Texas lawmaker vows to change indecency law
By The Associated Press
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Published: November 1, 2009
Modified: October 31, 2009 at 3:10 am
DALLAS — A 1970s-era Texas law that allows parents to show "harmful material” to their children has come under fire after a prosecutor said he couldn’t file charges against a man accused of forcing his 8- and 9-year-old daughters to watch hardcore online pornography.
Randall County District Attorney James Farren has asked the Texas attorney general’s office to review his decision not to pursue charges in the case, which has prompted at least one lawmaker to vow to change the state’s public indecency law.
"Our hands are tied. It’s not our fault. I have to follow the law,” Farren said Thursday.
"The mother of the victims in this case was less than happy with this decision, which I understand. We were less than happy with the statute.”
The law apparently was meant to protect the privacy of parents who wanted to teach children about sex education, but it states clearly that parents can’t be prosecuted for showing "harmful material” to their children.
Farren said police reported the incident to his office after one of the girls told a counselor in June that her father made them watch adults having group sex and various other acts at his home in
Amarillo.
The parents of the girls, and their 7-year-old sister, are divorced and share custody.
The girls’ mother,
Crystal Buckner, wants her ex-husband to be jailed.
She said she was stunned to hear from prosecutors and police that nothing can be done.
"I said, ‘Are you kidding me?’ There’s no way. This can’t be right,” said Buckner, a 30-year-old stay-at-home mother.
The Associated Press typically does not publish the names of parents if it could identify children who might have been abused, but Buckner is seeking publicity about the case.
She has printed out copies of the code, which she hands out to everyone she meets.
"I want people to know about this. I want parents to be mad and say, ‘No!’” she said.
"I understand in the ’70s everybody wanted the government to stay out of their homes. I don’t want to stop parents from having that right to teach sex education, but there’s a big difference and there’s a line you should not cross when teaching.”
The case caught the attention of state
Sen. Bob Deuell, a Republican from
Greenville who said he’s planning to push for a change in the law in the next legislative session in 2011.
The Texas attorney general’s office said Thursday that it would be months before an opinion’s issued and declined further comment.
Farren said he thinks the law is clear and that the attorney general will agree.
"I don’t think that’s what the legislators intended, but it’s the result,” he said.
"If our interpretation is wrong, that’d be great. It’s fine, we’d love to go ahead and prosecute.”
Farren noted that the law does not mention intent.
According to the Texas penal code passage, "harmful material” such as pornography is considered defensible from prosecution if "the sale, distribution, or exhibition to a minor who was accompanied by a consenting parent, adult, or spouse.”
"It just says it’s a defense. Period,” said Farren, who also hopes the case will force the Legislature to revisit the issue.
As for the girls, they still go to their father’s house once a month, but those visits now must be supervised.
A call placed to the home of the girls’ father, who is not charged with a crime, was not immediately returned Thursday.
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