Archive for 2024

State Rep. Steve Demetriou Interviewed after Introducing the E-Check Ease Act

August 9, 2024

Recently, State Representative Steve Demetriou joined State Representative Bill Roemer (R— Richfield) to introduce HB 640, the E-Check Ease Act.

Speaking on the legislation in an interview with Cleveland 19 News, Rep. Demetriou said, “The bill is pretty simple. It creates a way for Northeast Ohioans to comply with the E-Check mandate through personal form, saying their vehicle complies with the federal Clean Air Act on guidelines that require the state to implement this E-Check mandate.”

Currently, residents of the following Ohio counties must comply with E-Check mandates set forth by the federal Clean Air Act, administered by the Ohio EPA: Cuyahoga, Geauga, Lake, Lorain, Medina, Portage, and Summit. All gasoline, diesel, and hybrid vehicles without an electric plug-in charging port, between four and twenty-five years old, registered in these counties, must be tested every two years.

Rep. Demetriou, in an interview with Fox 8 News, noted benefits to Northeast Ohioans if HB 640 is signed into law: “We’re giving our constituents back the most precious thing we all have, which is our time.”

If signed into law, HB 640 would also shrink the E-Check mandate for gasoline and diesel vehicles to six to twenty-five years old, and the mandate for hybrid vehicles would shrink to seven to twenty-five years old.


Interviews and videos regarding the E-Check Ease Act can be accessed here:

Cleveland 19 News

Fox 8 News

WKYC

State Rep. Steve Demetriou Interviewed for Legislation Regarding Deepfakes and Online Protection

July 11, 2024

Ohioans would get more protection from targeted “deepfakes” with new bills proposed in the state House of Representatives seeking to enhance personal privacy and security.

Ohio House Bill 401, sponsored by Rep. Steve Demetriou, R-Bainbridge Township, and Rep. Kevin Miller, R-Newark, would create the offense of “nonconsensual distribution of a deepfake,” or spreading a falsified digital image or recording that has been altered and manipulated to falsely represent someone as doing or saying something that they didn’t do or say.

Taking a more specific approach, Demetriou has also introduced House Bill 295, or the Innocence Act.

With this, Demetriou’s bill would require organizations to verify users’ age before giving them access to inappropriate or obscene content, forbid using another’s likeness to create sexually explicit images of them, and allow the private right of civil action for each offense.

Demetriou became aware of this problem after seeing a Twitch streamer share her reaction to her face being foisted upon lewd imagery.

“My aide and I, you know, watched an interview with her and she broke down in tears and just talked about her experience with, you know, just seeing her image and likeness imposed on a pornographic video unknowingly,” said Demetriou.

Recognizing the potential for danger and harm stemming from this particular application of deep fakes, Demetriou began working on House Bill 295.

“Especially for young women, this is a real threat,” said Demetriou. “That just didn’t sit well with me. And I think we need to protect our children and especially you know, women, against these threats.”

House Bill 295 would draw upon existing language within the Ohio Revised Code and expand it to cover deepfakes.

“You can already have a, you know, civil cause of action for revenge porn. So to the deepfake side of things, we just kind of use that existing part of the revised code to address this newer issue with deepfakes, what in the bill is called a fabricated sexual image, but with the age verification in 295 as well, that also has a civil cause of action created under the bill,” said Branden Agnew, Demetriou’s legislative aide.

Both Miller and Demetriou feel that it’s time for the law to catch up with rapidly transforming technologies in order to adequately uphold people’s personal rights.

Demetriou speculated that the measures may come up for a vote in the fall, and said he is determined to continue working on and refining the proposed bills.

“Like every evolving and emerging technology, there’s good and bad,” Demetriou said. “And we’re just trying to protect Ohioans from the bad while making sure, you know, they can still exercise their constitutional rights and freedoms. And I think we’re on the right side of history on these issues.”


From: Fishman, Noah. “Ohio House of Representatives May Approve Legislation to Curb Deepfake Defamation.” The Columbus Dispatch, 2 July 2024, www.dispatch.com/story/news/politics/state/2024/07/02/legislation-proposed-to-protect-public-from-deepfake-visual-and-audio-misrepresentations/74244205007/.

State Rep. Steve Demetriou Interviewed for Legislation Regarding Squatting and Protection for Property Owners

July 11, 2024

Four GOP state lawmakers want to crack down on squatters, arguing the current eviction process doesn’t provide enough legal protections to property owners.

Two nearly identical bills—House Bills 478 and 480—would allow owners to “immediately” request removal, by law enforcement, of an unauthorized person in a residential place under certain conditions. The bills would also broaden the definition of criminal mischief and create a title fraud charge in Ohio.

Rep. Steve Demetriou (R-Bainbridge Twp.) is sponsoring HB 480 and said the issue is personal. Demetriou was in the process of selling an investment property in Florida when his broker discovered a squatter in the house after his final tenant moved out—which delayed the sale.

“Peeking through the window, it looked like they had made themselves quite at home,” Demetriou said in an interview. “I think they just saw a vacant property, and probably knew that it was getting sold and probably knew that it was potentially an out-of-state owner, and took advantage of that.”

The intention with the bill, he said, is to target people who enter a unit illegally.

“We’re certainly not trying to create avenues for landlords that want to use this as an avenue just to kick out a legitimate tenant that maybe they just don’t like,” Demetriou said.


From: Donaldson, Sarah. “Ohio House Bills Circumvent Standard Evictions Process for Squatters.” The Statehouse News Bureau, 24 June 2024, https://www.statenews.org/government-politics/2024-06-24/ohio-house-bills-circumvent-standard-evictions-process-for-squatters.