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HB0194 • 2025

Obscenity amendments.

AN ACT relating to crimes and offenses; creating the crime of promoting obscenity to minors; amending the crime of promoting obscenity as specified; providing and amending definitions; repealing an exemption from the crime of promoting obscenity for activities conducted in the course of employment at a school, college, university, museum or public library; repealing obsolete provisions; and providing for an effective date.

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Inactive

Wyoming marks this bill as inactive, which usually means it is no longer moving in the current session.

Sponsor
Representative Lucas
Last action
2025-03-03
Official status
inactive
Effective date
3/1/2025

Plain English Breakdown

The bill did not pass and is now inactive.

Amendments to Obscenity Laws

The bill creates a new crime for promoting obscenity to minors and removes exemptions from the crime of promoting obscenity for certain professionals.

What This Bill Does

  • Creates a new crime called 'promoting obscenity to minors'.
  • Defines what is considered harmful to minors in terms of sexual content or nudity.
  • Sets penalties for those who promote obscene material to minors, including fines up to $6,000 and jail time up to one year.
  • Repeals exemptions that allowed certain professionals like teachers or librarians to show obscene materials as part of their job.

Who It Names or Affects

  • People who create, distribute, or show obscene material to minors.
  • Schools, colleges, universities, museums, and public libraries where employees previously had an exemption from the obscenity laws.

Terms To Know

Harmful to Minors
Material that appeals to a prurient interest in sex for minors, is patently offensive to community standards about what is suitable for minors, and lacks serious literary, scientific, medical, artistic or political value for minors.
Disseminate
To sell, distribute, deliver, provide, exhibit, import, export, rent, lend, transfer possession of or title to, provide, display, show, present, broadcast, transmit, retransmit, communicate by telephone, play, orally communicate, perform or otherwise make available to another.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill did not pass and is now inactive.
  • It does not specify how the new laws will be enforced in schools and libraries.
  • The effective date of July 1, 2025, was set but may not apply since the bill is inactive.

Bill History

  1. 2025-03-03 House

    H:Died in Committee Returned Bill Pursuant to HR 5-4

  2. 2025-02-07 House

    H No report prior to CoW Cutoff

  3. 2025-01-21 House

    H Introduced and Referred to H01 - Judiciary

  4. 2025-01-16 House

    H Received for Introduction

  5. 2025-01-15 LSO

    Bill Number Assigned

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
25LSO-0470
2025
STATE OF WYOMING
25LSO-0470
Introduced
2.0

HOUSE BILL NO. HB0194

Obscenity amendments.

Sponsored by: Representative(s) Lucas, Andrew, Angelos, Bear, Brady, Brown, G, Campbell, K, Guggenmos, Heiner, Hoeft, Johnson, Lien, Neiman, Styvar, Wasserburger, Webb and Wharff and Senator(s) Hutchings, Laursen, D, Pearson, Smith, D and Steinmetz

A BILL

for

AN ACT relating to crimes and offenses; creating the crime of promoting obscenity to minors; amending the crime of promoting obscenity as specified; providing and amending definitions; repealing an exemption from the crime of promoting obscenity for activities conducted in the course of employment at a school, college, university, museum or public library; repealing obsolete provisions; and providing for an effective date.

Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Wyoming:

Section 1
.

W.S. 6
‑
4
‑
301(a)(i) and (ii) and 6
‑
4
‑
302(c)(i) and by creating new subsections (d) through (f) are amended to read:

6
‑
4
‑
301.

Definitions.

(a)

As used in this article:

(i)

"Disseminate" means to sell, distribute, deliver, provide, exhibit
, import, export, rent, lend, transfer possession of or title to, provide, display, show, present, broadcast, transmit, retransmit, communicate by telephone, play, orally communicate, perform
or otherwise make available to another
whether in person or electronically
;

(ii)

"Material" includes any form of human expression or communication intended for, or capable of, visual, auditory or sensory perception
.
;

This includes, without limitation:

(A)

A book, leaflet, pamphlet, magazine, picture, drawing, photograph, film, negative, slide, motion picture, figure, object, novelty, device, recording, transcription, live or recorded telephone message or any other similar item, whether tangible or intangible;

(B)

A performance, exhibition, transmission or distribution of any materials defined in subparagraph (A) of this paragraph;

(C)

A live performance or exhibition that depicts nudity, sexual conduct, sexual excitement, sadomasochistic behavior or abuse, as those terms are defined in this subsection, whether to the public or an audience of one (1) or more persons.

6
‑
4
‑
302.

Promoting obscenity; penalties.

(c)

This section shall not apply to any person who may produce, reproduce, possess or disseminate obscene material:

(i)

In the course of law enforcement and judicial activities
or in the course of medical or mental health care treatment
;

(d)

A person commits the crime of promoting obscenity to a minor if he, knowing the character of the material involved, knowingly:

(i)

Disseminates, furnishes, presents, provides, makes available, gives, lends, shows or advertises to a minor material that is harmful to minors;

(ii)

Provides, invites or promotes an event to minors that includes material that is harmful to minors; or

(iii)

Transmits or sends to a person that the person believes is a minor by means of electronic mail, personal messaging or any other direct internet communication material that is harmful to minors when the person knows or believes at the time of transmission that a minor in this state will receive that material.

(e)

Promoting obscenity to a minor is a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not to exceed six thousand dollars ($6,000.00) or by imprisonment for not to exceed one (1) year, or both.

(f)

For purposes of subsection (d) of this section:

(i)

"Harmful to minors" means that quality of any description, exhibition, presentation or representation, in whatever form, of nudity, sexual conduct, sexual excitement or sadomasochistic abuse, when the material or performance has the following characteristics:

(A)

The average person eighteen (18) years of age or older would find that the material or performance has a predominant tendency to appeal to a prurient interest in sex to minors;

(B)

The average person eighteen (18) years of age or older would find that the material or performance depicts or describes nudity, sexual conduct, sexual excitement or sadomasochistic abuse in a manner that is patently offensive to prevailing standards in the adult community with respect to what is suitable for minors; and

(C)

The material or performance lacks serious literary, scientific, medical, artistic or political value for minors.

(ii)

"Nudity" means a:

(A)

Showing of the human male or female genitals, pubic area or buttocks with no covering or less than a fully opaque covering;

(B)

Showing of the female breast with no covering or less than a fully opaque covering of any portion of the female breast below the top of the nipple; or

(C)

Depiction of covered male genitals in a discernibly turgid state.

(iii)

"Sexual conduct" means:

(A)

Any act of sexual intercourse, masturbation, excretory functions, lewd exhibition of the genitals, sadomasochistic abuse or bestiality;

(B)

Any other physical contact with a person's unclothed genitals, pubic area, buttocks or female breast, whether alone or between members of the same or opposite sex or between a human and an animal, in an act of sexual stimulation or attempting to sexually stimulate, gratification or perversion;

(C)

Any sexual or gender
‑
oriented material that knowingly exposes minors to persons who are dressed in sexually revealing, exaggerated or provocative clothing or costumes, or are stripping, or engaged in lewd or lascivious dancing or movements, presentations or activities in any place where minors are expected, invited or are known to be present.

(iv)

"Sexual intercourse" means coitus or copulation, whether genital
‑
genital, oral
‑
genital, anal
‑
genital or oral
‑
anal, and whether between persons of the same or opposite sex or between a human and an animal.

Section 2.

W.S. 6
‑
4
‑
302(b)(ii) and (c)(ii) is repealed.

Section 3
.

This act is effective July 1, 2025
.

(END)

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HB0194