NC senators weigh obscenity tax, social media limits

Summary

North Carolina senators reviewed bills on an obscenity tax, youth social media limits, and highway license plate readers.

Why this matters

The measures would affect state funding for anti-trafficking efforts, minors’ access to social media, and privacy rules around highway surveillance. The committee vote will help determine whether the proposals advance.

North Carolina senators considered several public safety measures Tuesday, including a proposal to tax illegal sexual material to help fund anti-human trafficking efforts.

Senate Bill 1007 would impose a 50% excise tax on “prurient” or obscene sexual material that is harmful to minors. The bill would also appropriate money to develop a North Carolina Human Trafficking Commission.

Sen. Ted Alexander, R-Cleveland, said North Carolina has ranked as high as eighth nationally in human trafficking cases and that the state’s response remains fragmented.

The tax would apply only to material already illegal under state law, including obscene content that is “patently offensive” under community standards and not protected by the First Amendment, as well as sexually explicit material sold to minors.

The bill bars the Department of Revenue and its employees from sharing confidential tax information for criminal prosecutions involving prurient materials. During the hearing, lawmakers said some OnlyFans payments and pornographic magazines could qualify, though the Department of Revenue would make the determination.

Senate Democratic Leader Sydney Batch, D-Wake, questioned leaving that decision to revenue officials.

“I do think that it’s extremely problematic when we have the subjective nature of allowing, by way of example, Charlie from Revenue to be the one person who determines what is, in fact, prurient information,” Batch said.

Batch also questioned whether the bill would substantially reduce human trafficking.

The committee also discussed House Bill 301, which would bar minors younger than 14 from using what it defines as addictive social media platforms, and House Bill 206, which would allow the State Bureau of Investigation to install automated license plate readers on North Carolina highways.

All three bills were scheduled for a vote in the Senate Judiciary Committee on June 3.

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