn Bowden (center), founder of the BADASS Army, along with members Jacklyn Lefevers of Cincinnati and Belinda Berry of Pittsburgh.

National stats estimate 1 in 25 people is threatened or harassed by the sharing of explicit images of themselves online without their consent or knowledge. And right now, it’s not illegal in Ohio to do that. But there’s a new bill that hopes to ban so-called “revenge porn”.

Last year, Youngstown mother Katelyn Bowden found out nude pictures of her were online when an acquaintance confessed to posting them after stealing her ex-boyfriend’s phone. Bowden founded an online group of survivors working against revenge porn and image abuse. “I was told that, to the state of Ohio, a cell phone had more rights than me, a human being. I was hurt, I was depressed, I felt ashamed for taking photos within the confines of a trusting relationship,” Bowden said.

The bill from Sen. Joe Schiavoni (D-Boardman) would make sharing nude pictures without the subject’s consent a first degree misdemeanor. 38 states already ban non-consensual sharing of explicit images, but victims say it’s hard to get pictures removed once they’re online.

Copyright 2018 The Statehouse News Bureau

Contact Karen at 614/578-6375 or at kkasler@statehousenews.org.