Nevada Code § 200.4631

Involuntary servitude of minors; penalties
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1. A person who has physical custody of a
minor, allows a minor to reside in his or her residence, is in a position of
authority over a minor or provides care for any length of time to a minor and
who knowingly:
(a) Obtains labor or services from the minor by
causing or threatening to cause serious harm to the minor or by engaging in a
pattern of conduct that results in physical injury to the minor, sexual abuse
of the minor or sexual assault of the minor pursuant to NRS 200.366 ;
(b) Benefits, financially or by receiving
anything of value other than sexual gratification from the labor or services
obtained by the conduct specified in paragraph (a); or
(c) Uses a scheme, plan or pattern intended to
cause the minor to believe that the failure to perform an act would result in
serious harm or physical restraint against any person,
is guilty of
holding a minor in involuntary servitude.
2. A person who is found guilty of holding
a minor in involuntary servitude is guilty of a category A felony and shall be
punished by imprisonment in the state prison for life with the possibility of
parole, with eligibility for parole beginning when a minimum of 15 years has
been served, and may be further punished by a fine of at least $50,000.
3. Consent of the victim to the
performance of any labor or services is not a valid defense to a prosecution
conducted pursuant to this section.
4. Nothing in this section shall be
construed to prohibit a parent or guardian of a child from requiring his or her
child to perform common household chores under the threat of the reasonable
exercise of discipline by the parent or guardian of the child.
5. For the purposes of this section:
(a) Physical injury includes, without
limitation:
(1) A sprain or dislocation;
(2) Damage to cartilage;
(3) A fracture of a bone or the skull;
(4) An injury causing an intracranial
hemorrhage or injury to another internal organ;
(5) Permanent or temporary disfigurement,
including, without limitation, a burn, scalding, cut, laceration, puncture or
bite; or
(6) Permanent or temporary loss or
impairment of a part or organ of the body.
(b) Serious harm means any harm, whether
physical or nonphysical, including, without limitation, psychological,
financial or reputational harm, that is sufficiently serious, under the
circumstances, to compel a reasonable person of the same background and in the
same circumstances as the victim to perform or to continue to provide labor or
services to avoid incurring that harm.
(c) Sexual abuse includes acts upon a child
constituting:
(1) Lewdness with a child pursuant to NRS 201.230 ;
(2) Sado-masochistic abuse pursuant to NRS 201.262 ;
(3) Sexual assault pursuant to NRS 200.366 ;
(4) Open or gross lewdness pursuant to NRS 201.210 ; and
(5) Mutilation of the genitalia of a
female child, aiding, abetting, encouraging or participating in the mutilation
of the genitalia of a female child, or removal of a female child from this
State for the purpose of mutilating the genitalia of the child pursuant to NRS 200.5083 .

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