Legal Sidebari
Federal Civil Action for Disclosure of Intimate
Images: Free Speech Considerations
April 1, 2022
On March 15, 2022, Congress authorized a federal civi
l claim relating to the disclosure of intimate images
as part of th
e Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2022. The new cause of action, which
takes effect on
October 1, 2022, marks the first federal law targeting the unauthorized dissemination of private, intimate
images of both adults and children—images commonly referred to as
“nonconsensual pornography” or
“revenge porn.”
This Sidebar discusses the current legal landscape with respect to prohibitions on nonconsensual
pornography. It first provides an overview of state and federal laws on the subject, including the new
private right of action. It then discusses how courts have decided significant First Amendment challenges
to nonconsensual pornography laws at the state level. The Sidebar concludes with a discussion of the
relevance of these legal developments for legislative proposals to
criminalize the distribution of
nonconsensual pornography at the federal level or to
expand liability fo
r distributing other types of
content online.
State of the Law
Nearly all 50 states (plus th
e District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, an
d Guam) have a nonconsensual
pornography law in some form. Th
e majority of states make dissemination of nonconsensual pornography
a criminal offense if the defendant acted with
a specific intent (e.g., to harass or intimidate) or with some
level of knowledge—either
actual or imputed through recklessness or
negligence—that the depicted
person had not consented to the disclosure.
Some states, includin
g New York, Pennsylvania, and Washington, also authorize the depicted person to
bring a civil action in state court against an individual who disseminated the material (also limited by the
requisite mental state). Such actions may authorize the court to award
injunctive relief or monetary
damages. Most of these state laws w
ere adopted within the past 10 years.
At the federal level, there is no criminal offense specifically aimed at the distribution of nonconsensual
pornography. Distribution of such materials over the internet or in interstate commerce could, however,
violate other federal laws, depending on the circumstances. For example, nonconsensual pornography
depicting persons under the age of 18 could violate federal prohibitions o
n child sexual exploitation.
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Circumstances involving
threats, extortion, or harassment could constitute other federal crimes. Federal
law also prohibits the interstate distribution of
obscene visual matter—a type of speech that
is not
protected by the First Amendment. However, as explained below, not all nonconsensual pornography rises
to level o
f legally obscene.
Congress created a new, private right of action for victims of nonconsensual pornography in
Section 1309
of the Violence Against Women Act Reauthorization Act of 2022, passed as part of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2022. Effective October 1, 2022, Section 1309
will authorize an individual whose
intimate image was disclosed without the individual’s consent to bring a federal lawsuit against the
person who made the disclosure. While a court has not yet interpreted Section 1309, t
he text of this
section provides that, to prevail in the litigation, a plaintiff would have to prove that the defendant made
the disclosure
knowing that the plaintiff had not consented to the disclosure or with
reckless disregard as
to whether the plaintiff had consented to the disclosure, wh
ich usually means consciously disregarding a
substantial risk. A cause of action could
be available under Section 1309 for distribution of an intimate
image without the plaintiff’s consent even if the plaintiff had consented to the creation of the image or
had shared it with someone else. In contrast, Section 1309
would not reach disclosures of commercial
pornographic content (with some exceptions); disclosures made in good faith to law enforcement or as
part of a legal, medical, or investigatory process; disclosures on matters of public concern; and
disclosures “reasonably intended to assist” the depicted person. Under Section 1309, a court
may award a
prevailing plaintiff monetary damages and enjoin the defendant from further disclosing the image.
First Amendment Challenges
As of the date of this Sidebar, CRS has not identified any pre-enforcement legal challenges to the
constitutionality of Section 1309. Litigation over similar laws continues to unfold at the state level,
however. The highest state courts in five states
—Illinois, Indiana
, Minnesota, Texas, and
Vermont—have
adjudicated free speech challenges to their states’ nonconsensual pornography laws. All five of these
courts ultimately rejected the First Amendment arguments in those cases, though the Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals did so in
a nonprecedential opinion that is not controlling in the state’s lower courts.
The reviewing courts concluded that the statutes prohibited
“more than obscenity,” reaching protected
speech in the form of non-obscene, sexually explicit images depicting adults. With one exception
(IL), the
courts also determined that the laws regulated
or potentially regulated speech on the basis of its content
(i.e., depictions of sexual conduct or nudity) and appli
ed strict scrutiny, the most stringent First
Amendment test. The laws passed strict scrutiny in these four jurisdictions (IN
, MN, TX, and VT). In
particular, the courts determined that the laws served compelling governmental interests in protecting
privacy and preventing the psychological and reput
ational harms associated with public disclosure of
intimate images. The courts also concluded that the laws were narrowly tailored and th
e least restrictive
means of serving those interests.
Although the state statutes differed in their particulars, at least three features of the laws were important to
the courts’ strict scrutiny analysis. First, the laws expressly imposed or were construed to impo
se a mens
rea requirement with respect to the depicted person’s consent to disclosure—negligence (IN
, MN),
recklessne
ss (TX), or actual knowledge
(VT). Second, several of the statutes exempted disclosures made
for law enforcement purposes (IN,
MN) or regarding matters of public con
cern (VT). Third, several of the
statutes were limited to circumstances where a depicted person would have a reasonable expectation of
privacy
(MN, TX, VT).
At least two of these courts (IN
, TX) also considered whether their states’ laws were substantially
“overbroad” in relation to their “plainly legitimate sweep” (a type of facial challenge), rejecting this
argument as well.
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Considerations for Congress
These cases upholding state laws in the states’ highest courts provide some insight into how Section 1309
might fare in a constitutional challenge in federal court. It appears th
at Section 1309 shares some
attributes of the statutes that survived free speech challenges in Indiana, Minnesota, Texas, and Vermont,
such as a knowing or reckless mens rea requirement for the lack-of-consent element and exceptions for
disclosures in the public interest. It remains to be seen, however, whether other state or federal courts will
adopt reasoning similar to the four state courts discussed above in future legal challenges to
nonconsensual pornography laws.
In terms of First Amendment case law, these state court cases are significant because they reflect the
“rare” circumstance in which a government restriction of speech based on its content survived strict
scrutiny. If a challenge to a nonconsensual pornography law were to reach the Supreme Court, the Court
could consider whether to recognize a new category of unprotected speech for nonconsensual
pornography—something it has bee
n reluctant to do with respect to other depictions that legislatures have
sought to restrict. Even assuming that nonconsensual intimate images enjoy First Amendment protection,
however, the surviving state laws could signal a path forward for legislatures seeking to expand criminal
or civil liability for nonconsensual pornography. They could also provide lawmakers with some options
for regulating online content su
ch as deepfakes, which, like nonconsensual pornography, may implicate
protected speech while posing distinct harms that Congress may have an interest in addressing.
One issue that the particular state cases discussed above did not decide is the interaction between the
restrictions under review and other federal statutes. In particular, could a defendant
seek to dismiss a
Section 1309 claim on the ground of immunity from liability under Section 230 of the Communications
Act? Section 230(c) precludes courts from holding a defendant liable for distributing content “provided
by another information content provider” through an interactive computer service (e.g., a website or
social media platform). Altho
ugh Section 230 does not bar enforcement of federal
criminal laws, the
statute contains no similarly broad exemption for federal
civil claims or state law claims. In practice,
therefore, Section 230 generally
bars a private plaintiff from proceeding with a claim against a provider or
a user of an interactive computer service if that claim is based on content that the defendant posted,
hosted, or otherwise disseminated but did not create or develop. This limitation often results i
n dismissal
of such claims in the early stages of litigation—before the court has reached the merits of the legal
dispute.
Section 1309 does not specify how it interacts with Section 230(c). In these circumstances, a court
reviewing a Section 1309 claim may have to decide whether the two provisions can be
“harmonized” or
whether Section 130
9 implicitly repeals Section 230(c) for claims concerning nonconsensual
pornography. The Supreme Court h
as discouraged courts from finding “repeals by implication” unless the
statutes pose an
“irreconcilable conflict.” The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit found no such
conflict in a case involving a different civil remedies provision enacted after Section 230,
reasoning that
“Section 230 provide[d] an affirmative defense to liability” to the civil claim “for only the narrow set of
defendants and conduct to which Section 230 applies.” If a reviewing court were to adopt similar
reasoning, it could conclude that Section 1309 and Section 230 can co-exist, with Section 1309 allowing
claims against defendants who distributed nonconsensual pornography that they either created or
developed, and Section 230(c) barring claims against providers and users of interactive computer services
based on third-party content.
In practice, the circumstances in which a plaintiff could show that a provider or user created or developed
the nonconsensual pornography at issue could be fairly narrow. By som
e estimates, a large percentage of
nonconsensual pornography images are “selfies”—that is, images captured by the depicted person—and
thus may not have been “created” by the defendant. Additionally, i
n some jurisdictions, a court may not
consider a provider or user to have “developed” the content at issue
unless the provider or user “directly
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and materially contributed to what made the content itself unlawful.” Websites that actively encourage the
posting of nonconsensual pornography might be content creators under this test. In 2021 and 2022, some
federal district
courts have allowed certain claims to proceed against pornographic websites based on
allegations that the providers of those sites “curate[d] video playlists” of illegal content or engaged in
other actions directly promoting that content. Assuming that a plaintiff could clear these initial hurdles,
the plaintiff would still have to allege and prove that the defendant acted knowingly or recklessly with
regard to the plaintiff’s lack of consent, which is a requirement unde
r Section 1309 itself.
Alternatively, although less likely, a court could decide that Section 1309 displaces Section 230(c)’s
liability shield because it is th
e later-enacted and
more specific law. Under that scenario, a court might
allow a claim against a non-developer distributor of nonconsensual pornography if the plaintiff
adequately alleges that the defendant acted with the requisite intent un
der Section 1309—that is, that the
defendant knew that the plaintiff had not consented to the disclosure or acted with reckless disregard as to
whether the plaintiff consented.
Author Information
Victoria L. Killion
Legislative Attorney
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