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Ohio debates lowering threshold for providing alcohol to minors


A bill proposed by two Republican lawmakers would lower the legal threshold for parents who

Parents “who turn a blind eye” to underage drinking would be easier to prosecute if a bill proposed by two Ohio Republicans becomes law.

House Bill 418 would lower the legal threshold for charging the owner or occupant of a home or business with allowing underage drinking from knowingly to recklessly because it is “easier for a prosecutor to prove that a person acted recklessly.”

“With the knowingly standard, people are gaming the code,” state Rep. Brian Stewart, R-Ashville, said. “I may have let 10 teenagers into my basement, and I may have stocked the fridge downstairs with beer. I may have taken keys at the front door, but I didn’t know what they were doing down there. I didn’t know they were drinking.”

The bill, which is up for a committee hearing Thursday, wouldn’t create new crimes or enhance the current penalties for adults caught providing alcohol to underage persons. It also wouldn’t change the law allowing parents to serve alcohol to their own children.



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