Connecticut 2024 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB05262 Latest Draft

Bill / Chaptered Version Filed 05/21/2024

                             
 
 
Substitute House Bill No. 5262 
 
Public Act No. 24-118 
 
 
AN ACT CONCERNING CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE. 
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General 
Assembly convened: 
 
Section 1. Section 10-217h of the general statutes is repealed and the 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective July 1, 2024): 
(a) For the school year commencing July 1, 2022, and biennially 
thereafter, the Department of Public Health shall administer the 
Connecticut School Health Survey to students in grades nine to twelve, 
inclusive, provided the department receives funding from the federal 
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for such purpose. The 
survey shall be based on the Youth Risk Behavior Survey developed by 
the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The department 
shall provide guidelines to the local or regional board of education 
regarding the administration of the survey to those high schools selected 
at random by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 
Such local or regional board of education shall administer the survey to 
each high school selected to participate in the survey in accordance with 
the guidelines provided by the department, including, but not limited 
to, (1) the survey protocol as required by the federal Centers for Disease 
Control and Prevention, (2) the requirement to provide parents the 
opportunity to exclude their children from the survey by denying 
permission in writing, on a form prescribed by the department, (3) the  Substitute House Bill No. 5262 
 
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requirement for the survey to be anonymous and administered in a 
manner designed to protect student privacy, (4) the timeframe for 
completion of the survey, and (5) the process by which the results of 
such survey are to be submitted to the department. On and after July 1, 
2026, each administration of the Connecticut School Health Survey shall 
include the sexual abuse and assault awareness prevention survey for 
administrators that was created as part of the state-wide sexual abuse 
and assault awareness and prevention program described in section 
17a-101q. Such survey for administrators shall be distributed to and 
completed by administrators of the school in which the Connecticut 
School Health Survey is being administered and the results of the 
administrators' surveys shall be submitted to the department at the 
same time as the results of the students' surveys. 
(b) The department, in consultation with the Department of Mental 
Health and Addiction Services, the Department of Children and 
Families, the Department of Education and any other agency or public 
interest group the department deems necessary, may develop 
additional survey questions to be included as part of the Connecticut 
School Health Survey that are relevant to the health concerns of high 
school students in the state. 
Sec. 2. Subdivision (13) of section 53a-193 of the general statutes is 
repealed and the following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 
1, 2024): 
(13) ["Child pornography"] "Child sexual abuse material" means any 
visual depiction including any photograph, film, videotape, picture or 
computer-generated image or picture, whether made or produced by 
electronic, digital, mechanical or other means, of sexually explicit 
conduct, where the production of such visual depiction involves the use 
of a person under sixteen years of age engaging in sexually explicit 
conduct, provided whether the subject of a visual depiction was a 
person under sixteen years of age at the time the visual depiction was  Substitute House Bill No. 5262 
 
Public Act No. 24-118 	3 of 11 
 
created is a question to be decided by the trier of fact. 
Sec. 3. Section 53a-196c of the general statutes is repealed and the 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 1, 2024): 
(a) A person is guilty of importing child [pornography] sexual abuse 
material when, with intent to promote child [pornography] sexual abuse 
material, such person knowingly imports or causes to be imported into 
the state three or more visual depictions of child [pornography] sexual 
abuse material of known content and character. 
(b) Importing child [pornography] sexual abuse material is a class B 
felony and any person found guilty under this section shall be sentenced 
to a term of imprisonment of which five years of the sentence imposed 
may not be suspended or reduced by the court. 
Sec. 4. Section 53a-196d of the general statutes is repealed and the 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 1, 2024): 
(a) A person is guilty of possessing child [pornography] sexual abuse 
material in the first degree when such person knowingly possesses (1) 
fifty or more visual depictions of child [pornography] sexual abuse 
material, or (2) one or more visual depictions of child [pornography] 
sexual abuse material that depict the infliction or threatened infliction 
of serious physical injury, or (3) (A) a series of images in electronic, 
digital or other format, which is intended to be displayed continuously, 
consisting of two or more frames, or a film or videotape, consisting of 
two or more frames, that depicts (i) more than one child engaging in 
sexually explicit conduct, or (ii) more than one act of sexually explicit 
conduct by one or more children, or (B) any combination of a (i) series 
of images in electronic, digital or other format, which is intended to be 
displayed continuously, (ii) film, or (iii) videotape, which series, film or 
videotape each consists of two or more frames and depicts a single act 
of sexually explicit conduct by one child.  Substitute House Bill No. 5262 
 
Public Act No. 24-118 	4 of 11 
 
(b) In any prosecution for an offense under this section, it shall be an 
affirmative defense that the acts of the defendant, if proven, would 
constitute a violation of section 53a-196h, as amended by this act. 
(c) Possessing child [pornography] sexual abuse material in the first 
degree is a class B felony and any person found guilty under this section 
shall be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of which five years of the 
sentence imposed may not be suspended or reduced by the court. 
Sec. 5. Section 53a-196e of the general statutes is repealed and the 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 1, 2024): 
(a) A person is guilty of possessing child [pornography] sexual abuse 
material in the second degree when such person knowingly possesses 
(1) twenty or more but fewer than fifty visual depictions of child 
[pornography] sexual abuse material, or (2) a series of images in 
electronic, digital or other format, which is intended to be displayed 
continuously, consisting of twenty or more frames, or a film or 
videotape, consisting of twenty or more frames, that depicts a single act 
of sexually explicit conduct by one child. 
(b) In any prosecution for an offense under this section, it shall be an 
affirmative defense that the acts of the defendant, if proven, would 
constitute a violation of section 53a-196h, as amended by this act. 
(c) Possessing child [pornography] sexual abuse material in the 
second degree is a class C felony and any person found guilty under this 
section shall be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of which two years 
of the sentence imposed may not be suspended or reduced by the court. 
Sec. 6. Section 53a-196f of the general statutes is repealed and the 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 1, 2024): 
(a) A person is guilty of possessing child [pornography] sexual abuse 
material in the third degree when such person knowingly possesses (1)  Substitute House Bill No. 5262 
 
Public Act No. 24-118 	5 of 11 
 
fewer than twenty visual depictions of child [pornography] sexual 
abuse material, or (2) a series of images in electronic, digital or other 
format, which is intended to be displayed continuously, consisting of 
fewer than twenty frames, or a film or videotape, consisting of fewer 
than twenty frames, that depicts a single act of sexually explicit conduct 
by one child. 
(b) In any prosecution for an offense under this section, it shall be an 
affirmative defense that the acts of the defendant, if proven, would 
constitute a violation of section 53a-196h, as amended by this act. 
(c) Possessing child [pornography] sexual abuse material in the third 
degree is a class D felony and any person found guilty under this section 
shall be sentenced to a term of imprisonment of which one year of the 
sentence imposed may not be suspended or reduced by the court. 
Sec. 7. Section 53a-196g of the general statutes is repealed and the 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 1, 2024): 
In any prosecution for a violation of section 53a-196d, as amended by 
this act, 53a-196e, as amended by this act, 53a-196f, as amended by this 
act, or 53a-196h, as amended by this act, it shall be an affirmative defense 
that (1) the defendant (A) possessed fewer than three visual depictions, 
other than a series of images in electronic, digital or other format, which 
is intended to be displayed continuously, or a film or videotape, of child 
[pornography] sexual abuse material, (B) did not knowingly purchase, 
procure, solicit or request such visual depictions or knowingly take any 
other action to cause such visual depictions to come into the defendant's 
possession, and (C) promptly and in good faith, and without retaining 
or allowing any person, other than a law enforcement agency, to access 
any visual depiction or copy thereof, took reasonable steps to destroy 
each such visual depiction or reported the matter to a law enforcement 
agency and afforded that agency access to each such visual depiction, or 
(2) the defendant possessed a visual depiction of a nude person under  Substitute House Bill No. 5262 
 
Public Act No. 24-118 	6 of 11 
 
sixteen years of age for a bona fide artistic, medical, scientific, 
educational, religious, governmental or judicial purpose.  
Sec. 8. Section 53a-196h of the general statutes is repealed and the 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 1, 2024): 
(a) (1) No person who is under eighteen years of age may knowingly 
possess any visual depiction of child [pornography] sexual abuse 
material that the subject of such visual depiction knowingly and 
voluntarily transmitted by means of an electronic communication 
device to such person and in which the subject of such visual depiction 
is a person under sixteen years of age. 
(2) No person who is under sixteen years of age may knowingly and 
voluntarily transmit by means of an electronic communication device a 
visual depiction of child [pornography] sexual abuse material in which 
such person is the subject of such visual depiction to another person 
who is under eighteen years of age. 
(b) As used in this section, ["child pornography"] "child sexual abuse 
material" and "visual depiction" have the same meanings as provided in 
section 53a-193, as amended by this act, and "electronic communication 
device" means any electronic device that is capable of transmitting a 
visual depiction, including a computer, computer network and 
computer system, as those terms are defined in section 53a-250, and a 
cellular or wireless telephone. 
(c) Any person who violates the provisions of this section shall be 
guilty of a class A misdemeanor. 
Sec. 9. Section 54-86m of the general statutes is repealed and the 
following is substituted in lieu thereof (Effective October 1, 2024): 
Notwithstanding the provisions of section 54-86a, in any criminal 
proceeding, any property or material that constitutes child  Substitute House Bill No. 5262 
 
Public Act No. 24-118 	7 of 11 
 
[pornography] sexual abuse material shall remain in the care, custody 
and control of the state, and a court shall deny any request by the 
defendant to copy, photograph, duplicate or otherwise reproduce any 
property or material that constitutes child [pornography] sexual abuse 
material provided the attorney for the state makes the property or 
material reasonably available to the defendant. Such property or 
material shall be deemed to be reasonably available to the defendant if 
the attorney for the state provides the defendant, the defendant's 
attorney or any individual the defendant may seek to qualify to furnish 
expert testimony at trial, ample opportunity for inspection, viewing and 
examination of the property or material at a state facility or at another 
facility agreed upon by the attorney for the state and the defendant. For 
the purposes of this section, ["child pornography"] "child sexual abuse 
material" has the same meaning as in section 53a-193, as amended by 
this act.  
Sec. 10. Subdivision (2) of subsection (c) of section 19a-343 of the 
general statutes is repealed and the following is substituted in lieu 
thereof (Effective October 1, 2024): 
(2) Promoting an obscene performance or obscene material under 
section 53a-196 or 53a-196b, employing a minor in an obscene 
performance under section 53a-196a, importing child [pornography] 
sexual abuse material under section 53a-196c, as amended by this act, 
possessing child [pornography] sexual abuse material in the first degree 
under section 53a-196d, as amended by this act, possessing child 
[pornography] sexual abuse material in the second degree under section 
53a-196e, as amended by this act, or possessing child [pornography] 
sexual abuse material in the third degree under section 53a-196f, as 
amended by this act. 
Sec. 11. (Effective from passage) (a) There is established a task force to 
study the responsiveness of state agencies and the Judicial Branch to 
issues concerning child sexual abuse. The task force shall undertake an  Substitute House Bill No. 5262 
 
Public Act No. 24-118 	8 of 11 
 
examination of state agency and Judicial Branch policies and practices 
relating to and impacting children in order to identify opportunities to 
detect, mitigate, prevent and effectively respond to such abuse. For the 
purposes of this section, "state agency" means the Departments of 
Children and Families, Public Health, Developmental Services, Social 
Services, Mental Health and Addiction Services, Emergency Services 
and Public Protection and Education. 
(b) The task force shall consist of the following members: 
(1) One appointed by the speaker of the House of Representatives, 
who is a member of the joint standing committee of the General 
Assembly having cognizance of matters relating to the judiciary; 
(2) One appointed by the president pro tempore of the Senate, who is 
a psychologist licensed pursuant to chapter 383 of the general statutes 
with expertise in the treatment of children who have suffered from child 
sexual abuse; 
(3) One appointed by the majority leader of the House of 
Representatives, who is a clinical social worker licensed pursuant to 
chapter 383b of the general statutes with expertise in identifying child 
sexual abuse; 
(4) One appointed by the majority leader of the Senate, who is a 
physician licensed pursuant to chapter 370 of the general statutes with 
expertise in pediatric medicine; 
(5) One appointed by the minority leader of the House of 
Representatives, who is an attorney admitted to the bar of this state with 
expertise in child welfare; 
(6) One appointed by the minority leader of the Senate, who is a 
representative of a state-wide organization dedicated to the prevention 
of sexual violence;  Substitute House Bill No. 5262 
 
Public Act No. 24-118 	9 of 11 
 
(7) The Commissioner of Children and Families, or the 
commissioner's designee; 
(8) The Commissioner of Public Health, or the commissioner's 
designee; 
(9) The Commissioner of Developmental Services, or th e 
commissioner's designee; 
(10) The Commissioner of Social Services, or the commissioner's 
designee; 
(11) The Commissioner of Mental Health and Addiction Services, or 
the commissioner's designee; 
(12) The Commissioner of Emergency Services and Public Protection, 
or the commissioner's designee; 
(13) The Commissioner of Education, or the commissioner's designee; 
(14) The Chief Court Administrator, or the administrator's designee; 
(15) The Probate Court Administrator, or the administrator's 
designee; 
(16) The Chief State's Attorney, or the Chief State's Attorney's 
designee; 
(17) The Chief Public Defender, or the Chief Public Defender's 
designee; 
(18) The Child Advocate, or the Child Advocate's designee; 
(19) The executive director of the Commission on Women, Children, 
Seniors, Equity and Opportunity, or the executive director's designee; 
(20) A member of the Trafficking in Persons Council, designated by  Substitute House Bill No. 5262 
 
Public Act No. 24-118 	10 of 11 
 
the chairperson of the council; 
(21) A member of the Governor's Task Force on Justice for Abused 
Children, established in accordance with the Child Abuse Prevention 
and Treatment Act, 42 USC 5106c et seq., jointly designated by the 
cochairpersons of the task force; and 
(22) One appointed by the Governor, who is a representative of a 
children's advocacy center, as defined in section 17a-106a of the general 
statutes. 
(c) Any member of the task force appointed under subdivision (1), 
(2), (3), (4), (5) or (6) of subsection (b) of this section may be a member 
of the General Assembly. 
(d) All initial appointments to the task force shall be made not later 
than thirty days after the effective date of this section. Any vacancy shall 
be filled by the appointing authority. 
(e) The speaker of the House of Representatives and the president pro 
tempore of the Senate shall select the chairpersons of the task force from 
among the members of the task force. Such chairpersons shall schedule 
the first meeting of the task force, which shall be held not later than sixty 
days after the effective date of this section. 
(f) The administrative staff of the joint standing committee of the 
General Assembly having cognizance of matters relating to children 
shall serve as administrative staff of the task force. 
(g) Not later than July 1, 2025, the task force shall submit a report on 
its findings and recommendations to the joint standing committees of 
the General Assembly having cognizance of matters relating to children 
and the judiciary, in accordance with the provisions of section 11-4a of 
the general statutes. Such recommendations shall include, but need not 
be limited to, any legislative recommendations and recommendations  Substitute House Bill No. 5262 
 
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for changes to the policies or procedures of any state agency or the 
Judicial Branch that would aid such agency or said branch in the 
detection, mitigation, prevention and effective response to child sexual 
abuse. The task force shall terminate on the date that it submits such 
report or July 1, 2025, whichever is later. 
Sec. 12. (Effective from passage) Not later than January 1, 2025, the 
Office of the Child Advocate shall review state agency practices and 
procedures for ensuring the care and protection of minors in Probate 
Court guardianship proceedings, and submit a report, in accordance 
with the provisions of section 11-4a of the general statutes, to the joint 
standing committees of the General Assembly having cognizance of 
matters relating to children and the judiciary concerning the adequacy 
of such practices and procedures. Such report shall include, but need 
not be limited to, an analysis of the (1) statutory requirements applicable 
to such proceedings, (2) applicable court rules and policies and quality 
assurance measures, (3) practices, procedures and quality assurance 
framework applicable to the work of the Department of Children and 
Families in Probate Court matters, (4) training and contractual 
expectations for counsel assigned to minors and guardians ad litem in 
Probate Court guardianship matters, and (5) practices and procedures 
for providing guardianship subsidies to eligible recipients by the 
Department of Social Services and the quality assurance framework 
applicable to the administration of such benefits.