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Oklahoma State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: April
13, 2005
Audio Clip
Senator Ted Fisher
Senate Approves Bill to Expand Laws Against Threatening Phone
Calls
to Text/Instant Messaging
A joint House/Senate committee is the next stop for
a bill to make sure the law against threatening, harassing or obscene
phone calls is extended to include cell phones, text messaging,
email and other forms of telecommunications. Sen. Ted
Fisher, D-Sapulpa, is Senate author of House Bill 1804 which
was approved unanimously Tuesday afternoon. The measure had previously
won unanimous approval by the House as well.
“Cell phones, email, text messaging, instant messaging—none
of those were even imagined when Oklahoma originally passed laws
against threatening phone calls. We simply need to make sure our
statutes are up-to-date so that the public is protected against
this new form of harassment,” Fisher said.
Fisher noted that while these technological advancements have helped
improve communications in business, government and for individuals,
they’ve also been exploited by criminals who’ve used
these modern communications tools as a new way to harass their victims.
Tamatha Mosier, Domestic Violence Specialist with the Oklahoma Coalition
Against Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault agreed that these new
technologies are increasingly being used to threaten and harass
individuals with a constant barrage of messages.
“Not just adult women but children are being harassed. Technological
harassment and stalking is on the increase—we need to stave
it off now before it gets worse,” Mosier said.
Rep. Lance Cargill, R-Harrah, is the House author of HB 1804 which
would make a first offense a misdemeanor while a subsequent offense
would be a felony. The measure next moves to a conference committee
and then will return to both chambers for a final vote.
For more
information contact:
Senate Communications Office- (405) 521-5774

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