In this Oct. 30, 2013 photo, Annmarie Chiarini, from left, University of Maryland law professor Danielle Keats Citron and state Rep. Jon Cardin, D-Baltimore County, are silhouetted during a news conference to announce a bill that would criminalize "revenge porn" - the nonconsensual distribution of ex-significant others' nude photos on the Internet - in Baltimore. Chiarini got behind the cause after an ex-boyfriend took to the Internet to post nude images that she shared with him privately over the course of their relationship. After California and New Jersey passed laws outlawing revenge porn, an increasing number of states, including Maryland, Wisconsin and New York, are considering whether to make it illegal. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)
In this Oct. 30, 2013 photo, Annmarie Chiarini, from left, University of Maryland law professor Danielle Keats Citron and state Rep. Jon Cardin, D-Baltimore County, are silhouetted during a news conference to announce a bill that would criminalize "revenge porn" - the nonconsensual distribution of ex-significant others' nude photos on the Internet - in Baltimore. Chiarini got behind the cause after an ex-boyfriend took to the Internet to post nude images that she shared with him privately over the course of their relationship. After California and New Jersey passed laws outlawing revenge porn, an increasing number of states, including Maryland, Wisconsin and New York, are considering whether to make it illegal. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky) Credit: Patrick Semansky

Concord — New Hampshire is poised to become the latest state to criminalize so-called “revenge porn,” when a jilted ex-lover sends out nude images of a past partner without consent.

The Republican-led House passed the legislation to ban the practice Wednesday. The bill now heads to Democratic Gov. Maggie Hassan, who plans to sign it into law, according to her spokesman.

The bill would bar the dissemination of private sexual images without the subject’s consent, in cases of intimidation, harassment or threatening. Those convicted of the crime would be guilty of a class B felony, but wouldn’t have to appear on the state’s sex offender registry.

The legislation is aimed at stopping revenge porn, but it also bans the sharing of images collected without a subject’s consent, through a hidden camera in a shower or a bedroom.

Both instances are very damaging to victims, advocates say. The images can be used as a threat, a form of coercion or a means of retaliation.

More than two dozen states across the country have already enacted similar laws to crack down on the issue.

Public hearings on the bill drew victims who testified their private photos had been stolen, and in some cases shared.

One woman said an acquaintance went through her phone, found “private photos” of her and sent them to himself.

Even though she took the allegations to the police, her case was dismissed in court because no law on the books prevented the taking of such images, she said.

The bill faced some opposition from some critics who said the penalty was too harsh.

Curbing Child Abuse

Amid a growing substance abuse problem, the House passed legislation on Wednesday that would let the state initiate child neglect investigations of parents who are abusing opioids and not seeking treatment. It cleared the chamber in a 203 to 149 vote.

More than 400 people died from drug overdoses in New Hampshire last year. And the opioid crisis is increasingly taking a toll on the children of addicted adults.

The number of referrals made to the the Division for Children, Youth and Families of children born exposed to drugs has increased more than 50 percent, from 285 in 2013 to 430 in 2015.