Creates felony crimes for grooming minors or mentally compromised people, including electronic solicitation.

HB 2317 / SB 2566

Bill Description

As enacted, provides that a person commits the offense of grooming of a minor when the person engages in a course of grooming conduct directed at a minor with the specific intent to commit, or facilitate the commission by another person of, a sexual offense or violent sexual offense against the minor; or to cause or induce the minor to engage in simulated sexual activity that is patently offensive or sexual activity; makes related changes.

Bill Sponsors

Bill Co-Sponsors

House: Fritts, Powell, White, Reedy, Terry, Reneau, Hawk, Hurt, Cepicky, Powers, Maberry, Martin B, Salinas

Senate: Lowe, Stevens, Yager, White

TLRC Statement on Bill

HB2317 creates (or clarifies) the crime of “grooming of a minor” in Tennessee by criminalizing a course of grooming conduct directed at a minor when done with the specific intent either to (1) commit, or to facilitate another person committing, a sexual offense or violent sexual offense against that minor, or (2) cause or induce the minor to engage in sexual activity or simulated sexual activity that is “patently offensive.” In practice this targets the pattern of behavior that often precedes child sexual abuse — repeated contact, manipulation, or enticement — rather than a single inadvertent remark or isolated contact. The bill ties culpability to a mental state (specific intent), which means prosecutors must prove the defendant intended to bring about the sexual offense or inducement rather than merely engaging in ambiguous conduct.

From a conservative perspective the measure advances core obligations of government: protecting the vulnerable and supporting law-and-order enforcement against sexual predators. The inclusion of a specific-intent requirement is important for due process and reduces the risk of convicting people for innocent or ambiguous interactions. That said, language like “grooming conduct,” “course of conduct,” and especially “patently offensive” is fact-sensitive and may be subject to vagueness or overbreadth challenges if not narrowly defined in the statute or clarified in implementing guidance or case law. Overall, HB2317 appears to be a reasonable, targeted criminal prohibition intended to prevent child sexual exploitation while preserving constitutional protections, provided courts and prosecutors apply it narrowly.

Vote Result:

Passed

TLRC Position:

SUPPORT

Read the Bill