Johnson Reintroduces Protection Against Child Exploitation Act
Washington, DC,
May 21, 2019
U.S. Representative Mike Johnson (LA-04) reintroduced the Protecting Against Child Exploitation Act (PACE Act) to close a court-created loophole that allows child predators to escape punishment on a technicality. JOHNSON RELEASED THE FOLLOWING STATEMENT:
BACKGROUND Johnson first introduced the PACE Act in the 115th Congress (H.R.1761). It passed the House overwhelmingly as a stand-alone bill in May 2018 and passed the House again as part of a package in September 2018. The Senate did not take up the legislation. Johnson introduced this bill after a ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit reversed the conviction of a sexual predator because the court determined the perpetrator lacked “intent” to record images of his horrific sexual assault of a young girl on his phone. In the case, United States v. Palomino-Coronado, the defendant admitted to sexually abusing a 7-year-old child and memorializing the conduct but escaped federal conviction because he supposedly lacked the requisite “purpose,” or specific intent, to take the photos. This outcome was a clear contradiction of Congress’ resolve to protect children and criminalize the production of all images of child sexual abuse. |