The Law Does What We Need It To

February 25, 2026

You may have seen in the news that there's been a challenge to the law regarding (what I would deem inappropriate) teacher/student relationships. There's one trial judge who has held the law unconstitutional, and an appeal has now been taken by a former teacher who was found guilty of having an inappropriate sexual relationship with a student and is now in prison as a result.

The article from ABC 33/40 reporter Lauren Walsh does a pretty good job of summarizing the situation - and how the law is currently in the hands of the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals - you can read it here.

I DO understand the position the judge and attorney are taking on this. I don't agree with them, but as an attorney, I understand the argument made saying teachers should not be singled out.

BUT - we simply cannot allow nor tolerate teachers having inappropriate sexual relationships with students, even if consensual. A line should - and has to be - drawn in our high schools, and parents need to have the assurance their kids will be protected. Such relationships will not be allowed, and teachers who engage in such relationships with students will be prosecuted. So, as I was quoted in the article, while I understand the constitutionality argument, the priority is keeping our children from being taken advantage of in these kinds of situations.

I want the current law to be upheld - I think the law does what we need it to do. However, if the law is held to be unconstitutional, then we'll just have to work on adjusting another area of the law and our school policies here in Alabama to achieve the same result, or even better protection for our students.

More news

See what Representative Faulkner is doing to represent District 46 values

Alabama Led the Way - Now Congress Is Following

Alabama passed Trey's Law. Now Congress is following our lead. I was on Capitol Hill this week as Senators Ted Cruz and Katie Britt filed the federal version of the bill - here's what that moment meant.

Week 8 Recap - Bills Moving, Victims Funded, and a Bridge Getting Built

Crime victims are getting their funding restored, a Homewood pedestrian bridge is underway, and several of my bills are one step from final passage. A busy week in Montgomery - here's the full update.

Week 7 Session Recap: Three Bills, One Night, Zero No Votes - Plus Key Advances in the Senate

A long Tuesday night in Montgomery produced three unanimous votes, and a major self-defense bill cleared its biggest Senate hurdle. Here's everything that moved in Week 7 - from arson reform to protecting houses of worship.

Feb 24, 2026
|
Legislative Updates

Week 6 Session Recap: Camp Safety Act Passes 104-0, Heads to Senate

The Camp Safety Act passed the House unanimously, key bills on computer science and arson reform advance, and Trey's Law awaits the Governor’s signature as the session reaches its midpoint.

Apr 22, 2020
|
Education

Expectations Over the Next Few Weeks

do expect the Governor to BEGIN lessening the restrictions and limitations imposed by the latest State Health Order as of May 1st.

April 20 COVID-19 Update

The Governor and Alabama State Health Officer, Dr. Scott Harris, shared Alabama’s most recent numbers and updates...

April 14 COVID-19 Update

I had my legislative weekly conference call with the Governor and our State Health Officer, Scott Harris, yesterday.

Update from Weekly COVID-19 Conference Call with Governor

For 4 weeks now, the Legislature has had a weekly conference call with the Governor and some of the State’s top Department and Agency heads.

upcoming campaign

25
Sunday, September 25, 2022
Sep

Conference on Small Business

Organizing for Action: We’re the people who don’t just support

25
Sunday, September 25, 2022
Sep

65-th Annual International Conference

Organizing for Action: We’re the people who don’t just support

24
Saturday, September 24, 2022
Sep

25-th Annual Democracy Forum

Organizing for Action: We’re the people who don’t just support

View All Events