Teens face jail for private “sexts”
There’s no evidence the photos were ever sent to anyone else, and police only became aware of them because they searched Copening’s phone for unrelated reasons that haven’t been specified. Even so, the teen—formerly the starting quarterback at his high school—faces decades on the Sex Offender Registry and up to ten years behind bars if convicted. He’s also been benched from the team while Jack Britt High School investigates the matter.
Copening’s girlfriend—who remains unnamed in the news articles—is also facing charges, ABC11 reported.
These teen-sexting witch hunts are almost always outrageous; they conflate child pornography with something far less sinister. It’s perfectly normal—and wildly common—for kids to express an interest in sex. Should authority figures discourage underage sexting? Sure. Should they ruin kids’ lives for doing it anyway? Absolutely not. Full story. Robby Soave, Reason.com
Should these teens be punished? If so, what would you consider reasonable consequences?
* This story was originally published as a post from the blog "Huckleberries Online." Read all stories from this blog