Or teenagers could be, you know, not stupid enough to send naked pictures around. They should be smart enough to delete the pictures after a few...uses if they do get them. I'm 21, and dated a girl three years younger than me for 2.5 years, with the relationship ending all of six months ago or so. You bet your sweet bippy we knew the legal ramifications of every single thing we did (should we have gotten caught) and behaved accordingly. Deleted dirty texts. Fooled around in places where we were unlikely to be caught. Were waiting until she turned eighteen to do the "wild thing". It is not the law's business to be parsing out the difference between an 18 year old who has pictures of his underage girlfriend and the 20 something who collects pictures of under age girls and the 30 year old who held onto the mass "sext" that his nephew sent of his teeny bopper girlfriend. Again, the solution is simple - don't keep naked pictures of under aged girls around your house, and you won't get popped for under-age porn charges. The dude could (more than likely, based what I know of consent laws) legally have sex with her. Isn't that enough?You mean, he sent pictures of his girlfriend that he'd been dating for years from before he was a legal adult. That just makes him a bad boyfriend and an asshole, not a sex offender. If the law is incapable of coping with the realities of teens dating, then the law is in horribly bad shape.
Fair enough. I, personally, consider sexual offenses to be deserving of life sentences. Hell, I'd sentence your average rapist far harsher than I'd sentence you average murderer. As I understand it, murder usually is done with a goal in mind. Money, anger, revenge, honor, etc. There's a person specific reason. It deserves a long ass sentence, but the chance of recidivism strikes me as lower than average. On the other hand, rapists tend who have a psychological reason. A need to dominate, to prove their power, etc. That's not super specific. That strikes me as the kind of thing that will pop up again. Let the fuckers rot. But you are right - the law as written sets a poor precedent.I'm not sure if you're being willfully obtuse, but allowing Congress to decide that a particular class of criminal hasn't been in jail long enough after the fact is a terrible precedent.
You want longer sentences for sex offenders? Fine. Then change the laws so future sex offenders get longer sentences. But holding people indefinitely after they've served their court-appointed sentences just because they're the class of criminal the public currently sends the most fearful letters about makes a mockery of our justice system.
I admit though, I am far less than objective on these issues. In addition to my experiences with a tweenage-boy fondler, my eldest step-"niece" was raped. At a very young age, and with her birth mother's consent. She can never have kids because of it, and has a whole host of relationship issues as well. The guys who did it? Never prosecuted. Never caught. No evidence. Her mother? Has a warrant out for child abuse charges. Which was heartening four years ago. Now its a joke. So yes...I'm not super objective. If anything, I want harsher laws.