Texas Legislature

Children can still be charged with prostitution in Texas after Greg Abbott veto

Children in Texas can still be charged with prostitution after Gov. Greg Abbott this month vetoed a popular bill prohibiting prostituted minors from being arrested or going to juvenile court.

House Bill 1771, authored by Rep. Shawn Thierry, D-Houston, would have changed the Texas penal code to not include children in its definition of prostitution. Law enforcement officers would still have the power to apprehend minors they suspected were involved in prostitution, but instead of going to jail, the children would be returned to their parents or the Texas Department of Family Protective Services.

Thierry said she was shocked to learn the Republican governor had vetoed the bill, especially since she had worked with his office throughout the session to craft the legislation. The current system, she said, only further hurts children who have been victims of sexual abuse.

“We are really depriving them of their liberty,” she said. “They can’t even consent to sex.”

In his veto, Abbott said the bill, while well-intentioned, would have had “unintended consequences.”

“The bill takes away options that law enforcement and prosecutors can use to separate victims from their traffickers,” Abbott said. “And it may provide a perverse incentive for traffickers to use underage prostitutes, knowing they cannot be arrested for engaging in prostitution.”

A major concern around the current law is that it allows children who may have been victims of sexual predators to be punished and victimized by the legal system, Thierry said. Her legislation would have taken victims of child sex abuse to a legal guardian or protective services, not the courts.

“These are pedophiles that are having sex with children,” Thierry said. “And we are further victimizing the children and criminalizing them.”

In his veto, Abbott said efforts to reduce trafficking are to be commended, and he looks forward to working with Thierry on ways to separate victims from their traffickers, both physically and economically.

Thierry said she is “deeply hurt and disappointed” by the veto but will return to the next session with even greater focus on changing the law.

“It is something I will make my No. 1 priority next session,” she said.

This story originally appeared on the Texas Tribune. To read this article in its original format, click here.

Lara Korte, The Texas Tribune

Lara Korte is a reporting fellow at The Texas Tribune.

Recent Posts

Texas Sees Surge in COVID-19 Activity as New Variant Spreads

COVID-19 activity is climbing once again in Texas, with a new variant contributing to what…

21 hours ago

Judge temporarily blocks Texas’ Ten Commandments requirement in 11 school districts

"Judge temporarily blocks Texas’ Ten Commandments requirement in 11 school districts" was first published by…

22 hours ago

New Texas Laws Targets Hemp THC Products and Gendered Restroom Bill

On August 15, Texas lawmakers started a second special session to review and come up…

2 days ago

Trump’s September Is Filled With Tough Deadlines

As September unfolds, President Donald Trump faces important affairs, domestic and abroad. Some of the…

3 days ago

Kerr County Youth Camps Appeal to Dan Patrick on Proposed Floodplain Restrictions

After the Guadalupe River flooding tragedy on July 4, owners of affected camps in Kerr…

3 days ago

In rapidly diversifying Tarrant County, a summer of GOP redistricting hits Black and Latino representation

FORT WORTH — When Lillie Biggins learned that the YMCA in East Fort Worth was…

4 days ago

This website uses cookies.