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SUPCO Strikes Down Child Enticement Law

The Ohio Supreme court says Ohio's child enticement law is unconstitutional because it criminalizes innocent behavior. M.L. Schultze of member station WKSU in Kent reports.

The case began in 2010 when Jason Romage offered money to a child in his Columbus neighborhood to help him move boxes. He was charged because Ohio law says – with the exception of police, firefighters or emergency squads – no one can solicit a child younger than 14 to accompany them “in any manner” without a parent’s OK. Both the trial and appeals courts threw the charges out, saying the law was too broad. But that conflicted with another appeals court decision, so the case went to the Supreme Court.
In the 5-2 decision, Justice Judith Lanzinger acknowledged that protecting children from sexual predators is “a paramount governmental interest.” But she said the law the way it is written could prohibit something as innocent as a senior citizen offering to pay a kid to mow the grass.

Jim has been with WCBE since 1996. Before that he worked as a reporter at another Columbus radio station, and for three newspapers in Southwest Florida.
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