United States statutes pertaining
to
spanking*
[Cr.]= Criminal Code, [Ci.]=Civil Code
*As of
November 20, 2007
| WARNING- The existence of these laws are in NO WAY a DEFENSE for actually spanking a child in the United States. There is a De Facto SPANKING BAN, and there will continue to be until the New Agers finally figure out they are FATALLY WRONG and that they have DESTROYED AMERICA with their New Age parenting THEORIES- and the laws plainly clarified to ENCOURAGE spanking as necessary. |
ALABAMA
Parent/guardian/person responsible for care and supervision of a
minor/teacher or other person responsible for care and supervision of a
minor for a special
purpose may use reasonable and appropriate physical force when and to
the extent he reasonably believes it necessary and appropriate to
maintain
discipline or promote welfare of the child. Sec. 13A-3-24. [Cr.]
ALASKA
Force is justified when and to the extent reasonably necessary and
appropriate to promote a child's welfare. Parent/guardian/other person
with care and
supervision of child under 18 may use reasonable and appropriate
non-deadly force upon the child. Sec. 11.81.430.[Cr.]
ARIZONA
Parent/guardian may use reasonable and appropriate physical force upon
the minor when and to the extent reasonably necessary and appropriate
to maintain
discipline. Sec. 13-403.[Cr.]
ARKANSAS
Abuse does not include physical discipline of a child if reasonable and
moderate and inflicted by a parent or guardian for restraining or
correcting a
child. Listed as not reasonable or moderate for correcting or
restraining: -- Throwing, kicking, burning, biting, cutting, striking
with a closed fist,
shaking a child under 3, striking or other actions which result in any
non-accidental injury to a child less than 18 months, interfering with
a child's
breathing, threatening a child with a deadly weapon, striking a child
on the face, or any other act that is likely to cause bodily harm
greater than
transient pain or minor temporary marks. [Statute says this is an
illustrative and not exclusive list]. Age, size, condition of the
child, and the location of
the injury and frequency or recurrence of injuries shall be considered
in determining "reasonable" or "moderate." Sec.
9-27-303(B).[Ci.] Parent/teacher/guardian/other with care and
supervision of a minor may use
reasonable and appropriate physical force when and to the extent
reasonably necessary to maintain discipline or promote the welfare of
the child. Sec. 5-2-605(l).[Cr.] If the belief that the force is
necessary is a reckless or
negligent belief, than the above offers no defense to a crime if the
culpability of that crime is proven by showing recklessness or
negligence.
Justification is not available if person recklessly or negligently
injured or created a substantial risk of injury to a person. Sec.
5-2-614.[Cr.]
CALIFORNIA
Law not intended to prohibit the use of reasonable methods of parental
discipline, or to prescribe a particular method of parenting. Serious
physical
harm does not include reasonable and age-appropriate spanking to the
buttocks where there is no evidence of serious physical injury. Welf.
and Inst. Code
Sec. 300. [Ci.] Abuse includes unlawful corporal punishment or injury.
Penal
Code Sec. 11165.6.[Cr.] "Unlawful corporal punishment or injury" is any
person
willfully inflicting upon a child any cruel or inhuman corporal
punishment or injury resulting in a traumatic condition. Penal Code
Sec. 11165.4.[Cr.]
COLORADO
Any investigation of child abuse shall take into account the
child-rearing practices of the child's culture. Child abuse and neglect
does not include acts which can be reasonably construed to be a
reasonable exercise of parental
discipline. Sec. 19-3-303(l).[Ci.] A continued pattern of conduct which
results in cruel punishment or accumulation of injury which results in
death or serious bodily injury is child abuse. Sec. 18-6-401.[Cr.]
Parent/guardian/ person with care and supervision of minor can use
reasonable and appropriate physical
force, if it is reasonably necessary and appropriate to maintain or
promote welfare of child. Sec. 18-1-703.[Cr.]
CONNECTICUT
It is abuse if having control and custody of a child under sixteen (16)
one cruelly or unlawfully punishes. Sec. 53-20.[Cr.]
Parent/guardian/person with
care and supervision of a minor (other than a teacher) may use
reasonable physical force, when and to the extent that he reasonably
believes necessary to
maintain discipline or promote welfare of minor. Sec. 53a-18.[Cr.]
DELAWARE
Force is justifiable if reasonable and moderate and by
parent/guardian/foster parent/legal custodian/other similar person
responsible for care and
supervision. Force must be: -- For purpose of safeguarding or promoting
welfareof child,
including prevention or punishment of misconduct, and -- Intended to
benefit child. Reasonable and moderate is determined in light of: size,
age,
and condition of child, location, strength, and duration of force.
Force is not justified if it consists of: -- Throwing child, kicking,
burning, cutting,
striking with a closed fist, interfering with breathing, use of or
threatened use of deadly weapon, prolonged deprivation of sustenance or
medication, any
act likely to cause or causing physical injury, disfigurement, mental
distress, unnecessary degradation or substantial risk of serious
physical injury or
death. Criminal Sec. 468.[Cr.]
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Abuse includes excessive corporal punishment. Sec. 6-2101.[Ci.] Abuse
includes when a parent/guardian/custodian inflicts or fails to make
reasonable efforts
to prevent the infliction of physical or mental injury, including
excessive corporal punishment. Sec.
16-2301.[Ci.]
FLORIDA
"Harm" to a child occurs when the parent or other person responsible
for the child's welfare inflicts or allows to be inflicted upon the
child physical,
mental, or emotional injury. The following factors must be considered
in evaluating any injury: prior injuries; location; multiplicity; and
type of
trauma. Such injury include, but are not limited to willful acts that
produce the following specific injuries: sprains, dislocations, or
cartilage damage;
bone or skull fractures; brain or spinal cord damage; intracranial
hemorrhage or injury to other internal organs; asphyxiation,
suffocation, or drowning;
injury resulting from the use of a deadly weapon; burns or scalding;
cuts, lacerations, punctures, or bites; permanent or temporary
disfigurement; or
permanent or temporary loss or impairment of a body part or function.
"Willful" refers to the intent to perform an action, not to achieve a
particular result
or an intent to cause an injury. Sec. 415.503.[Ci.]
GEORGIA
Physical forms of discipline may be used as long as there is no
physical injury to the child. Secs. 19-7-5/
19-15- 1/49-5-180.[Ci.] Parent or person in loco parentis reasonably
disciplining of a minor has a justification for a criminal
prosecution based on that conduct. Sec. 16-3-20.[Cr.]
HAWAII
Parent/guardian/person responsible for general care and supervision of
minor/person acting at request of above may use force if. -- employed
with due
regard for age and size of minor and reasonably related to purpose of
safeguarding or promoting welfare of minor, including prevention or
punishment of minor's conduct, and -- not designed to cause or known to
create a risk of
causing substantial bodily injury, disfigurement, extreme pain,
mental
distress, or neurological damage. Sec. 703-309.[Cr.]
IDAHO
Abuse includes physical cruelty in excess of that required for
reasonable disciplinary purposes, inflicted by a parent or other person
in whom legal
custody is vested. Sec. 16-2002.[Ci.]
ILLINOIS
An "abused child" includes any child whose parent/immediate family
member/person responsible for the child's welfare/individual residing
in the
same house/paramour of child's parent inflicts excessive corporal
punishment.
Secs. 325 5/3/ [Ci.]
INDIANA
Law does not limit right of parent/guardian/custodian to use reasonable
corporal punishment when disciplining a child. Sec. 31-34-1-15.[Ci.]
IOWA
Child endangerment includes using unreasonable force, torture, or
cruelty which results in physical injury, is intended to cause serious
injury, or causes
substantial mental or emotional harm. Sec. 726.6.[Cr.]
KANSAS
Abuse includes cruel and inhuman corporal punishment. Sec. 21-3609.[Cr.]
KENTUCKY
Parent/guardian/person/teacher with care and supervision of minor can
use force if person believes force necessary for welfare of child and
force is not
designed to cause or known to cause a substantial risk of causing
death, serious physical injury, disfigurement, extreme pain, or extreme
mental
distress. Sec. 503.110.[Cr.]
LOUISIANA
In determining abuse the agency should take into
account that an injury may
have resulted from what might be considered reasonable discipline for a
child's misbehavior. Children's Code Art. 615(A).[Ci.]
Parent/tutor/teacher reasonably
disciplining a minor has a defense to a criminal prosecution based on
that conduct. Sec. 14:18. [Cr.]
MAINE
It is a crime for parent/guardian/other with care and custody of child
to cruelly treat a child by extreme punishment. 17A Sec. 554(1)(B-1).
[Cr.]
MARYLAND
Law does not prohibit reasonable punishment by parent or stepparent,
including reasonable corporal punishment, evaluated in light of the age
and condition of
child. Sec. 4-501.[Ci.]
MICHIGAN
Parent/guardian/other person permitted by law, parent, or guardian can
reasonably discipline a child, including the use of reasonable force.
Sec.
750.136b.[Cr.]
MINNESOTA
Parent/legal guardian/caretaker who intentionally uses unreasonable
force or cruel discipline that is excessive under the circumstances is
guilty of malicious punishment. Sec. 609.377.[Cr.] Parent/legal
guardian/teacher/caretaker of child or pupil can use reasonable force
to restrain or correct a child or pupil. Sec. 609.379.[Cr.]
MISSISSIPPI
Physical discipline (not to include any form of sexual abuse) performed
on a child by a parent, guardian or custodian shall only be deemed to
be abuse under this paragraph when a licensed physician has determined
that physical injury has occurred. Sec. 97-5-39(2(m)). [Cr.]
MISSOURI
Discipline including spanking, administered in a reasonable manner, is
not abuse. Sec. 210.110. [Ci.] Force justified if by
parent/guardian/other person
with care and supervision of minor if- -- Person believes force
necessary to promote welfare of minor, and -- Force used is not
designed to cause or
believed to create a substantial risk of causing death, serious
physical injury, disfigurement, extreme pain, or extreme emotional
distress. Sec.
563.061.[Cr.]
MONTANA
"Physical abuse" is defined as "substantial skin bruising, internal
bleeding, substantial injury to skin, subdural
hematoma, intentional burns, bone fractures, extreme pain, permanent or
temporary disfigurement, impairment of
any bodily organ or function, or death if the injury or death is not
accidental." Sec. 41-3-102.[Ci.] Parent or
authorized agent of parent/guardian/master/teacher is justified to use
force if reasonable and
necessary to restrain or correct child. Sec. 45-3-107.[Cr.]
NEBRASKA
It is abuse to knowingly, intentionally, or negligently cause or permit
a child to be cruelly punished. Sec. 28-710.[Cr.]
Parent/guardian/person responsible for care and supervision/person
acting at one of the above's request is
justified to use force on a minor if for the purpose of safeguarding or
promoting the welfare of minor, including prevention or punishment of
misconduct, but not designed to cause or known to create a substantial
risk of causing death, serious bodily harm, disfigurement, extreme
pain, mental
distress, or gross degradation. Sec. 28-1413.[Cr.] If the belief that
the force is necessary is a reckless or negligent belief, than the
above offers no
defense to a crime, if the culpability of that crime is proven by
showing recklessness or negligence. Justification is not available if
person recklessly
or negligently injured or created a substantial risk of injury to a
person. Sec. 28-1414.[Cr.]
NEVADA
Excessive corporal punishment may cause physical or mental injuries
which constitute abuse. Sec. 432B.150.[Ci.] "Injury" to a child occurs
when a
parent/guardian/custodian inflicts or allows to be inflicted upon a
child physical, mental, or emotional injuries sustained as a result of
excessive
corporal punishment. Sec. 128.013.[Ci.]
NEW HAMPSHIRE
Parent/guardian/person/teacher responsible for general care and welfare
of minor may use force against minor when and to the extent that he
reasonably
believes it necessary to prevent or punish minor's misconduct. No
defense available for malicious or reckless use of force that creates
risk of death,
serious bodily injury, or substantial pain. Sec. 627:6.[Cr.]
NEW JERSEY
Cruelty to a child includes inflicting unnecessarily severe corporal
punishment upon a child. Sec. 9:6-1.[Ci.] "Abuse" includes a parent,
guardian, or other
person with control or custody inflicting excessive corporal punishment
(which must be excessive to the point that the child's physical,
mental, or emotional
condition has been impaired or is in imminent danger of becoming
impaired as a result). Sec. 9:6-8.9.[Ci.] Person with responsibility
for care,
supervision, discipline, or safety of another may use force against
them if for the purpose
of and to the extent necessary to further the responsibility. Sec.
2C:3-8.[Cr.] Justification is not available if the person recklessly or
negligently
injures or creates a risk of injury. Sec. 2C: 3-9.[Cr.]
NEW MEXICO
An abused child includes one who has been cruelly punished by a parent/
guardian/ custodian. Sec.32A-1-4(B).[Ci.] Abuse includes knowingly,
intentionally, or negligently permitting or causing a child to be
cruelly punished. Sec. 30-6-1.[Cr.]
NEW YORK
Neglecting a child includes unreasonably inflicting or allowing the
infliction of harm or substantial risk thereof, including excessive
corporal punishment.
Fam. Ct. Sec. 1012.[Ci.] Parent/guardian/other person with care and
supervision of person under 21, can use non-deadly physical force when
and to the extent he
reasonably believes necessary to maintain discipline or promote welfare
of person force performed upon. Penal Sec. 35:10.[Cr.]
NORTH CAROLINA
Abuse includes infliction of a serious physical injury by other than
accidental means; creating a substantial risk of such injury by other
than accidental
means; and using cruel or grossly inappropriate procedures or devices
to modify behavior. Juvenile Sec. 7B-101(1). [Ci.]
NORTH DAKOTA
"Harm" includes injuries sustained from excessive corporal punishment.
Sec. 50-25.1-02.[Ci.] Parent/guardian/other person responsible for care
and supervision
of minor/person acting at direction of the above can use reasonable
force on a minor for safeguarding or promoting his welfare, including
prevention or
punishment of his misconduct and maintenance of proper discipline.
Force does not have to be "necessary," but cannot create substantial
risk of death,
serious bodily injury or disfigurement, or gross degradation. Sec.
12.1-05-05.[Cr.]
OHIO
Not abuse if not prohibited under law prohibiting endangering children.
"Endangering children" is administering
corporal punishment or other physical discipline, or physically
restraining the child in a cruel manner or
for a prolonged period if the punishment or discipline is excessive
under the circumstances and creates a substantial risk of serious
physical harm to the
child. Sec. 2151.031.[Ci.] It is a criminal act to administer corporal
punishment or other physical discipline, or to physically restrain the
child in
a cruel manner or for a prolonged period if it is excessive under the
circumstances and creates a substantial risk of serious physical harm
to the
child. It is a criminal act to administer unwarranted disciplinary
measures to child if there is a substantial risk that if conduct is
continued it will seriously impair the child's health or development.
Sec. 2919.22.[Cr.]
OKLAHOMA
Parents/teachers/other persons can use ordinary force as a means of
discipline, including but not limited to spanking, switching, or
paddling. 21 Sec. 844.[Cr.] Criminal penalty for using unreasonable
force upon a child under 18. 10
Sec. 7115.[Cr.]
OREGON
Physical force is justified if parent/guardian/other person with the
care and supervision of a minor uses reasonable force when and to the
extent the person reasonably believes necessary to maintain discipline
or promote welfare of
minor. Sec. 161.205. [Cr.]
PENNSYLVANIA
Parents can use reasonable supervision and control when raising their
children.23 Sec. 6302.[Ci.] Parent/guardian/person responsible for
general care and
supervision/ person acting at request of the above may use force for
the purpose of safeguarding or promoting welfare of minor including the
prevention
or punishment of his misconduct, if the force is not designed to cause
or known to create a substantial risk of causing death, serious bodily
injury,
disfigurement, extreme pain, mental distress, or gross degradation. 18
Sec. 509.[Cr.]
RHODE ISLAND
Abuse occurs when a child's physical or mental welfare is harmed or
threatened by a parent or person responsible for child's welfare, by
means including
excessive corporal punishment which causes physical or mental injury or
creates or allows to be created a substantial risk of physical or
mental injury. Sec.40-11-2.[Ci.] Serious physical injury is any injury,
other than a serious
bodily injury, arising from other than non-excessive corporal
punishment. Sec.11-9-5.3. [Cr.]
SOUTH CAROLINA
"Harm" includes excessive corporal punishment. "Harm" does not include
corporal punishment or physical discipline if- Administered by a parent
or person
acting in place of a parent, Perpetrated for the sole purpose of
restraining or correcting, Force is reasonable in manner and moderate
in degree, There is no permanent damage, and Behavior is not reckless
or grossly negligent. Sec.
20-7-490.[Ci.]
SOUTH DAKOTA
It is abuse to cruelly punish. Sec. 26-10-1.[Cr.]
Parent/guardian/teacher/school official can use, attempt, or offer to
use force if reasonable in manner and moderate in degree, and used to
restrain or
correct as necessitated by misconduct or refusal to obey a lawful
command. Sec.22-18-5 [Cr.]
TENNESSEE
Permits criminal charges against a parent/guardian/custodian who
administers "unreasonable" corporal punishment which causes "injury" to
the child.
Sec. 39-15-401 [Cr.]
TEXAS
Abuse does not include reasonable discipline by a
parent/guardian/managing or possessory conservator if child not exposed
to substantial risk of harm. Family Code Sec. 261.001.[Ci.]
Parent/stepparent/person standing in loco
parentis to child is justified to use non-deadly force against a child
under 18 when and to degree the actor reasonably believes necessary to
discipline, or safeguard or
promote child's welfare. Penal Sec. 9.61.[Cr.]
UTAH
Force is justified if used for reasonable discipline of a minor by
parent/guardian/teacher /person standing in loco parentis. Sec.
76-2-401.[Cr.]
WASHINGTON
Physical discipline is not unlawful if reasonable and moderate and
inflicted by parent /teacher/guardian for restraint or correction.
Presumed unreasonable if
the following are used to correct/ restrain: -- Throwing, kicking,
burning, cutting, striking with a closed fist, shaking a child under 3,
interfering with breathing, threatening with a deadly weapon, any other
act likely to cause and which does cause bodily harm greater than
transient pain or minor
temporary marks. [Statute says this list is illustrative and not
exclusive]. Age, size,condition of child, and location of injury are
all factors in
determining "reasonable" and "moderate." Sec. 9A.16.100.[Cr.]
WEST VIRGINIA
Physical injury can include that which is the result of excessive
corporal punishment. Sec. 49-1-3 [Ci.]
WISCONSIN
Use of force is justified when actor's conduct is reasonable discipline
of a child by a person responsible for child's welfare. Reasonable
discipline may
involve only such force as a reasonable person believes is necessary.
Never reasonable to use force intended to cause great bodily harm or
death, or which
creates an unreasonable risk of great bodily harm or death. Sec.
939.45.[Cr.]
WYOMING
Abuse include excessive or unreasonable corporal punishment. Sec.
14-3-202.[Ci.] A "neglected child" includes one abused by the
infliction of physical or
mental injury including excessive or unreasonable corporal punishment.
Sec. 14-6-201.[Ci.] Same definition as civil abuse definition. Sec.
6-2-503.[Cr.]