The Government wants to close a legal loophole that currently gives people streaming live videos of child abuse lighter sentences than those found guilty of making recordings.
Until now, some offenders received lesser sentences if it couldn’t be proved that the video they were streaming had also been recorded.
In one such case in 2013, William Hanna, a teacher working in Birmingham, was arrested after streaming sexual abuse involving a 15-year-old girl, and subsequently found guilty of sexual activity with a child.
His seven-year sentence may have been longer had the authorities proved the abuse had been recorded, as well as broadcast live.
The new proposals, outlined in the Queen’s Speech at the end of May, will mean that people who broadcast abuse would face the maximum sentence of 14…
