CONCORD, N.H. — If the attorney general has probable cause to believe a legislator does not live in the district he or she represents, the attorney general would be obligated
For the 200 portraits in the New Hampshire State House, there’s a common theme – most depict old, white men. Nine portraits recognize female leaders. But if a portrait of the late Rogers Johnson, former civil rights leader and state representative,.
CONCORD A re-introduced House bill would criminalize the practice of sending explicit images of oneself to another person without the recipient’s consent, making the practice of “cyber-flashing” a misdemeanor.Receiving unwanted photos of another.
NH Business Review
New Hampshire House bill takes aim at sending unwanted explicit images
March 11, 2021
As the coronavirus pandemic has moved daily life into the virtual world, crime has followed. We now have words like “Zoombombing” and “cyberflashing” to describe new forms of online harassment. This year, the New Hampshire Legislature is considering a bill that would criminalize some of these behaviors.
Unsolicited explicit images
According to a 2017 YouGov poll, over half of women under age 35 have received an unsolicited explicit image from a man, and roughly one-fourth of young men admit to sending an uninvited photo of their genitalia.