Congressman Mark Harris announces bill to close child pornography loophole at Capitol Hill press conference.
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North Carolina Republican introduces bill to close child pornography loophole

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Congressman Mark Harris, a Republican from North Carolina, has introduced legislation aimed at closing what he and his supporters describe as a loophole in federal law that lets some producers of sexually explicit videos featuring children in the background evade punishment. The bill targets cases where minors are intentionally depicted in a sexually exploitative context but are not directly engaged in sexual acts, and Harris argues the change is necessary to better protect children from exploitation.

On Monday, Congressman Mark Harris introduced the Child Predators Accountability Act of 2025, a measure his office says is designed to amend federal law and eliminate ambiguities that can hinder child exploitation prosecutions.

According to The Daily Wire, the legislation would allow prosecutors to bring child pornography charges in cases where a minor is intentionally depicted in a sexually exploitative context in a video, even if the child is not actively participating in the explicit conduct itself. Harris’s office told the outlet that the bill would revise federal law in three parts so that such materials are treated as child exploitation and would carry a minimum 15-year prison sentence for offenders.

Harris’s push follows concerns raised by prosecutors and advocates after a 2020 ruling from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in United States v. Howard. In that case, the court vacated two convictions for producing child pornography against Matthew Howard. The videos at issue showed Howard masturbating next to his fully clothed, sleeping nine-year-old niece. The appellate panel concluded the images did not qualify as child pornography under 18 U.S.C. § 2251(a) because they did not depict the child engaging in sexually explicit conduct, and it said the government’s interpretation stretched the statute "beyond the natural reading of its terms considered in context."(criminallegalnews.org)(wislawjournal.com)

Citing that decision, Harris argues existing law leaves children vulnerable when they are used as the backdrop or object of a predator’s sexual conduct. “Protecting our children from sexual exploitation is one of the government’s most sacred duties — yet dangerous loopholes in federal law allow predators to evade justice and exploit minors,” he said in a statement to The Daily Wire. “We must act now to close these gaps, eliminate ambiguities, and equip law enforcement with tools to prosecute criminals fully and without excuse.”(dailywire.com)

Under the definitions put forward in the bill, intentionally depicting a child in a sexually explicit video would trigger a mandatory minimum sentence of 15 years in prison, The Daily Wire reported. Harris’s office says the reforms are meant to ensure that videos intentionally featuring a minor in a sexually exploitative context — regardless of the child’s specific role in the scene — are treated as harmful exploitation under federal law.

Harris contends that clarifying the statute would help law enforcement and prosecutors pursue cases without being blocked by technical readings of the law. “Congress must act now to strengthen our laws and deliver real protections, ensuring that criminals who use children in any sexually exploitative context face real justice,” he told The Daily Wire.(dailywire.com)

By addressing the legal gap exposed in the Howard ruling, supporters of the Child Predators Accountability Act of 2025 say the measure is intended to make clear that the presence of a child in certain sexually explicit videos can itself constitute exploitation, even when the minor is not shown engaging in sexual conduct.

What people are saying

Initial reactions on X to Rep. Mark Harris's bill closing a child pornography loophole are sparse but positive from supporters who praise efforts to protect children and equip law enforcement; skeptics question the loophole's existence or Harris's credibility citing past actions like not releasing Epstein files.

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