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14-year-old boy faces charges for having sex with 12-year-old girl


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14-year-old boy faces charges for having sex with 12-year-old girl.
HOUSTON, Texas -- A mother fears her 14-year-old son may have to register as a sex offender for having sex with his 12-year-old girlfriend.
The mother, who spoke to Eyewitness News under the condition of anonymity, said her son was detained and charged with aggravated sexual assault of a child a few months ago. The two went to the same middle school and were a grade apart, she said. He was charged because she was 12 and he was a few months older than 14.
If found criminally responsible, there could be a long-term consequence.
"Since he's 14, he's facing the possibility of being put on the sex registry. The sex registry is for people who are absolute criminals, pedophiles, child molesters, dangerous people. The worst of the worst," she said.
There is an exemption for some teens. The so-called Romeo and Juliet law protects those who have consensual sex with someone within three years of their age. So, in Texas a 17-year-old can legally have sex with a 14-year-old , but if either party is under 14, like the girl in this case, the law does not apply.
"Every parent needs to know if you have a son or daughter who's sexually active," she warned. "It terrifies us. It terrifies him. He won't have a future. He won't be able to go to school. He won't be able to get a job. He won't be able to get a job digging ditches because he won't be able to pass a background check."
That's why she and her attorney are speaking up.
"Where's the common sense? It's incomprehensible we're doing this to children in our society and something needs to change," said Joe Gutheinz, the boy's attorney.
The Harris County District Attorney's Office filed the case. A spokesman declined to comment due to juvenile privacy concerns.
Juvenile court judges decide whether delinquents are placed on the registry, which has happened, according to two attorneys who defend juveniles.
The boy's mother is asking for compassion.
"Everybody was young. Everybody has a past. Everybody has made mistakes," she added.
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Video of young Tulsans having sex, fighting viewed more than 375,000 times on Facebook



An explicit video showing young people in Tulsa having sex and fighting has been viewed more than 375,000 time on Facebook.
and last updated 1:23 PM, Jul 25, 2017
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Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way
TULSA -- An explicit video showing young people in Tulsa having sex and fighting has been viewed more than 375,000 times on Facebook.
The three-minute long video montage posted Friday night was up on social media more than 36-hours on Facebook, even after it was reported. 
Tulsa Police say even though the video was shared more than 3,500 times, they can only look into it if someone comes forward and files a police report. 
"It's a shocking video for anyone to see," Officer Jeanne MacKenzie with the Tulsa Police Department said.
Young people were recorded having sex with several of their faces easily identified. Others were recorded getting beaten up. It was all compiled into one video, put to music and shared on Facebook. 
The person who put the video together said all of the videos were sent in. 
"If a person came forward saying, 'This is me. I got jumped,' or 'This is me and I didn't share this photo,' or 'Someone took this photo without my knowledge,' then we would have some type of crime," Officer MacKenzie said.
Officer MacKenzie said as of now, they have not determined that a crime was committed.
She said to determine if one had been committed, officers would have to see if the people were underage, intoxicated or if they gave consent. 
"You can't have pictures of naked children, but trying to determine if those people in that video are children or not would be a hard task for us, because there are certain criteria we have to go by to determine whether or not they are a child," Officer MacKenzie said. 
It is obvious some of the explicit videos were sent out on Snapchat. 
"I've seen a lot of people say it goes away in 24 hours, but it still can be screen shot," Officer MacKenzie said. "Other people can see it." 
The person who made and posted the video wrote on their page that people in the video were laughing it off. 
"If that is true and everyone in that video gave her permission to post it, then that makes it legal," Officer MacKenzie said. 
She said laws are changing to incorporate crimes on social media. But as it stands now, police departments cannot force someone to take a video down. People offended by the video just have to report it to the social media site. 
"Just because we feel or think something someone has done is not moral, we can't do anything to them without a crime," Officer MacKenzie said. 
More than 1,000 comments were posted to the video. Some said they were proud to be from Tulsa after watching it. Others wrote they were appalled and said to pray for children involved. 
Officer MacKenzie cautioned parents to get involved in their children's social media accounts to monitor what they are doing. 
"There are cameras everywhere," Officer MacKenzie said. "You might think you are doing something that no one will know or see, but the possibility of someone filming it or sharing are great nowadays." 
Officers said if someone in the video is a minor or did not want their video published in the montage, they can contact police. 
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Published September 25, 2017 10:20pm EDT
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Laura Lynn Cross, 36 , charged with sexual battery in Ohio after giving birth to her former student’s child, joins the growing number of women accused or convicted of having sex with adolescents. About two weeks ago, a Georgia woman, Angelene McAnulty, 25 , was charged with having sex with a 15-year-old boy. Last week, Lee Annette Williams, 50 , of North Carolina, was charged with statutory rape of a former student when the now-22-year-old man was 14.
What is going on in the minds of these women?
First, there is the obvious: In order for an adult to manipulate an adolescent to have sex, that adult has to have little regard for free will. The adolescent in such a scenario — relatively new to sexual encounters and potentially worried about the consequences of saying no — would be ill-equipped to refuse the advances of his teacher.
What sort of women have so little regard for the autonomy of others? Generally, they are women whose own boundaries were shattered in childhood or adolescence. It is cliché, but also true, that sexual offenders were most often victims themselves (whether of sexual misconduct or physical violence or significant emotional violence).
As I have said before, there’s no original evil left in the world; everyone is just recycling pain now.
If some of the most intense dramas in a person’s life have been ones of being overtaken, the notion of heartlessly wielding power or, conversely, yielding to it again can be a nearly irresistible dynamic.
Women who sexually abuse boys may also have less control over their actions due to illnesses like bipolar disorder or impulse control disorder, sometimes coupled with substance abuse.
But there is also a cultural problem here: I would venture that a significant percentage of Americans still believe that a 15-year-old boy who has sex with his teacher is a conqueror, not a victim. And women who are now 25 or 36 or 50 years old were certainly raised in a culture that promoted that view.
I have heard men joke very recently about how much they wish young, pretty female teachers of theirs had “abused” them. Of course, they have no idea what the emotional fallout could, in fact, have been.
Five years ago, I criticized actor Adam Sandler for his starring role in a comedy called “That’s My Boy,” which celebrated sex between a 13-year-old and his pretty teacher and grossed almost $37 million at the box office.
Sandler never apologized. He’s still a megastar. Imagine what kind of career he would have now if his film had been a laugh fest about a 13-year-old girl whose male teacher rapes her, repeatedly.
Part of the trouble in getting people to recognize the very real damage done to adolescents and young teens who have sex with adult women is that males have to be sexually stimulated for intercourse to occur. In these cases, they must penetrate their assailants. Too many people interpret that to mean that the male in the scenario must be partly responsible for what happens.
It isn’t so. A naive person with an appetite can be tempted to eat poisonous food. A young, innocent, thirsty person will drink tainted water. Sexual appetites are just as commanding. The poison conveyed by an adult female authority figure who manipulates an adolescent or young teen into an aroused state is just as toxic.
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