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FC: Porn commissioners want more Net-prosecutions, convictions
From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Date: Fri, 22 Sep 2000 21:01:56 -0400
[Or at least some of them do. --Declan]
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,38901,00.html
COPA: Peddle Smut, Go to Jail
by Declan McCullagh
3:00 a.m. Sep. 20, 2000 PDT
WASHINGTON -- Porn peddlers should be prosecuted, say members of a
federal smut commission.
Conservative members of the Commission on Child Online Protection
suggested during a meeting Tuesday that the government should shield
Junior from dirty pictures by imprisoning owners of "obscene"
websites.
"I think the deterrent effect is key here," said Commissioner Donna
Rice Hughes. "One of the main reasons we are seeing so much activity
in the area (of online pornography) is because they're not getting
prosecuted."
Hughes, a former Gary Hart gal pal turned anti-porn advocate and
author, said that "one well-placed prosecution could send the message
to the providers of this material that it's not acceptable."
But it's not quite that simple: A federal appeals court in June
blocked prosecutors from filing cases under a new anti-erotica law --
ironically, the same one that created the commission. The law makes
displaying "harmful to minors" materials online a crime.
That leaves existing federal obscenity laws as the Justice
Department's remaining lock-up-the-miscreants option.
"Prosecution in a well-defined way is a good idea," said Michael
Horowitz, chief of staff to the Justice Department's assistant
attorney general for the criminal division and a commission member.
"But it can't be in a splash-bang-wild, whatever-you're-going-to-hit
method."
Anti-porn activists in the past have lobbied the Justice Department to
file more Net-obscenity cases, saying that the relatively few federal
lawsuits that have been brought demonstrate that the Clinton
administration is neglecting children online.
The most recent variation of U.S. obscenity law grew out of the 1973
Miller v. California Supreme Court case, which upheld a law banning
the distribution of material that is arousing but "lacks serious
literary, artistic, political, or scientific value." But obscenity
laws date back much further, to prosecutions in England in the early
1700s, and were derived from religious prohibitions against blasphemy.
Critics say obscenity laws violate free speech rights guaranteed by
the First Amendment.
Edward de Grazia, one of the founders of Yeshiva University's Benjamin
N. Cardozo School of Law, outlines in Girls Lean Back Everywhere: The
Law of Obscenity and the Assault on Genius how obscenity prosecutions
imperiled James Joyce's Ulysses, Lenny Bruce's monologues, and 2 Live
Crew's lyrics.
[...]
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