Texas Senate Bill 20

Senate Bill 20
Texas Legislature
  • Relating to the creation of the criminal offense of possession, promotion, or production of certain obscene visual material appearing to depict a child.
Territorial extent Texas
Enacted byTexas Senate
EnactedMay 26, 2025
Enacted byTexas House of Representatives
Signed byGreg Abbott
SignedJune 20, 2025
EffectiveSeptember 1, 2025
First chamber: Texas Senate
Bill citation[1]
Introduced byPete Flores, Brent Hagenbuch, Juan Hinojosa, Joan Huffman, Phil King, and Tan Parker
Summary
Creates new criminal offenses for "obscene visual material" and possession or promotion of "obscene visual material" that appears to depict a child under age 18.
Status: In force
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Texas Senate Bill 20 (S.B. 20), also known as the "Stopping AI-Generated Child Pornography Act", is a 2025 law in the state of Texas that creates new criminal offenses for those who possess, promote, or view visual material deemed obscene, which is said to depict a child, whether it is an actual person, animated or cartoon depiction, or an image of someone created through computer software or artificial intelligence. It was passed by the Texas Legislature on May 28, 2025, unanimously in both chambers. It was signed into law by Governor Greg Abbott on June 20, 2025. It went into effect on September 1, 2025.

It was authored by Pete Flores and co-sponsored by Brent Hagenbuch, Juan Hinojosa, Joan Huffman, Phil King, and Tan Parker, as part of a package of legislation in the Texas House and Senate about A.I. and child pornography. Some supporters called it "common-sense" legislation falling within the "proper role" of government, protecting children and the "common good" within the state, with Heidi Ruiz, a police sergeant in Houston, describing the bill as "fantastic" and "fabulous."

The bill drew comparisons to language, within Texas state legislation, which aimed to institute state-level book bans. Critics described the law as unconstitutional, saying it violated the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment which prohibits abridgement of freedom of speech and the press, including the legal precedent set in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition. The Comic Book Legal Defense Fund vowed to support those wrongly accused under the law. Much of the controversy regarding S.B. 20 involves the broad language pertaining to "obscene" pornographic images as including A.I.-created, animated, and cartoon depictions, with some critics arguing it could have a chilling effect on anime, manga, graphic novels, and other media produced, distributed, or created within Texas.