House Judiciary Committee Passes Sen. Ossoff’s Bipartisan Bill to Protect Children from Online Sexual Exploitation

Sen. Ossoff’s bipartisan bill with Sen. Blackburn would toughen penalties on websites and social media companies that fail to report crimes against children

Bipartisan legislation passed the U.S. Senate in December

Bill now heads to full U.S. House for consideration as final step before becoming law

Washington, D.C. — U.S. Senator Jon Ossoff’s bipartisan bill to protect children from online sexual abuse and exploitation passed the U.S. House Judiciary Committee yesterday.

Sens. Ossoff and Marsha Blackburn (R-TN)’s bipartisan REPORT Act would strengthen the national tipline run by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) to collect reports of online exploitation and would require evidence to be preserved for a longer period, giving law enforcement more time to investigate and prosecute crimes.

The bill would also require websites and social media platforms to report crimes involving Federal trafficking and enticement of children, which they are not currently required to do, and it would increase fines for companies that knowingly and willfully fail to report child sex abuse material on their site.

Sen. Ossoff’s bipartisan bill passed the U.S. Senate in December. The bill will now go to the full U.S. House for consideration, the final step toward it becoming law.

“My bipartisan bill will ensure tech companies are held accountable to report and remove child sex abuse material and to strengthen protection for kids online,” Sen. Ossoff said. “At a time of such division in Congress, we are bringing Republicans and Democrats together to protect kids on the internet.”’

According to NCMEC, the tipline received over 36 million reports last year. 

Sen. Ossoff has heard from child welfare experts and local leaders across the state about this growing concern, who have noted that online child sexual abuse continues to run rampant but remains underreported in Georgia.

Late last year, Sen. Ossoff’s bipartisan Preventing Child Sex Abuse Act of 2023 with Sen. Grassley was signed into law to strengthen Federal protections against the sexual abuse of children, including online exploitation.

In a December 2023 U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, Sen. Ossoff pressed FBI Director Christopher Wray to address sextortion schemes targeting children online amidst a reported 700% increase in their frequency since 2021 in Georgia.

Last September, Sens. Ossoff and Blackburn launched an inquiry with Attorney General Merrick Garland about the FBI’s capacity to investigate and respond to crimes involving child sexual abuse and exploitation, highlighting a June 2023 report to Congress in which the DOJ cited an international threat assessment demonstrating that “the growth in online child sexual exploitation is outpacing our ability to respond.”

# # #

Search

Thank you

Your form has been received. Someone from our office will contact you when the next Congressionally Directed Spending (CDS) process begins. If your request needs immediate attention, please don’t hesitate to call our Washington, D.C. office or Atlanta office.

Thank you

Your form has been received. Someone from our office will get back to you as soon as possible. Please allow 5–7 business days to process a request. If your request needs immediate attention, please don’t hesitate to call our Washington, D.C. office or Atlanta office.