June
27 Update We
have posted an html copy of the stipulated
order in FSC v. Gonzales. Prepared from the Acrobat
.pdf original on file with the Court in Denver, it is the
agreement between the Free Speech Coalition and the Department
of Justice.
We
have posted also a comprehensive
five-column table, breaking down the original, proposed,
and finally promulgated Part 75 Regulations (implementing
Section 2257), section by section, subparagraph by subparagraph
to compare changes, highlighting changes in color, and extracting
from the official DOJ commentary those particular statements
that seem associated with the respective parts of the regulation.
Anyone who has read through the DOJ Commentary knows that
there is no obvious order to the various treatments and
that there is no handy way to correlate the DOJ comments
to the Sections and their paragraphs.
It
was obvious to us that the disorder of the DOJ Commentary
interfered with understanding, and accordingly, we resolved
to parse the Commentary out in an ordered fashion associating
its text with the portions of the Regulation to which the
text related. This table is the result of four weeks of
work by four persons associated with this Law Office and
we believe that it should help clarify the meaning and intent
of DOJ as expressed in the various provisions of the new
Regulation. Although it cannot eliminate the contradictions
and inconsistencies among the various provisions of the
final Regulation, it may clarify some as it more boldly
highlight others.
We
also maintain on this site our preliminary three-column
table merely highlighting and identifying changes from
the original and proposed regulations through the final
regulation.
Good
News from Denver: FSC Complaint, USDOJ Response to Motion
for Temporary Restraining Order
June
24 Update.
Good news emerges from Judge Miller's courtroom in Denver
today. The Free Speech Coalition brokered an agreement with
the US Department of Justice which restrains the Justice
Department from inspections of the records of FSC members
under Section 2257 and prosecutions under the same Section.
The period covered by the agreement extends to thirty days
after the expected date of a hearing for a preliminary injunction,
to September 7, 2005. Press accounts suggest that our friend
and colleague, Paul Cambria, played a significant and central
role in the negotiations, with the collaboration of other
attorneys. Press accounts also suggest that the DOJ intends
to clarify the intent of certain ambiguous or conflicting
or confusing provisions in the regulations which seem to
impose a heavier burden on expression than the already-burdensome
regulations were intended to impose.
The
Free Speech Coalition Press Release may be found here.
We
most strongly encourage all adult webmasters to assure that
their membership in the Free Speech Coalition is active,
and that all business names are in the hands of FSC.
The
stipulation will only relate to members of FSC as of 2:00
p.m. Pacific Time, June 25, 2005.
We
have posted the Complaint
filed by the Free Speech Coalition and the Government's
Response
to FSC's Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order. No
other documents were available at the time of this posting
from the FSC Website or the Court's online records system.
Attorney
General Gonzales Signs Order Adopting Revised Regulations
Implementing Section 2257
May
24 Update.
Today's Federal Register publishes
the eagerly-awaited final rule adopting revisions in the
Justice Department's regulations in implementation of 18
USC Section 2257. We have compiled a preliminary
table contrasting the existing regs, the proposals made
last summer, and the final regulations promulgated today.
We apologize for any formatting issues in lining up the
parallel provisions. The regulations are surprising for
both the changes that were made in response to
numerous "Comments" submitted by the web community,
and for the refusal of DOJ to change some of the
most obnoxious provisions. The extensive commentary of Drew
Oosterbaan, who heads CEOS, should be read carefully to
understand DOJ's rationale. We were particularly troubled
by the DOJ reliance on caselaw that is simply not on point
to support the overreach of the provisions. Though we happy
to see an expression - belated as it is - for the safety
of the small businesses operating on the adult Internet,
we are saddened that the rhetoric is not backed up by regulations
that take the potential of harm into account. The regulations
wholly ignore the massive economic cost of the warehousing
of gigabyte upon gigabyte of streaming video. There is much
more to say in careful analysis, but for the time being,
it is important to quickly provide our clients, friends,
and surfers with the information posted now. JDO
May
17 Update. The United States Justice
Department announced
this afternoon that Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has
signed a final rule containing changes to the Justice Department
regulations implementing 18
USC Section 2257. These changes will become effective
thirty days after their publication in the Federal
Register unless their enforcement is enjoined by a federal
court. Until they are published, we cannot know how closely
they resemble the changes proposed last June by the Justice
Department. A table comparing the existing regulations
with the June 2004 proposal is found here.
A detailed article highlighting the differences, published
last Summer in AVN Online, is found here.
Contrary
to at least one GFY-posted account, the sky may not actually
be falling. The promulgation points however to a present
intention on the part of DOJ to actually enforce
Section 2257 for the first time. Indeed, there may be something
falling on the heads of those who have not taken the law
seriously, but it will not be the sky. The press release
does put quotation marks around the term "pornography
producers", a term that does not exist in the present
statute or regulations or the proposed regulation, and hints
that the final version has been modified, probably in the
direction of the so-called "secondary producer"
requirements; Though at least one US Court of Appeals has
found the provisions to work beyond the authority of the
Justice Department, the existing regulations have always
required web publishers who buy content made by others to
obtain and retain and make available for inspection the
original documents and alias information obtained by the
original content producers. Substantial parts of the proposal
made last Summer were unconstitutional on their face - notably
the inspection requirement that mandated availability for
inspection of the records from 8am to 6pm. The burden this
onerous requirement would place on part-time webmasters
would eliminate substantial constitutionally protected expression.
The proposal also required the long-term archiving of terabyte
upon terabyte of live, streaming content for many years
- and the expensive segregation of this data from the working
servers of sites. All of this was related to Justice by
this firm during the comment period, and we will shortly
know whether any of the hardship was taken into account
in the final rule.
The
Free Speech Coalition can be expected to take point at the
forward edge of this battle by initiating litigation. Understand
though, that an injunction against the enforcement of the
changes alone will be of little value. The existing
regulations provide the Justice Department with very effective
tools for all of the purposes underlying the statute and
regulation. It is my best hunch that Justice would not be
promulgating the changes without plans to enforce in the
immediate future.
All
available information will be posted here as it becomes
available. JDO
The
Pace and Tempo Quicken:
Chronology of the Emerging Porn Offensive
Number Two on the DOJ Playlist with a Bullet
1.
January 6, 2005.
Alberto Gonzales nomination
hearing, Senate Judiciary Committee: Mr. Gonzales stated
six particular goals. Number six was "Obscenity";
The AG-to be explained, "I think obscenity is something
else that very much concerns me. I've got two young sons,
and it really bothers me about how easy it is to have access
to pornography".
2.
Fourteen days later, on January
20, US District Judge Gary Lancaster declared
the federal obscenity statutes to be unconstitutional -
at least as applied to the activities of Extreme Associates,
Inc., Robert Zicari, and Janet Romano in shipping obscene
material by mail-order and in selling access to a pay website
containing material that was conceded by the defense to
be obscene for the purposes of the motion. His decision
rested strongly on the right to Privacy as articulated in
Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558 (2003) and Stanley
v. Georgia, 394 U.S. 557, 564-6 (1969).
3.
On February 14, 2005,
Alberto Gonzales was sworn in as the eightieth Attorney
General of the United States. He faced an immediate and
urgent decision as to whether the government should appeal
from the decision in Extreme Associates. One year, to the
day, earlier, Bruce Taylor's appointment as Senior Counsel
to the chief of the DOJ Criminal Division had been quietly
announced in the LA Times.
4.
Two days later, on February
16, the Justice Department filed its notice
of appeal from Judge Lancaster's dismissal of the Indictment.
"The Department of Justice places a premium on the
First Amendment right to free speech, but certain activities
do not fall within those protections, such as selling or
distributing obscene materials," Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales proclaimed in a written
statement. "The Department of Justice remains strongly
committed to the investigation and prosecution of adult
obscenity cases."
5.
Twelve days later, on February
28, 2005, the Attorney General spoke
at the Hoover Institute and laid out a vision of his term:
"Another area where I will continue to advance the
cause of justice and human dignity is in the aggressive
prosecution of purveyors of obscene materials. I am strongly
committed to ensuring the right of free speech; the right
of ordinary citizens and of the press to speak out and to
express their views and ideas is one of the greatest strengths
of our form of government, but obscene materials are not
protected by the First Amendment, and I am committed to
prosecuting these crimes aggressively."
6.
Very quietly, a short time later, a publication named DOJ
Obscenity Prosecution News made its appearance on
the US DOJ Criminal Division web page, ominously describing
itself as "Spring 2005, Volume I, Issue 1" of
a new periodical edited by Bruce Taylor and apparently dedicated
to chronicling a new wave of adult obscenity prosecution.
AVN's Mark Kernes wrote an article detailing the newsletter,
attributing the tip to XXXLAW. It may be found where it
is discretely hosted on the DOJ Criminal Division
page, at http://www.usdoj.gov/criminal/obs032604.pdf
as well as on this site.
7.
On March 16,
Senator Brownback's Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil
Rights and Property Rights of the U.S. Senate Committee
on Judiciary held a hearing
in reaction to the decision in Extreme Associates. Senator
Brownback first ridiculed the reasoning of Judge Lancaster's
decision by observing: "Judge Lancaster cobbled together
hand-picked strands of 14th Amendment substantive due process,
decisions from Roe, Lawrence and others and ruled that the
statutes at issue violated an unwritten constitutional right
to sexual privacy."
8.
On May 3, 2005,
Attorney General Gonzales spoke
to a group of prosecutors and law enforcement officers at
a conference in Gaitlinburg, Tennessee and significantly
addressed adult obscenity, listing the prosecution of obscenity
second among his goals as Attorney General:
From
street corners to websites, obscenity and child pornography
rip at the heart of our moral values and too easily corrupt
our communities. I've made it clear that I intend to aggressively
combat the purveyors of obscene materials. . . Enforcement
is absolutely necessary if we are going to protect citizens
and children from exposure to obscene materials. . . I
have directed Department officials to carefully review
federal laws to determine how we can further strengthen
our hand in prosecuting obscenity. Our goal is to assess
all the law enforcement methods we use-and identify the
tools we may still need-to more effectively investigate
and prosecute these crimes.
9.
Two days later, on May 5,
last week Thursday, the Chief of the DOJ Criminal Division
announced the formation of an obscenity prosecution task
force composed of CEOS trial attorneys and dedicated exclusively
to the prosecution of adult obscenity. Counsel to the task
force is Bruce Taylor; The task force will obtain assistance
from the Organized Crime, Computer Crime, and the Assets
Forfeiture units. In the DOJ Criminal Division press
release, the Chief explained that the global traffic
in obscenity required a specialized response in the computer
age. He pledged to enforce "the laws on the books".
10.
Twelve days later, May 17,
2005, the Attorney General signs an order
approving revised regulations implementing 18 USC Section
2257.
[The
foregoing was extracted from an article by J. D. Obenberger
that will appear exclusively in the July, 2005 issue of
AVN Online, "True North and the Magnetic Declination
in Alberto Gonzales's Moral Compass. Another article, "Pleasureboating
on the River Rubicon" is nearing completion.]
Victory
in Mike Jones Appeal
On
April 28, 2005,
the Illinois Appellate Court entered an order dismissing
the State's appeal from an order of the Circuit Court
in McHenry County, Illinois suppressing any and all evidence
derived from the illegal seizure of evidence from the home
and studio of longtime and respected Internet content producer,
Mike Jones in 2000. The state may apply to the Illinois
Supreme Court for review within 21 days. Mike Jones is not
guilty of the obscenity and concocted child porn charges
that have hung over his head for five years. We have represented
Mike since from before the time of the search warrant and
we were with him at night after the search left his home
and studio in shambles.
Motions
Filed by XXXLAW
to Invalidate Louisiana Obscenity Statute:
Potential Effects on the Internet
It
is the privilege of this office to represent Le
Video Store, Inc. and Emmette Jacob, Jr.
in criminal obscenity charges pending in St. Martinville
Parish, Louisiana, in the heart of Acadiana, an hour and
a half west of New Orleans. Le Video Store and Mr. Jacob
are not guilty of any crime at all and we will defend them
with vigor and passion.
On
May 1, 2005 we filed a 29-page Memorandum
in support of our motion to quash the Bills of Information
brought against each of our clients.
We
have challenged the statute as being substantially
overbroad, and therefore unconstitutional, because
it aspires to restrain "electronic communication"
and presumably tries to apply its laws to the Internet.
This offends the First Amendment because of its effect on
speech as was suggested by six members of the US Supreme
Court in the last COPA case, Ashcroft v. ACLU and runs afoul
of the Commerce Clause of the US Constitution because of
the burden in places on interstate commerce in expressive
materials. The Louisiana statute is unusual, too, because
it includes depictions and descriptions of sexual conduct
between nonhuman animals with each other as part of its
predicate circumstances that trigger the statute. We believe
that, in order for obscenity analysis to begin, some kind
of human involvement must be depicted or described. (That's
what I call the "Discovery Channel Argument.")
In short, we think the statute goes beyond the power
of Baton Rouge to legislate. The local ACLU executive
director has agreed that the Louisiana statute is due for
a challenge.
Louisiana's
law is also unconstitutionally vague.
Louisiana
law simply does not define the extent and dimensions of
the "community" for the purposes of applying the
community standards tests of Miller v. California.
This hampers anyone intending to sell books, tapes, DVD's,
or Internet content and wanting to conform to the law. It
permits the capricious commencement of charges and it permits
a conviction on a factor never in evidence, never proved,
and in fact never established by the court. It provides
no guidance or instruction for the jury to even begin to
answer the question of "which community?". Accordingly,
publisher has no meaningful way to assess the arrests and
convictions of others for erotic material, to conduct surveys
and interview community leaders, to see what's on the shelf
in the library, to evaluate what other adult and nonadult
outlets such as convenience stores and truckstops sell,
to determine what's available in relevant cable TV systems
and through pay per view in hotels.
In
the course of preparing this motion, we looked at
the laws of 51 American jurisdictions. Among the
states and federal government, 29 jurisdictions define the
community - usually statewide, but sometimes by county or
judicial district. In the largest number of jurisdictions,
the community is defined by statute (e.g. California, Illinois,
Wisconsin) and in others by court decision. Seventeen jurisdictions,
like Louisiana, have not provided a definition, though
few have brought reported obscenity cases in recent years.
We were unable to find an obscenity law of general applicability
at all in five jurisdictions. In at least one jurisdiction,
the state supreme court held precisely that a failure to
define the community in an obscenity case was fundamentally
unfair.
Louisiana's
statute contains a seldom-seen provision that requires a
civil proceeding before obscenity prosecutions are commenced
- but which wholly exempts explicit depictions from the
protection. The law seems to establish a category of
state-law-preferred porn, or more accurately, it
creates a category of the presumptively obscene. Though
it has been challenged without success in the past, the
statute stands in opposition to American jurisprudence
that finds all expression to be presumptively protected
until determined to be obscene in an adversary proceeding.
Finally,
we advance an argument written by Reed Lee of our office
that has already deservedly attracted national interest.
It is addressed to both First Amendment freedoms
and the right to privacy articulated in
Stanley v. Georgia and Lawrence v. Texas,
and it ultimately comes to the conclusion - inescapable
according to Reed - that since R.A.V. v. Minneapolis,
all of the existing obscenity laws - insofar as they regulate
what is distributed among consenting adults and involving
only consenting adults - have become invalid on First Amendment
grounds.
This
is a case that the adult Internet should watch closely
along with the store owners because it contains significant
issues they share.
US
Supreme Court Denies Certiorari: XXXLAW client awarded $56,250
in legal fees for case overturning County Adult Zoning Ordinance
This
comes from one of the most staunchly Republican, most solidly
conservative, richest counties in the country, the birthplace
of Billy Graham and Red Grange, just west of Chicago. On
March 29, 2001, after several years of tough litigation,
we obtained for our clients, Palmetto Properties, a substantial
victory against DuPage County, Illinois, invalidating portions
of its adult use zoning ordinance, which taken as a whole,
had kept any Gentlemen's Club from opening in any part of
the County under county zoning jurisdiction. In fact, there
were no such clubs anywhere in the County. There are numerous
seminaries in the county seat in Wheaton. Diamond's Gentlemen's
Club opened and remains open because of this litigation.
We applied for attorney's fees for the services rendered
on behalf the client for the arguments which prevailed,
so that our clients could be partially recompensed. The
County fought tooth and nail against the $56,250.00
award granted by the US District Court in Chicago.
The County of DuPage took appeal to the United States Court
of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, and they lost there,
too. Finally, they sought review in the United States Supreme
Court. The Supreme Court denied review by certiorari
on January 18, 2005. Great work by Reed Lee of this office.
Speaking
Engagements and Professional Meetings
Since
our last Bulletin, it's been my privilege to attend - and
to speak at - the Webmaster Access Shows
in Santa Monica on November 19, 2005 and
in Montreal the weekend before last, on May 6, 2005 and
at Internext in Las Vegas on January 4. These shows consistently
draw some of the brightest and most talented Internet professionals,
and it has been a joy to find a high degree of legal understanding
in the attendees who ask questions during the Q and A. At
the Santa Monica show, Greg Picchionelli and I went on with
the questions for about two hours, turning it into a three
hour seminar - though it had been scheduled for one - because
we each so much enjoyed the dialogue with the very smart
attendees. I wish to thank the event sponsors, Adult.com,
(and Gamma Cash and Top Bucks in Montreal), and others for
the opportunity to take part, and their many kindnesses.
Montreal is an exquisitely beautiful city, and I share some
of my photos from the trip here.
I
was privileged to speak on one of the Internext
Legal Panels on January 4, 2005 - and was delighted
by the size and enthusiasm of the audience. We thank AVN
Online and all of the sponsors of the Speaker Program.
Reed
and I both attended the Winter meeting of the First
Amendment Lawyers' Association in February. I took
the experiences and insights of the distinguished attendees
home with me - including an extensive eyewitness account
of the shooting of Larry Flynnt - and was greatly enriched.
The shared insights of the other First Amendment Lawyers
were incredibly valuable.
I
look forward to seeing many of you again (and meeting others)
at Internext in Hollywood, Florida August 5-7. I will not
be attending Cybernet Expo in San Diego. Reed and I are
available to speak with Webmasters and other groups concerned
with Freedom of Expression.
*
* *
The
coming months and years portend to be a time of great change
for the Adult Internet; Its practices and conventions are
to likely be affected by legal developments - Now is an
especially important time to listen to quality legal speakers
- to read all of the regulations, statutes, and explanations
of quality that affect what you do - to form a close relationship
with an attorney - to get your site or program assessed
- and to make such changes as may be necessary. The time
is surely coming when some of you will find yourselves combatants
at the forward edge of the battle area on the battleground
of freedom. When the enemies of Free Speech approach, it
will be without warning, and they will come armed and in
force to seize images, computers, written correspondence,
and they will seek to forfeit everything else of value.
They will seek emergency orders over the tangible and intangible
assets of their targets, and there will be little or no
time then to prepare. It remains my advice - as it has been
from the start - that the members of the First Amendment
Lawyers' Association who specialize in the field in which
you earn your living are the smart and logical choice for
the times to come. It is also my hope that the members of
the Adult Internet become more closely involved with -and
join - The Free Speech Coalition. It exists to serve you
and the freedom our society demands. The recent addition
of Tom Hymes at FSC as Communications Director
is a most positive step that I hope heralds an era of closer
contact between FSC and the Adult Internet. JDO
Updated
February, 2004.
Reed Lee of J. D. Obenberger
and Associates was re-elected to the Board of Directors
of The Free Speech Coalition. Reed is currently serving
as a Director of FSC and is also National Secretary of the
First Amendment Lawyer's Association, an American national
association of lawyers concentrating in protection of the
freedom of speech.
Updated
December 18, 2004. XXXLAW Bulletin.
Several times each year, xxxlaw.net transmits a Bulletin
of news significant to adult and Internet industry professionals
and people in general concerned with the downsizing of Liberty
in contemporary American society. These updates frequently
deal with First Amendment Law, significant Supreme Court
decisions, legislation, news developments, and new articles
of interest. If you have not received an XXXLAW Bulletin
in 2004, the odds are that your email address has changed,
that your spam filter is blocking "xxx" or "adult".
Please do email us indicating continued
interest in receiving the Bulletin to assure that you will
not be omitted. You are invited to forward copies
of our Bulletin to all of your associates and friends. Simply
send an email through
any of the links on page and ask to be added or restored
or confirmed. We
invite you to join our email family. We never have and never
will share our email list.
Updated
August 18, 2004.
Adult Internet Attorneys Larry Walters, Greg Piccionelli,
and Joe Obenberger collaborated during the past two weeks
to create draft/template paragraphs for the use of webmasters
and content providers in crafting "Comments" to
the Justice Department regarding the proposed changes to
the Regulations implementing Section 2257. This joint effort
for the good of the adult web community may be found, together
with instructions for emailing you comments to DOJ before
August 24 at the AVN
Online Site.
Updated August 18, 2004.
Since it first appeared online in 2000, our "Webmaster's
Primer on Section 2257" has become an Internet standard
in describing the history and in explaining the obligations
of that federal law and the regulations associated with
it. At the suggestion of AVN Online, we have thoroughly
revised and updated the Primer to include and critically
discuss the newly proposed DOJ revisions and how they will
hit webmasters if adopted. We have not neglected to address
some significant, thorny free speech issues associated with
them, and for reference value, substantial parts of the
legal history of Section 2257, and litigation it has generated,
is also included. AVN Online has graciously agreed to run
the fairly massive Third Revised Primer uncut in its Internext
Issue, in time to help webmasters compose their comments
to the Justice Department. Those comments are due by mail,
fax, or email to the Chief of CEOS at DOJ no later than
August 24, 2004. Full address information is contained
in the preface to the proposal, linked below, in our June
29 Update. That article is now running on the AVN Online
website under "Features" (sans footnotes, which
they have run in the print edition) and on this site under
our 2257 Section. Click here for the full Primer.
Updated August 18,
2004. We've returned from Internext, having
survived Hurricane Charlie together with the other attendees.
It was - very sincerely - quite a delight to meet so many
kind and thoughtful persons, including many clients. Thanks
also for the wonderful and kind audience during the legal
seminar. AVN did a particularly spectacular job structuring
the seminar - even if it felt a bit like a police traffic
stop to those of us on the platform because of the intense
lighting. Thanks also to the reporters who covered and wrote
about the seminar. It's hard to condense all of the points
that were made by the speakers to a short article, but an
excellent job was done of it.
Updated
July 31, 2004.
In connection with our preparation of comments for the Justice
Department to read and consider in the adoption of new regulations
implementing Section 2257, we invite your own comments concerning
the newly proposed Regulations by email
to us. Appropriate comments may be included by us, in our
discretion, in whole or in part, in comments to the Justice
Department prepared by us for one or more of our clients.
We are particularly soliciting verifiable accounts of persons
who have been stalked, harassed, or hurt as a result of
compliance with the Notice requirement as presently written,
and instances in which content producers and webmasters
have discontinued web operations as a result of reasonable
and well-founded fear of such hostile contact.
Updated
July 12, 2004.
Our table comparing and contrasting the existing regulations
implementing Section 2257 and Mr. Ashcroft's proposal, laying
them out side by side with indications of changed text in
color, is posted for your reference here.
More - a great deal more! - to follow.
Updated
June 29, 2004.
The United States Supreme Court today announced its opinion
in Ashcroft v. ACLU, involving the Child Online Protection
Act. By a 5-4 vote, the Court sent it back to Philadelphia,
without ruling on its constitutionality, for trial. The
Supreme Court refused to overturn a preliminary injunction
that prohibits the government from enforcing the Act with
arrests and indictments. This case amounts to a continuation
of the status quo and not a substantive determination
of the issues. It is a decision that avoided serious loss
to the protections of the First Amendment, but it cannot
be called a victory for its principles. Only two justices
- Stevens and Ginsburg - would have invalidated the Act
because it unfairly employs local community standards to
determine what is obscene as to children. The
decision may be viewed and downloaded from this site.
The
four dissenting justices don't recognize the possibility
that there may be a significant amount of material published
on the Internet which may be erotic, nonobscene, and constitutionally
protected at the same time, but nevertheless unsuitable
for children: Justice Breyer, writing for three dissenters
writes: "The Act’s definitions limit the material
it regulates to material that does not enjoy First Amendment
protection, namely legally obscene material, and very little
more." The fourth dissenter, Scalia, in citing
to Playboy Enterprises and Ginzburg, writes: "We
have recognized that commercial entities which engage in
‘the sordid business of pandering’ by ‘deliberately emphasiz[ing]
the sexually pro-vocative aspects of [their nonobscene products],
in order to catch the salaciously disposed,’ engage in constitutionally
unprotected behavior.” Breyer also writes regarding
the prurience fork in Miller, "Insofar as material
appeals to, or panders to, 'the prurient interest,'it simply
seeks a sexual response." Accordingly, it seems to
this writer that we were one vote away from a result that
would view substantial portions of the adult internet as
criminal obscenity, portions that we have long viewed as
protected, nonobscene erotica that is nevertheless not generally
suitable for children.
Updated
June 29, 2004.
Attorney General John Ashcroft and House Judiciary Chairman
Jim Sensenbrenner (9th District of Wisconsin, R) have announced
DOJ proposed revisions to the Justice Department regulations
implementing Section 2257. The backdrop is that there have
never been any 2257 Inspections because, it seems, the Attorney
General has never designated any law enforcement agency
to do so; Outside one reported Court Martial, there never
has been a prosecution for its violation. Notwithstanding
the absence of any investigatory attempts to determine whether
Section 2257 was being complied with, in the absence of
any attempt to learn whether its penalty provisions were
ample to deter violations, last year, in the Protect Act,
Congress increased the penalty for violation of Section
from two to five years imprisonment as a maximum. Congress
also required the Attorney General to furnish Congress "a
report detailing the number of times since January 1993
that the Department of Justice has inspected the records
of any producer of materials regulated". Several months
late, it now looks like the Justice Department has provided
Congress with the obvious answer, that no inspections have
taken place, and it has dressed the report up with the proposal
for changed regulations, quite possible as a matter of political
cover. The proposed changes can be
read and downloaded here. An account of the Report and
announcement can be found at this
link. Our Webmaster's Primer on Section 2257 and covering
the ins and outs of the existing statute and associated
regulations can be read here.
Updated
June 17, 2004.
Joe Obenberger quoted regarding proposed time, place and
manner restrictions on adult entertainment in Buffalo Grove.
The Daily Herald, June 17, 2004, "Village may limit
adult entertainment."
Updated May 2, 2004.
On Friday, April 23, 2004 the Provincial Court of British
Columbia in Vancouver acquitted Randy Price in all 20 counts
related to the making and distribution of obscene materials,
chiefly of a BDSM nature. This is the "Sweet case".
Under Canadian practice, the Crown (the prosecutors) may
appeal, and it apparently plans to do so. Hearty congratulations
to the capable defense team is in order. Sweet's lawyers
presented a massive defense case, profiling the BDSM scene
in Canada, the wide availability of BDSM materials in Canada
and on the world wide web. (They brought a broadband connection
into the courtroom, accessed google, searched for BDSM,
and showed the Judge the apparently broad scope of interest,
tolerance, and acceptance of the material.) Additionally,
expert testimony was offered as to the reduction in violent
sexual offenses in the US and Canada since Internet adult
content took off, and they also highlighted the aggressive
themes of mainstream cinema, including The Texas Chainsaw
Massacre. A copy of the (very detailed) 25-page order, highlighting
the evidence, is in our possession and is available for
our clients.
Updated
May 2, 2004.
We've posted a transcript of
Joe Obenberger's August 11, 2003 Fox appearance on "The
O'Reilly Factor" dealing with the federal obscenity
prosecution of Extreme Associates, and the rational of obscenity
laws in general.
Updated
May 2, 2004.
Regarding the continuing debate - and unresolved issue -
of what "contemporary community standards" are
to apply to Internet publication, an issue definitely present
in the government's mind in the Extreme Associates case,
We have prepared a table comparing
and contrasting the opinions of each of the members of the
Supreme Court so that you may yourself view where each stands
on "Community Standards".
Click
Here for a list of events at which one or both of us will
be speaking about Internet Law and Freedom of Speech.
Updated
January 16, 2004.
Defense Motion to Suppress Granted in Mike Jones criminal
obscenity case. I am delighted to report that Circuit Court
Judge Sharon Prather this afternoon granted our defense
motion to suppress all evidence obtained and deriving from
the search warrant executed against Mike Jones of L&M
Enterprises (and founder of CD Babes) on October 28, 2000.
As you probably know, Mike was indicted for obscenity and
child pornography in 2001. Judge Prather found that the
search warrant violated the First and Fourth Amendments
because it authorized a "general search" for obscene
and underage materials in the home and studio of Mike Jones,
that it lacked particularity that might direct and limit
the officers as to what they were to seize, that the search
itself devolved into a constitutionally impermissible "general
search" (in other words, a fishing expedition) and
that it amounted to an improper prior restraint on speech
without adequate judicial oversight.
Updated
January 16, 2004.
adultinternetlaw.com
joins xxxlaw.net. Please visit our new (at least new to
us!) site: Richard J. Chapo and Greg Geelan transferredadultinternetlaw.com
to this firm in late 2003. Our plan at present is to maintain
that site as a brass-tacks "business law of the adult
internet" site and to retain the valuable articles
it contains written by those two experts. We plan to keep
our more topical legal news, cases, statutes, and political
and Libertarian-oriented essays on these pages.
Updated
July 18, 2002.
xxxlaw™ Links Page revamped with
new and comprehensive listings for websites devoted to Liberty,
Freedom of Speech, Privacy, Constitutional Government, Freedom
of Information Act, Adult Industry News, Webmaster Resource
Boards, and many other areas of interest to Internet and
Adult Industry professionals and students.