Summary of the Truly Agreed Version of the Bill

SS SCS SB 714, 933, 899 & 758 -- SEXUAL OFFENSES

This bill changes the laws regarding sexual offenses.  It its
main provisions, the bill:

(1)  Requires registered sexual offenders to include any online
identifiers they may have on the sexual offender registry and
requires, subject to appropriations, the State Highway Patrol to
make this information available to certain businesses or
organizations for the purpose of prescreening users;

(2)  Requires a juvenile who is 14 years of age or older at the
time of his or her offense to register as an adult sexual
offender if the offense would be considered a felony under
Chapter 566, RSMo, and the offense is equal to or more severe
than aggravated sexual abuse under 18 U.S.C. Section 2241;

(3)  Includes parental kidnapping under certain circumstances in
the definition of "dangerous felony";

(4)  Increases the penalty for parental kidnapping to a class C
felony if it is committed by detaining or concealing the
whereabouts of a child between 60 and 119 days and a class B
felony for committing the action for 120 or more days;

(5)  Increases the age of a possible victim of sexual misconduct
involving a child from 14 years of age to 15 years of age and
specifies that anyone attempting to commit sexual misconduct
involving a child will be guilty of a class D felony;

(6)  Specifies that any person who has committed an offense in
any other state or foreign country or under any federal, tribal,
or military jurisdiction which if committed in this state would
be a sexual offense involving a child cannot reside within 1,000
feet of a public or private school or a child-care facility or be
present in or loiter within 500 feet of any school building, on
real property comprising any school, or in any conveyance owned,
leased, or contracted by a school to transport students to or
from school or a school-related activity unless the offender is a
parent, legal guardian, or custodian of a student present in the
building;

(7)  Creates the crime of age misrepresentation with intent to
solicit a minor when a person knowingly misrepresents his or her
age with the intent to use the Internet to engage in criminal
sexual conduct involving a minor.  Anyone violating this
provision will be guilty of a class D felony;

(8)  Specifies that a victim of the crime of promoting child
pornography in the first degree must be or appear to be 13 years
of age or younger and a victim of the crime of promoting child
pornography in the second degree must be or appear to be 17 years
of age or younger;

(9)  Allows statements made by a child younger than 14 years of
age regarding a pornography offense to be admissible in criminal
proceedings;

(10)  Specifies that any person who pleads guilty to, is found
guilty of, or is convicted of promoting child pornography in the
first degree will not be eligible for probation, parole, or
conditional release for a period of three calendar years and any
person who pleads guilty to, is found guilty of, or is convicted
of promoting child pornography in the second degree will not be
eligible for probation;

(11)  Increases the penalty for the crime of possession of child
pornography from a class D felony to a class C felony.  Any
person possessing more than 20 still images of child pornography;
possessing one motion picture, film, videotape, videotape
production, or other moving image of child pornography; or who
has pled guilty to or been found guilty of a prior possession of
child pornography offense will be guilty of a class B felony;

(12)  Specifies that any property or material that constitutes
child pornography must remain in the care, custody, and control
of either the state or the court in any criminal proceeding;

(13)  Specifies that it is not an affirmative defense to a
prosecution for the crime of furnishing pornographic material to
minors that the person being furnished the pornographic material
is a peace officer masquerading as a minor;

(14)  Revises the definition of "sexual assault" to include the
act of enticement of a child or any attempt to commit the act;

(15)  Requires any person convicted of, found guilty of, or pled
guilty or nolo contendere to committing, attempting to commit, or
conspiring to commit abuse of a child when the abuse is sexual in
nature and any person conspiring to commit certain sexual
offenses to register as a sexual offender;

(16)  Requires any juvenile certified as an adult or who was 14
years of age or older at the time of the offense and the offense
is equal to or more severe than aggravated sexual abuse under 18
U.S.C. Section 2241 to register as an adult sexual offender;

(17)  Specifies that any person required to register as a sexual
offender must register within three days of conviction, release
from incarceration, or placement upon probation.  Currently,
these individuals have 10 days to register;

(18)  Requires any registered offender from another state who has
a temporary residence in this state and resides more than seven
days in a 12-month period to register for the duration of the
temporary residency.  Currently, these offenders must temporarily
reside in the state for more than 14 days;

(19)  Requires the offender registration form developed by the
State Highway Patrol to include online identifiers used by the
offender, palm prints, and a DNA sample if a sample has not
already been obtained;

(20)  Requires registered sexual offenders to notify the patrol
within three business days after a change to any information
included on the registry.  Currently, these offenders have 10
days after any change to update the registry;

(21)  Increases the penalties for failing to register as a sexual
offender;

(22)  Requires any person required to register as a sexual
offender to avoid Halloween-related contact with children, remain
inside his or her residence between the hours of 5:00 p.m. and
10:30 p.m., post a sign at his or her residence stating "No candy
or treats at this residence," and leave all outside residential
lighting off after 5:00 p.m. on October 31 of each year.  Anyone
violating this provision will be guilty of a class A misdemeanor;
and

(23)  Requires the General Assembly, beginning with Fiscal Year
2010, to appropriate $3 million annually into the newly created
Cyber Crime Investigation Fund to be used by the Department of
Public Safety to administer grants to law enforcement agencies
investigating Internet sexual crimes against children and for the
training of prosecuting and circuit attorneys and assistant
prosecuting and circuit attorneys.

The bill contains an emergency clause for the provisions
regarding the control of child pornography material in a criminal
proceeding, the statements of a child in pornography criminal
proceedings, the crime of promotion of child pornography, and the
crime of possession of child pornography.

Copyright (c) Missouri House of Representatives


Missouri House of Representatives
94th General Assembly, 2nd Regular Session
Last Updated October 15, 2008 at 3:12 pm