FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM  JULY 25, 2019 • THE QUEENS COURIER 19 
 Photo courtesy of Assemblyman Edward Braunstein 
 Bayside assemblyman’s bill criminalizes revenge porn in New York 
 BY JENNA BAGCAL 
 jbagcal@qns.com 
 @jenna_bagcal 
 Cyberbullies in New York state looking  
 to publish revenge porn will now face up  
 to a year in jail thanks to a Bayside lawmaker’s  
 Queens lawmaker’s fi  rst-in-the-nation cat declawing ban enacted 
 BY BILL PARRY 
 bparry@schnepsmedia.com 
 @QNS 
 New York became the fi rst state in the  
 nation to outlaw cat declawing. 
 State Senator Michael Gianaris sponsored  
 the legislation that was signed into  
 law by Governor Andrew Cuomo imposing  
 a $1,000 fi ne for medically unnecessary  
 declawing practices. 
 “Declawing is a cruel and painful procedure  
 that can create physical and behavioral  
 problems for helpless animals and  
 today it stops,” Cuomo said. “By banning  
 this archaic practice, we will ensure that  
 animals are no longer subjected to these  
 inhumane and unnecessary procedures.” 
 Declawing, also known as onychectomy, 
  involves the removal of all or most  
 of the last bone of each of the toes of the  
 front feet, and tendons, nerves and ligaments  
 that  allow  for  normal  function  of  
 the paws are severed, resulting in intense  
 and chronic pain and other serious medical  
 or behavioral issues. Aft er the claws  
 are removed, cats oft en shift  their gait and  
 where it places most of its weight, causing  
 strain on its leg joints and spine, which  
 can lead to early onset arthritis and prolonged  
 back and joint pain. 
 Cats’ claws play an important role in  
 various aspects of their lives, including to  
 assist in climbing and maintaining balance  
 and to escape danger. 
 “Cat declawing is a brutal procedure  
 similar to severing a human fi nger at the  
 fi rst knuckle and has lifelong ramifi cations  
 for cats,” Gianaris said. “I am proud  
 of the new Senate majority’s emphasis on  
 animal welfare and am glad the governor  
 enacted this legislation.” 
 Nine cities across the country, including  
 Denver, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Santa  
 Monica, West Hollywood and Berkley  
 have enacted anti-declawing laws. State  
 legislatures  in  California,  New  Jersey,  
 Massachusetts, Rhode Island and West  
 Virginia  are  considering  similar  measures. 
 newly signed legislation criminalizing  
 the act. 
 Aft er a six-year push, Governor Andrew  
 Cuomo  recently  signed  Assemblyman  
 Edward  Braunstein’s  bill  criminalizing  
 the publication of revenge porn or the  
 “non-consensual sharing or publication of  
 an intimate image.” 
 Images classifi ed as “revenge porn” are  
 done with the intent to cause harm to the  
 emotional, fi nancial or physical welfare of  
 a person. In addition, the images must be  
 taken with a reasonable expectation that it  
 will remain private. 
 Under  the  bill,  violators  will  face  up  
 to a year in jail and as well as civil damages. 
   Th  e  law  also empowers  victims  to  
 seek a court order to remove the off ending  
 images online. 
 “Th  is  new  law  will  make  it  a  Class  
 A  misdemeanor  to  disseminate  revenge  
 porn,  providing  prosecutors  with  the  
 tools  necessary  to  punish  those  who  
 engage  in  this  type  of  reprehensible  
 behavior.  Additionally,  New  York  will  
 become  the  fi rst  state  in  the  nation  to  
 allow  victims  to  seek  a  court-ordered  
 injunction to require websites to remove  
 the off ending images,” said Braunstein. 
 Th  e northeast Queens lawmaker introduced  
 the  bill  in  2013  to  keep  up  with  
 people’s 21st-century photo-sharing habits  
 of  decimating  intimate  images  by  
 phone and online. 
 In February 2019, Cuomo and the state  
 Legislature voted in favor of the bill. 
 “Th  ank  you  to  Governor  Cuomo  for  
 signing this important measure into law.  
 I would also like to express my gratitude  
 to Carrie Goldberg, a victims’ rights lawyer, 
   as  well  as  Sanctuary  for  Families,  
 the  Cyber  Civil  Rights  Initiative  and  
 the Cyber  Sexual  Abuse  Task  Force,  for  
 their  tireless  advocacy  on  this  issue,”  
 Braunstein said. 
 Th  e Assembly unanimously passed the  
 bill last year, while it failed to pass in the  
 then-Republican  Senate.  According  to  
 QNS, the Senate did not bring the bill to  
 the  fl oor  despite  alleged  pressure  from  
 the Internet Association and Google. 
 “Our  laws  have  not  kept  pace  with  
 technology  and  how  abusers  can  use  it  
 to harass, intimidate and humiliate intimate  
 partners,” Cuomo  said.  “By  criminalizing  
 the publication of revenge porn,  
 we  are  empowering  victims  of  this  heinous  
 act  to  take  action  against  their  
 abusers and showing them a path to justice.” 
 Councilman  Rory  Lancman  passed  a  
 similar  bill  in  the  City  Council  back  in  
 2017. At the city level, violators can face  
 up to a year in jail, a $1,000 fi ne or both. 
 “As  part  of  our  Women’s  Justice  
 Agenda,  we  are  focused  on  changing  
 a  culture  that  enables  sexism  and  violence  
 against  women,”  said  Lieutenant  
 Governor Kathy Hochul. “Th  is  legislation  
 ensures New Yorkers are not victims  
 of  nonconsensual  release  of  intimate  
 images, empowering them to take action  
 to remove images from the Internet and  
 subject abusers to jail time. Th  is is another  
 important step in our overall goals to  
 achieve true social, economic, racial and  
 gender justice once and for all.” 
 
				
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