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ECCHO Act

1/7/2026, 4:57 PM

Summary of Bill S 3397

The ECCHO Act, introduced in the 119th Congress, specifically as Senate bill 3397 on December 9, 2025, aims to address certain issues. The bill text includes pagination information and a link to the bill's details on the official Congress website. Additional formatted versions of the bill text in PDF and XML formats are accessible through provided URLs. This bill primarily focuses on electronic payments and related policies or regulations, potentially impacting the financial services sector or electronic payment systems. For detailed provisions and directives, the full bill text should be consulted via the official links provided.

Congressional Summary of S 3397

Ending Coercion of Children and Harm Online or the ECCHO Act

This bill establishes a federal framework to combat the online coercion of minors to commit harm. The bill creates new criminal offenses, expands reporting of instances involving the online coercion of minors, facilitates the prosecution of offenders, and expands protections for minors who testify in court.

Specifically, the bill makes it a crime to intentionally coerce a minor to

  • commit suicide (or attempt to);
  • kill someone (or attempt to);
  • kill a pet, emotional support animal, service animal, or horse (or attempt to);
  • physically harm an individual (including the minor), pet, emotional support animal, service animal, or horse; or
  • commit (or attempt to commit) arson or certain other acts such as doxxing or swatting.

A violation (or conspiracy or attempt to commit a violation) is subject to a fine, a prison term, or both.

The bill requires electronic communication service providers and remote computing service providers to report instances of online coercion of minors to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children via the CyberTipline.

The bill facilitates the federal prosecution of offenses committed by (1) individuals as part of a child exploitation enterprise, and (2) minors in certain circumstances.

The bill extends various protections for minors who testify in court (e.g., certain privacy protections) to those who are victims of or witnesses to crimes involving mental injury (i.e., psychological or intellectual harm to a child) or the negligent treatment of a child.

Current Status of Bill S 3397

Bill S 3397 is currently in the status of Bill Introduced since December 9, 2025. Bill S 3397 was introduced during Congress 119 and was introduced to the Senate on December 9, 2025.  Bill S 3397's most recent activity was Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. as of December 9, 2025

Bipartisan Support of Bill S 3397

Total Number of Sponsors
1
Democrat Sponsors
0
Republican Sponsors
1
Unaffiliated Sponsors
0
Total Number of Cosponsors
4
Democrat Cosponsors
2
Republican Cosponsors
2
Unaffiliated Cosponsors
0

Policy Area and Potential Impact of Bill S 3397

Primary Policy Focus

Crime and Law Enforcement

Alternate Title(s) of Bill S 3397

A bill to make coercion of children to commit harm a criminal offense, and for other purposes.
A bill to make coercion of children to commit harm a criminal offense, and for other purposes.

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