Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus

IN THE SECOND DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL

CHRISTOPHER M. WILSON APPEAL CASE NO.:

LT CASE NO.: CF-05-7738

Petitioner, 10TH Judicial Circuit, Polk County, Florida

EMERGENCY PRELIMINARY

  1. RELIEF REQUESTED

UNDER SEPARATE COVER

GRADY JUDD, in his official capacity as Sheriff of Polk

County, Florida, and JERRY HILL, in his official capacity as State Attorney in and for the Tenth Judicial Circuit

Respondents.

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PETITION FOR WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS FROM TRIAL COURT ORDER REVOKING BOND AND DENYING BAIL

Petitioner, CHRISTOPHER M. WILSON, (“WILSON”), pursuant to

Fla.R.App.P. 9.030(b)(3), 9.100, and 9.300(c), and Fla.R.Crim.P. 3.132(c)(4),

petitions this Court for a Writ of Habeas Corpus directed to Respondents, GRADY JUDD, in his official capacity as Sheriff of Polk County, Florida, (“SHERIFF”), and JERRY HILL, in his official capacity as State Attorney in and for the Tenth Judicial Circuit, (“STATE ATTORNEY”), (collectively referred to as “Respondents”), and as grounds, states as follows:

    1. BASIS FOR INVOKING JURISDICTION

This Court has jurisdiction to issue a Writ of Habeas Corpus pursuant to Article V, § 4(b)(3), FLA. CONST. and Fla.R.App.P. 9.030(b)(3). Habeas Corpus is the proper remedy to challenge an unlawful detention pending trial in a criminal case. Glinton v. Wille, 457 So.2d 563 (Fla. 4th DCA 1984). Moreover, issues relating to the constitutionality of statutes relied upon as a basis for detention may be properly considered in a Habeas Corpus proceeding. Ennis v. Regier, 869 So.2d 701 (Fla. 2d DCA 2004). Petitioner WILSON has no other adequate remedy available to him which will prevent his continued unlawful incarceration without bail, or which will prevent additional obscenity allegations being used as a basis to

revoke future bonds.1

    1. INTRODUCTION

This case involves the incarceration of a United States citizen without bond based on the dissemination of constitutionally-protected expression which has not been determined obscene on the merits.2 The Order of detention results in a prior restraint of speech in violation of the United States Constitution. The evidence

1 To the extent that the Florida Rules of Criminal Procedure, Rule 3.132(c)(4), contemplate filing a different form of request for review of orders of pretrial detention, Petitioner requests that this Petition be considered as the appropriate Motion for review.

2 All of the sexually oriented materials referenced in this Petition depict only adults; neither the depictions nor the allegations of obscenity indicate that any juveniles — i.e., persons under 18—were involved. This case is only about adult

obscenity.

supporting the bond revocation did not include the “whole” work as required under the Miller Test, and was obtained in violation of Petitioner WILSON’s Fourth Amendment rights contrary to binding precedent from this Court. Nonetheless, the Trial Court revoked Petitioner WILSON’s bond and ordered pretrial detention with no bond, without conducting a hearing on the matter, and without making any factual findings mandated by Fla.R.Crim.P. 3.132(c)(1) and §907.041, Fla. Stat. (2005). Both the underlying charges against Petitioner WILSON, and the basis for revoking his bond are premised on alleged violations of Florida’s obscenity statute, Chapter 847, et. seq., Fla.Stat. (2005), against which Petitioner WILSON has mounted various constitutional challenges – none of which were considered or resolved prior to using the law as a basis to order pretrial detention without bond.

    1. FACTS

This case arises out of the operation of a website which allows individuals throughout the world to post a variety of erotic and non-sexually oriented images, video clips, and written comments on various web pages contained on the website. A 1-56; 132-133.3. Petitioner WILSON did not create any of the content displayed on the website, and does not approve the content before it is posted on the website. A 133. Nothing on the website physically “exists” in Polk County, Florida, or within the Tenth Judicial Circuit. A 132. The website is hosted in Amsterdam,

3 References to the Appendix shall be designated by the letter “A,” followed by the appropriate page number(s) of the document or item referenced.

Netherlands, and is administered by various individuals, all of whom reside outside of Polk County, Florida and outside of the Tenth Judicial Circuit. A 132.

In November, 2004, the Polk County Sheriff’s Office began an investigation into the website after the lead investigator contacted a newspaper reporter who was writing an article about the United States Military’s investigation into Petitioner WILSON and the website. A 57, 61. The website at issue sparked nationwide controversy as a result of Petitioner WILSON’s decision to allow soldiers to join the website and obtain full membership benefits by submitting images which depicted military activities from the War in Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East. A 135. Petitioner WILSON created this procedure for soldiers who wanted to access the website by paying via credit cards, but whose credit card transactions were routinely denied, since they emanated from high credit risk countries such as Iraq or Afghanistan. A 135. Therefore, as an alternative to payment via credit card, Petitioner WILSON allowed soldiers to obtain free access to the entire website if they posted pictures evidencing their status as active military in the Middle East. A 135.

Although Petitioner WILSON did not solicit gory battlefield images, soldiers ultimately began submitting such images (hereinafter referred to as “War Images”) as proof of their active military status in order to gain access to the website. A 136.

The existence of these uncensored War Images apparently resulted in a Military investigation. A 57. Respondents SHERIFF and STATE ATTORNEY also launched an investigation into Petitioner WILSON’s website activities, during which an Investigator joined the website, www.NowThatsFuckedUp.com, as a member, and printed out eighty (80) still images and twenty (20) short movies (all exclusively sexually oriented) that Respondent SHERIFF’s Investigator, Charlie Gates, (“Investigator Gates”), determined (in his opinion) to be obscene. A 58. No warrant was obtained prior to copying the images and video clips from the website and using them in the course of the investigation. A 57-61. Investigator Gates presented the content copied from the website to the Honorable A. Cowden, Circuit Judge for the Tenth Judicial Circuit, in and for Polk County, Florida, on October 7, 2005, who issued one hundred (100) individual probable cause determinations to believe that each image was independently obscene. A 58. The website was not evaluated ‘as a whole’ contrary to the requirements of the Miller Test. A 58. Respondent STATE ATTORNEY filed three hundred one (301) separate counts of obscenity, although all materials at issue came from a single website. A 1-56; 57-59. Although Respondents deny that their investigation was prompted by, or motivated by, the Military’s concerns with the War Images, Respondent SHERIFF is sharing evidence generated in connection with this case with the Military. A 62; 232.

Based on Judge Cowden’s probable cause determinations, and the statements of Investigator Gates, Respondent SHERIFF sought and obtained an Arrest Warrant for Petitioner WILSON, charging him with one (1) felony count of wholesale promotion of obscene materials and three hundred (300) separate misdemeanor counts of distribution of obscene materials, pursuant to Chapter 847, Fla. Stat. (2005). A 1-56. Given the manner in which this case was charged, i.e. three (3) individual misdemeanor counts relating to each image selected from the website, Petitioner WILSON’s bond was set in the amount of $151,000.00. A 56. Petitioner WILSON was required to pay a bondsman $30,500.00 as a bond premium, in order to obtain release pending trial. A 1-56. He has no financial means to post an additional bond, or pay a new bond premium. A 137.

Shortly after his arrest, Petitioner WILSON moved from within the geographic boundaries of Polk County and the Tenth Judicial Circuit, into Orange County, Florida. A 132. At no time was Petitioner WILSON told to stop distributing any sexually-oriented content on the subject website by any law enforcement agent, or that continuing to do so could jeopardize his bond or pretrial release. A 134. Petitioner WILSON was not aware of any other case where the continued distribution of presumptively-protected adult-oriented material after an arrest on obscenity has been determined to constitute a violation of bail release conditions or resulted in a revocation of bond or in pretrial detention. A 130. The

unprecedented nature of this proceeding was confirmed by the Affidavit of an expert censorship attorney, who has monitored proceedings in obscenity cases for decades. A 226-230. Petitioner WILSON did not imagine, comprehend or have any reason to believe that the continued operation of his website, from outside of Polk County, would put him at risk for violating any condition of bond, or having his bond revoked or being remanded to custody pending trial. A 130.

Despite the above, on November 22, 2005, Respondent STATE ATTORNEY filed a Motion to Revoke Defendant’s Bond, alleging only that Petitioner WILSON committed new crimes in the form of distribution or promotion of additional content on the website, which Respondents alleged was obscene. A 98. The State’s Motion to Revoke Defendant’s Bond also sought pretrial detention, but contained no allegations in support of this request, concerning Petitioner WILSON’s ties to the community, financial resources, or threat of physical danger to the community. A 98.

Shortly after receiving a copy of the State Motion to Revoke Defendant’s Bond, Petitioner WILSON eliminated any and all sexually-oriented images/video from the website and prevented users from posting such images/video to the website in the future. A 130, 131. Receipt of the motion constituted the first notice to Petitioner WILSON that continued operation of his website could constitute a violation of his conditions of pretrial release, and therefore he took

these actions in an attempt to remedy the alleged violation, given his concern over pretrial incarceration. A 130-131. Petitioner WILSON was never told, in advance, that any of the “new” images at issue in the bond revocation proceeding were illegal, obscene, or otherwise problematic by anyone in law enforcement prior to the filing of the State Motion to Revoke Defendant’s Bond. A 130. After the revocation motion was filed, counsel for Petitioner WILSON attempted to obtain a clarification from Respondent STATE ATTORNEY as to what types of images/video can safely be distributed via the website without risk of additional allegations of obscenity and consequent future attempts to revoke Petitioner WILSON’s bond. A 131; 213-215. Respondents failed and refused to provide such guidance in order to assist Petitioner WILSON in complying with the law, and therefore Petitioner WILSON concluded that the only way to protect himself from future a bond revocation based on future allegations of obscenity was to remove all sexually-oriented images from the website, regardless of whether they may have serious value, or be otherwise constitutionally protected. A 131.

Petitioner WILSON testified, via his Affidavit, that none of the content at issue in this case affirmatively “exists” in Polk County, Florida, or in the Tenth Judicial Circuit. A 132. Images and video clips must be requested by an individual from the server in Amsterdam, Netherlands, and brought into Polk County to be downloaded onto a hard drive or a removable disk. A 132. The

materials are therefore not broadcast, or beamed into Polk County, like television or radio. A 132-133. Consequently, Respondents sought to revoke Petitioner WILSON’s bond based on activities occurring completely outside of their jurisdiction, by individuals other than Petitioner WILSON, with no prior warning that the images may be obscene, no request for removal, and involving a website hosted in another country. A 98; 132-33. Moreover, none of the images at issue in the bond revocation proceeding was created by Petitioner WILSON, nor did he even see them before they were brought to his attention in the bond revocation proceedings. A 130, 133. At any given time, there were over 250,000 images or video clips on the website, and the content was constantly changing. A 135.

Respondent STATE ATTORNEY scheduled the hearing on the State Motion to Revoke Defendant’s Bond for Friday December 16, 2005, and reserved only thirty (30) minutes for the hearing. A 99; 100, 103. Petitioner WILSON’s attorneys requested a continuance of that hearing on December 12, 2005, arguing that insufficient time existed to address the complex issues involved in this case in regards to a determination of obscenity, and since numerous preliminary issues such as preemption of the state obscenity statute under the Commerce Clause and recent federal legislation, the constitutionality of the obscenity statute had not been addressed by the Trial Court, despite the pendency of numerous timely filed and

briefed pretrial motions raising such issues. A 100-104. The Trial Court denied the Motion for Continuance without comment. A 111.

The Trial Court conducted a hearing on the State Motion to Revoke Defendant’s Bond on Friday, December 16, 2005. Just prior to the the beginning of argument, Petitioner WILSON filed a Verified Motion for Disqualification in order to disqualify the Judge from any further proceedings in the case based on his well-founded fear that Judge J. Dale Durrance could not conduct the necessary in- depth, visual review of the allegedly obscene materials, given a serious eyesight problem, and impending surgery to address same. A 216-222. The Trial Court denied the Motion as legally insufficient. A 223.

Petitioner WILSON, though counsel, renewed his request to continue the hearing on bond revocation, given the inadequate time, and pendency of other preliminary constitutional challenges, and that request was denied without elaboration. SA.4 Petitioner WILSON also filed a Motion to Strike State’s Motion to Revoke Defendant’s Bond, as legally insufficient under Florida law. A 112-117. The Trial Court never ruled on the Motion to Strike. The Trial Court then proceeded to address the State Motion to Revoke Defendant’s Bond, during which Investigator Gates sought to establish probable cause to believe that Petitioner

4 References to the audio recording of the proceeding on the Motion to Revoke Bond shall be designated by the letters “SA,” referencing the Supplemental Appendix containing the audio recording.

WILSON committed “new crimes” while on pretrial release, in violation of

§903.046(2)(j), Fla.Stat. (2005). In doing so, Investigator Gates adduced, over objection, printouts of thirty (30) still images, and three (3) short video clips, extracted from hundreds of thousands of images on the website at issue.5 Investigator Gates admitted that no warrant had been sought or issued prior to copying the images and video clips from the website. SA. Counsel for Petitioner WILSON thereafter moved to suppress and exclude such evidence based on this Court’s decision in Miragaya v. State, 654 So.2d 262 (Fla. 2d DCA 1995), holding such procedure to be an illegal seizure and imposition of prior restraint on protected speech. SA. The Court overruled the objection and denied the suppression request without comment. SA.

After additional witness voir dire regarding the nature of the images sought to be introduced, counsel for Petitioner WILSON also objected to the introduction of the images and video clips at issue based on Inspector Gates’ admission that he eliminated various textual comments pertaining to each of the images, and selected certain images out of a series or set of images, without presenting the entire set of all images and associated comments to the Trial Court as required to present the

5 In so much as Petitioner WILSON, for purposes of this Petition only (or for the relevant portions of this Petition only) assumes, arguendo, that a magistrate could reasonably conclude that there was probable cause to believe that the “revoking” images were obscene, when considered in isolation, Petitioner WILSON does not attach any of those images. Petitioner WILSON will provide them if requested by the Court.

materials “as a whole” under the test set forth in Ch. 847, Fla.Stat. (2005) and

Miller v. California, 413 U.S. 15, 93 S.Ct. 2607, 37 L.Ed.2d 513 (1973). SA. In

support of his objection, Petitioner WILSON referenced his previously-filed Affidavit of Defendant Regarding Comments Associated with Images, identifying a typical set of images posted by a user on the subject website, as it would appear when displayed with the associated comments. A 174-188. This Affidavit demonstrated how a set of images was portrayed on the website, and how the comments related to the set of images presented. The Trial Court overruled the objection6 to the failure to consider the images ‘as a whole’ and allowed the isolated images (bereft of commentary) to be considered as evidence justifying revocation. SA.

On cross examination, Investigator Gates admitted that the website was hosted in The Netherlands; that he was not aware of anyone else in Polk County who had viewed the proffered images; that Petitioner WILSON no longer resided in Polk County, that Petitioner WILSON did not create or post the images himself; that no evidence existed that Petitioner WILSON ever saw the images; and that there was no evidence that Petitioner WILSON resold or redistributed the images at issue in the bond revocation proceedings. SA.

6 Petitioner WILSON had also filed a Motion in Limine and supporting Memorandum, A 163-165; 120-126, arguing that the State should be precluded from introducing only portions of the website, or eliminating the associated comments.

The State presented no evidence on whether Petitioner WILSON intended to violate the bond conditions, or even whether he was aware of the nature and character of the images involved. In addition, the State failed to present any evidence of the community standards that would apply to the images at issue, or which community’s standards would apply, given Petitioner WILSON’s move to Orange County, and lack of any presence in Polk County.

Thereafter, Petitioner WILSON, though counsel, attempted to call an Expert Witness, Dr. Randy Fisher, Professor of Human Sexuality at the University of Central Florida, on the issue of obscenity, and availability of similar, comparable sexually-explicit materials within the Polk County area. Petitioner WILSON previously filed the Affidavit of Dr. Randy Fisher in Opposition to State Motion to Revoke Defendant’s Bond, in which Dr. Fisher set forth his conclusions on these issues, and opining that the images at issue in the bond revocation proceeding were not obscene, appealed to a healthy interest in sex, contained serious value, and were similar to other comparable materials readily available for purchase throughout the Polk County area. A 196-212. The Trial Court prohibited the defense expert from testifying. SA.

After final argument on the issue of bond revocation, the Court ruled that probable cause existed to find that Petitioner WILSON committed new crimes of obscenity while on pretrial release, which thereby justified his remand to custody

without bail. A 231. No pretrial detention hearing occurred. Counsel for Petitioner WILSON vigorously attempted to point out to the Court that the issue of pretrial detention had not yet been considered, and that such an issue required its own separate hearing, and evidence beyond a reasonable doubt, pursuant to Fla.R.Crim.P. 3.132(c). SA. Petitioner WILSON’s position on the need for specific findings prior to ordering pretrial detention had also been thoroughly briefed in his previously-filed Memorandum in Opposition to State’s Motion for Revocation of Pretrial Release. A 166-176. The Trial Court instructed Petitioner WILSON’s counsel to stop arguing. SA. Petitioner WILSON’s counsel then sought a stay of the Trial Court’s pretrial detention order, which the Trial Court refused to consider. SA. The Trial Court again instructed counsel to stop arguing, since the hearing was over. SA.

Petition WILSON remains illegally incarcerated by Respondent SHERIFF and subject to future bond revocation by Respondent STATE ATTORNEY based on continued distribution of website material, before trial on the merits.

  1. RELIEF SOUGHT

Petitioner WILSON requests that this Court grant the following relief:

  1. Issue the Writ of Habeas Corpus;

  1. Reverse the Trial Court’s Order revoking bond and remanding Petitioner WILSON to pretrial detention without bond;

  2. Order release of Petitioner WILSON by reinstating his original bond with instructions that no further revocation occur based on any allegations of obscenity until a final conviction is obtained on the underlying obscenity charges;

  3. [REQUESTED IN A SEPARATE CONTEMPORANEOUSLY- FILED MOTION] Emergency preliminary relief pursuant to Fla.R.App.P. 9.300(c) in the form of a stay pending consideration of the petition, requiring Petitioner WILSON’s immediate release from pretrial detention, temporary reinstatement of Petitioner WILSON’s original bond, and interim prohibition against revocation of that bond based upon allegations of obscenity until this Court renders a final determination of this Petition on the merits; and,

  4. Such further relief as this Court deems equitable and just under the circumstances.

  1. LEGAL ARGUMENT

  1. Revocation of Bond and Imposition of Pretrial Detention Results in a Prior

Restraint on Protected Speech in the Instant Case.

As more fully set forth exclusively in Petitioner WILSON’s Emergency Motion for Stay of Proceedings Based on Prior Restraint, the revocation of bond and imposition of pretrial detention based on allegations of new obscenity offenses, before any website content has been judicially determined to be obscene, results in the imposition of an unconstitutional prior restraint on protected speech.

Petitioner WILSON incorporates the arguments made in the accompanying Emergency Motion for Stay of Proceedings Based on Prior Restraint as if fully set forth herein. By way of summary, Petitioner WILSON contends the following:

    1. Pretrial detention for unproven obscenity offenses is an impermissible form of prior restraint;

    2. Pretrial detention for unproven obscenity offenses under the circumstances of this case will cause in impermissible chilling effect in violation of the First Amendment.

    3. Pretrial detention for one or more unproven obscenity offenses is impermissible prior punishment prohibited by the First Amendment.

Since the prior restraint arguments support the granting of immediate, preliminary relief while this Court considers the balance of this Petition, those arguments are contained in a separate emergency motion.

  1. The Trial Court Departed from the Essential Requirements of Law by Ordering Pretrial Detention Without Conducting a Hearing Thereon, or Considering any of the Required Factors.

Assuming, arguendo, that additional allegations of obscenity can form the basis for bond revocation in an obscenity case, without violating the First Amendment, such allegations do not, by themselves, justify pretrial detention.

The Florida Constitution guarantees:

Unless charged with a capital offense or an offense punishable by life imprisonment and the proof of guilt is

evident or the presumption is great, every person charged with a crime…shall be entitle to pretrial release on reasonable conditions. If no conditions of release can reasonably protect the community from risk of physical harm to persons, assure the presence of the accused at trial, or assure the integrity of the judicial process, the accused may be detained.

Article I, Section 14, Declaration of Rights. See also, Fla.R.Crim.P. 3.131.

Elimination of this strong constitutional right to bail can only occur under the narrowest of circumstances, with attendant Due Process protections and appropriate legal burdens placed on the State. The right to bail was not observed by the Trial Court.

Determinations regarding pretrial detention are controlled by §907.041, Fla. Stat. (2005), which requires the court to conduct a separate inquiry to whether any conditions of pretrial release will protect the community from the risk of physical harm to persons. The Florida Supreme Court, in State v. Paul, 783 So.2d 1042 (Fla. 2001), considered whether a court may revoke a defendant’s bond, and order pretrial detention based merely on proof of commission of new crimes. The court held that trial courts must consider the criteria set forth in §907.041, Fla. Stat. (2005) when deciding the issue of pretrial detention, which is separate from the issue of bond revocation:

By breaching a condition of the bond originally set forth by the court, a defendant forfeits the right to continue release under the terms of that bond. However, the defendant does not forfeit his or her constitutionally-

guaranteed right to bail altogether. A refusal to readmit a defendant to any bail at all must be subject to the limitations of the pretrial detention statute.

Id. at 1050, citing Paul v. Jeanne, 728 So.2d 1167, 1171 (Fla. 4th DCA 1999); see also, Rix v. Jeanne, 728 So.2d 827 (Fla. 4th DCA 1999); rev. granted, Bland v. State, 744 So.2d 452 (Fla. 1999) and decision approved, Jeanne v Rix, 783 So.2d 237 (Fla. 2001) (granting writ of habeas corpus where state did not satisfy burden of proving requirements of pretrial detention upon breach of bond)

In light of the above, it is clear that the Trial Court departed from the essential requirements of law by incarcerating Petitioner WILSON without allowing the parties to address the requirements of § 907.041, Fla. Stat. (2005), without placing the appropriate burden of proof on the State to demonstrate the necessity for pretrial detention, beyond a reasonable doubt, pursuant to Fla.R.Crim.P. 3.132(c), and without making the required findings pursuant to

§901.041(4)(i), Fla. Stat. (2005). Counsel for Petitioner WILSON attempted to address the issue of the propriety of pretrial detention, but was prohibited from making any further argument in that regard. SA. Petitioner WILSON had secured the attendance of numerous witnesses to testify regarding his significant ties to the community, unquestioned likelihood of attendance at future court proceedings, and minimal financial resources. However, his attempt to raise these issues, as required by the Florida Supreme Court, was rejected by the Trial Court.

Accordingly, the Trial Court departed from the essential requirements of law by remanding Petitioner WILSON to pretrial detention with no bond, with no required findings as mandated by §901.041(4)(i), Fla. Stat. (2005). Such findings are mandatory and must be rendered within twenty four (24) hours of the pretrial detention hearing. Id.

Had the Trial Court conducted the proper inquiry on the issue of pretrial detention, it would have been forced to conclude that Petitioner WILSON should be released on bond. There is no evidence that Petitioner WILSON is a flight risk, and he has made all of his court appearances. There has been no allegation that Petitioner WILSON constitutes a threat of physical harm to the community, as required by § 907.041(1), Fla. Stat. (2005) to justify pretrial detention. That section states: “It is the intent of the legislature that the primary consideration be protection of the community from the risk of physical harm to persons.” See also, Lepore v. Jenne, 701 So.2d 980, 981 (Fla. 4th DCA 1998). In Lepore, the court addressed a Writ of Habeas Corpus filed on behalf of a defendant charged with aggravated stalking. The court found that the defendant had “willfully and substantially” violated the terms of pretrial release, and ordered him held without bond pending trial. The defendant’s violation related to his repeated telephone contact with the alleged victim. The Fourth District observed that in order to order

pretrial detention based on a threat of harm, the State must prove, and the trial court must find, that:

[T]he defendant is presently charged with a dangerous crime, that there is a substantial probability that the defendant committed such crime, that the actual circumstances of the crime indicated disregard for the safety of the community, and that there are no conditions or release reasonably sufficient to protect the community from the risk of physical harm to persons.

The Lepore court ultimately concluded that a substantial probability of physical harm was not present, and that “[I]t is hard to understand how telephone contact, no matter how unpleasant, can constitute physical harm to the victim or anyone else in the community.” Lepore, 708 So.2d at 981. The State’s burden of proof on the issue of physical danger is “beyond a reasonable doubt” citing Fla.R.Crim.P. 3.132(c)(1).

Applying the relevant standard to the instant case, it could not be logically argued that the continued operation of a website constitutes a threat of physical harm to the community. Respondent STATE ATTORNEY has made no such allegation, and no proof of physical harm was submitted at the hearing. SA. The Trial Court therefore committed clear legal error when it ordered pretrial detention of Petitioner WILSON, in the absence of any proof of physical harm, and silencing Petitioner WILSON’s counsel and denying him even the opportunity submit argument or proof on that critical issue.

  1. The Trial Court Erred in Determining That the Bond Conditions Were Breached Absent any Evidence of Intent or Knowledge.

Petitioner WILSON strenuously argued in his Affidavit, and through counsel during the bond revocation argument, that he had no intent to violate the law or to breach any condition of pretrial release. A 130-131. Specifically, the unrefuted testimony of Petitioner WILSON, in his Affidavit, established the following:

    1. He diligently attempted to comply with all conditions of release of which he was aware. A 130.

    2. He did not understand or have any reason to believe that continued operation of the website, from outside the jurisdiction of Polk County or the Tenth Judicial Circuit, would put him at risk of violating any condition of bond or having his bond revoked, or being remanded to custody pending trial. A 130.

    3. He was unaware of any other case in the country where this had occurred. A 130.

    4. No law enforcement personnel ever advised Petitioner WILSON to stop distributing sexually oriented images on the website, or to stop distributing the specific images at issue in the bond revocation proceeding. A 130.

    5. Petitioner WILSON would have removed all sexually-oriented images from the website if he had been advised that there was any risk of pretrial detention without bond, or revocation of his existing bond. A 130-131.

    6. He attempted to obtain clarification from Respondents as to what categories of images could be safely distributed on the website, to no avail. A 131.

    7. Petitioner WILSON removed all sexually-oriented images from the subject website shortly after the State filed its Motion to Revoke Defendant’s Bond. A 130.

    8. Petitioner WILSON was not aware of the existence of the specific images at issue in the bond revocation proceeding, did not create those images, did not post those images, and could not possibly have reviewed every image posted by users throughout the world on the website which contained over 250,000 images at any given time. A 130, 133, 134-35.

In addition to the above, it is important to note that none of the activities occurred within Polk County, Florida, or the Tenth Judicial Circuit.7 A 132. The

7 Notably, the State also failed to establish venue in its case in chief, or at any time in the revocation proceedings. The un-rebutted testimony of Petitioner WILSON established that he moved out of Polk County and the Tenth Judicial Circuit, immediately after his arrest. A 132. Moreover, the images at issue were posted by individuals throughout the world, without prior knowledge or approval of Petitioner WILSON. A 133-135. The website, itself, is hosted in The Netherlands, A 132, and Petitioner WILSON maintains no business contacts relating to the website in Polk County, or the Tenth Judicial Circuit. A 132. The only connection between this case and Polk County was the downloading of the content from the server in Amsterdam by Investigator Gates, who is the only known person to access the images in Polk County. SA. Therefore, Respondent STATE ATTORNEY failed to establish that any offense occurred in Polk County, Florida thereby failing to meet the venue requirement for criminal offenses. Croft v. State, 139 Fla. 711, 191 So. 34 (1939); Pennick v. State, 453 So.2d 542 (Fla. 3d DCA

1984); Brown v. State, 728 So.2d 335 (Fla. 4th DCA 1999).

website is hosted in The Netherlands, A 132, and had no connection with Polk County until it was brought there by Investigator Gates in the course of his investigation. A 132; 57-59. It was therefore not reasonable for Petitioner WILSON to be legitimately concerned about being remanded to custody, with no bond, based on the unknown postings of website members, of which he was unaware and which he had not approved, which members acted unilaterally from areas throughout the world, to post images to a website hosted in The Netherlands, while Petitioner WILSON resided outside the jurisdiction of Polk County, Florida.

Under Florida law, Petitioner WILSON may not be held responsible for violating a condition of release, of which he was unaware. Respondent STATE ATTORNEY was required to introduce credible evidence that Petitioner WILSON was informed of the relevant conditions of pretrial release that he refrain from certain conduct, and that the violation of the condition was willful. Pilorge v. State, 876 So.2d 591, 591-592 (Fla. 5th DCA 2004). The fact that a condition of pretrial release is deemed “mandatory” is insufficient to establish the presumption that the defendant was aware of the condition. Id. at 592. For example, requiring the defendant not to engage in employment connected with obscene material is not a standard, mandatory condition of pretrial release of which one would be aware. Carter v. Carson, 370 So.2d 1241, 1242 (Fla. 1st DCA 1979). Such a condition does not bear any relationship to a legitimate purpose of bail, i.e., ensuring the

defendant’s appearance at future court proceedings. Id., citing Ladoga Canning Corp. v. McKenzie, 370 So.2d 137 (Fla. 1979).

Respondent STATE ATTORNEY offered no evidence to establish that Petitioner WILSON was aware that the continued distribution of images from his website could possibly result in a revocation of his bond or imposition of pretrial detention. Both the facts and the law establish the reverse: Petitioner WILSON made every effort to comply with the law, inquire about its requirements, and address the concerns of Respondents in regards to distribution of material from his website. He received no advance warning or guidelines to govern his conduct in regards to operation of the website. Under First Amendment principles, all sexually-oriented images of adults are presumed to be constitutionally protected. Reno v. ACLU , supra. Moreover, Petitioner WILSON is entitled to continue distributing materials alleged to be obscene, pending a final determination of obscenity by the trier of fact at the conclusion of the case. Heller v. New York, 413

U.S. 483 (1973); State v. U & L Theaters, Inc., 307 So.2d 879, 881 (Fla. 3d DCA 1974). In light of this presumption of protection that is carried with sexually- oriented materials throughout the conclusion of an obscenity case, Petitioner WILSON had no reason to believe that continued operation of his website, in the same manner as it had been when he was originally charged, could result in a revocation of his bond or in pretrial detention. A 130. Since the images at issue

were posted by website users throughout the world, without any prior knowledge or approval from Petitioner WILSON, there is no evidence that he willfully violated any conditions of pretrial release, even assuming, arguendo, that probable cause exists to find the images obscene.8 Therefore, Respondent STATE ATTORNEY failed to meet its burden of proving “willfulness” in connection with the commission of new crimes. Accordingly, the Court’s determination that a violation occurred in the absence of the required evidence of intent, renders the finding of a violation of the terms of pretrial release, clearly erroneous.

  1. The Trial Court’s Failure to Consider the Allegedly Obscene Materials “As A Whole” Constitutes Fundamental Error Requiring Reversal.

As noted in the Statement of the Facts, the Trial Court determined that a collection of isolated images, and several video clips, extracted from Petitioner WILSON’s website, met the probable cause standard for obscenity, thereby justifying a finding that Petitioner WILSON committed new crimes while on pretrial release. A 231. Instead of considering the website, from which the materials were taken, as a whole work, the Trial Court allowed the State to present individual images and video clips extracted from the hundreds of thousands of images appearing on the website. SA. Moreover, the Trial Court allowed the State to present this evidence in isolation from the comments, posted by users, and

8 Petitioner WILSON does not concede that any content from the website is obscene.

associated with the images. These comments often contained humor, or quality evaluation associated with the images. A 174-188; A 200. In addition, the images forming the basis for the bond revocation allegations appeared to be part of a series or set of images, however the entire set of images was not provided to Judge Durrance, to evaluate the “whole” work. A 177; SA.

Investigator Gates confirmed under cross examination that the images presented appeared to be taken from a series of related images. SA. The failure to consider the series of images “as a whole” in the context of the associated comments dramatically affected the impact of the content on the viewer, and prevented a proper evaluation of the serious literary, political, scientific, or artistic value associated with the work as required under the Florida obscenity statute and the Miller test. A 200. As argued by counsel for Petitioner WILSON, considering only selected images taken from certain pages of the entire website without the associated comments is tantamount to extracting a sentence, from a paragraph, from a chapter, of a book, and claiming that the sentence is, on its own, obscene. SA. This is not permitted under the Florida Statutes or the First Amendment.

Examination of isolated portions of larger works to determine the question of obscenity constitutes fundamental error, in light of the test announced in Miller

v. California, supra. There, the Court announced a stringent set of criteria, which has become the “Miller Test,” and which requires the following evaluation:

The basic guidelines for the trier of fact must be: (a) whether ‘the average person, applying contemporary community standards’ would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest, (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.

Miller, supra, at 415 U.S. 24.

Each prong of the Miller Test must be considered; in order for the evaluation to meet constitutional standards. See: Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition, 535 U.S. 234, 122 S.Ct. 1389, 132 L.Ed.2d 403 (2002) (Court struck down portions of the Child Pornography Prevention Act due to, inter alia, its failure to consider all prongs of the Miller Test when evaluating the legality of virtual child pornography). Since sexually-oriented materials appearing on the Internet are presumptively deserving of full First Amendment protection, ACLU v. Reno, 521

U.S. 844, 112 S.Ct. 2329, 138 L.Ed.2d 874 (1997), the materials published on Petitioner WILSON’s website are presumed to be constitutional unless each prong of the Miller Test is properly applied, and the material found to be obscene, as a whole.

While very early cases allowed for segmented review of individual items, in determining obscenity, that approach was decisively rejected in Roth v. United States, 354 U.S. 476, 77 S.Ct. 1301, 1 L.Ed.2d 1498 (1957). There, the High Court

adopted the requirement that “…books, pictures, and circulars must be judged as a whole, in their entire context, and you are not to consider detached or separate portions in reaching a conclusion.” 354 U.S. at 490. Likewise, in Penthouse v. McAuliffe, 610 F.2d 1353 (5th Cir. 1980), the court reaffirmed the “as a whole” requirement, and ruled that magazines must be considered in their entirety, and not as a volume of separate ‘works’ in the form of individual pictures. Id at 1367. The Fifth Circuit concluded that the Supreme Court intended magazines to always be considered as whole works, even though made up of individual articles and pictures. Id at 1368. The only conceivable exception would be where unrelated

“value” material is inserted as a “sham” such as where hardcore materials were interspersed throughout the Bible. Id. Importantly, “[t]he inclusion of serious literary matter in significant proportions may preclude a finding that a magazine is obscene even though the magazine contains items, photographs for example, which standing alone would be found obscene under the Miller test.” City of Urbana v. Downing, 539 N.E. 2d 140, 148 (Ohio 1989). The Florida Supreme Court agreed with this analysis in Ladoga Canning Corporation v. McKenzie, 370 So.2d 1137, 1141 (1979), wherein it held:

The Miller Court made it clear that the portrayal of sexual conduct, without more, does not render a publication obscene. The determination of obscenity must be based upon an examination of the work as a whole, rather than isolated passages.

Id at 1141 [emphasis added; citations omitted].

In light of the above, the Trial Court erred in considering only portions of the “whole” work at issue in the instant case, and basing its obscenity determination on isolated images and video clips, without reference to the remainder of the graphic material, and without consideration of the text and comments associated with the content. This error was compounded by the fact that the comments associated with the images are critical for purposes of evaluating the final prong of the Miller Test, i.e., the existence of serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value. A 174-188; A 200. Considering only certain images also ignores the significant literary and political value associated with the War Images. A 135-139; 200-201. Since the Trial Court’s obscenity determination was fundamentally flawed due to failure to properly apply the Miller Test, the determination that Petitioner WILSON committed new crimes while on pretrial release was clearly erroneous and must be reversed.

  1. Federal Law Preempts Application of State Obscenity Law to the Internet.

As noted above, Petitioner WILSON timely sought to have various constitutional challenges heard prior to determining whether Petitioner WILSON had committed new obscenity violations, implicating bond revocation. One of the constitutional challenges raised, in defense of the underlying charges, is that of federal preemption under the Commerce Clause. A 83-97. The Trial Court

refused to consider Petitioner WILSON’s previously-filed constitutional challenges, before applying Florida’s obscenity law to Petitioner WILSON, in the bond revocation proceeding. A 111. Had it done so, it would have been forced to conclude that Florida’s obscenity statute cannot be applied to Internet content, consistent with the “dormant” Commerce Clause. 9

The instant case – one of distinct first impression – involves the application

of Florida’s obscenity law, Chapter 847, et. seq., Fla. Stat. (2005) to online media. Therefore, unique and unsettled issues of law are implicated. One of those issues involves the interplay between state and federal regulation of Internet commerce, and the State’s ability to criminalize distribution of online media. This appears to be a matter of first impression anywhere in the United States.

The Internet has been called “the most participatory form of mass speech yet developed.” Reno, supra, 521 U.S. at 863 (citation omitted). The United States Supreme Court identifies the web as a “unique and wholly new medium of worldwide human communication. Id., 521 U.S. at 850. Online communications have historically been regulated at the federal, as opposed to the state level. The

9 It should be noted that the facial invalidity of a statute under the Commerce Clause can be raised at any time, including the first time on appeal. State v. Johnson, 616 So.2d 1, 3 (Fla. 1993); Trushian v. State, 425 So.2d 1126, 1129 (Fla. 1982); Harvey v. State, 786 So.2d 28 (Fla. 1st DCA 2001) rev. granted 797 So.2d 585 (Fla. 2001). In addition, once an Appellate Court has jurisdiction it may address any item which affects the case. Whitted v. State, 362 So.2d 668 (Fla. 1978); Miami Gardens, Inc. v. Conway,102 So.2d 622 (Fla. 1958); Vance v. Bliss Properties, Inc., 109 Fla. 388, 149 So. 370 (1933).

Communications Decency Act of 1996 contains the federal regulations for obscenity distributed on the Internet.

Online communications are contemporaneously available in all states – and throughout the world. In order to attempt to comply with each individual state’s laws, an online business would need to negotiate a “mine field” of potentially inconsistent and widely varying regulations and prohibitions. Imposing such burdens on website operators would cause the Internet to grind to a halt, since it would be virtually impossible to research and comply with fifty (50) sets of different regulations for the distribution of a particular image or movie on the Internet.10

As a result of these concerns, and others, the courts have uniformly struck

down any attempt of state-level regulation of sexually-oriented, online content, even where such regulation was supported by a compelling government interest such as the protection of minors. See, American Book Sellers Foundation for Free Expression v. Dean, 202 F.Supp.2d 300 (D. Vt. 2002); PSI Net, Inc. v. Chapman, 167 F.Supp. 878 (W.D. Pa. 2001), question certified, 317 F.3d 413 (4th Cir. 2003); Cyberspace Communications, Inc. v. Engler, 142 F.Supp.2d 827 (E.D. Mich. 2001); ACLU v. Johnson, 194 F.3d 1149 (10th Cir. 1999); American Libraries

10 The problem would be compounded in those states whose obscenity laws are determined by community standards in counties or some other inferior political subdivision. Notably, some states such as Oregon and Hawaii do not regulate obscenity at all.

Association v. Pataki, 969 F.Supp. 160 (S.D.N.Y. 1997); Center for Democracy & Technology v. Pappert, 337 F.Supp.2d 2006 (E.D. PA 2004); Southeast Booksellers Ass’n v. McMaster, 371 F.Supp.2d 773 (D.S.C. 2005). Each of these cases recognized the need for uniform regulation of online content, and the incompatibility of state-level regulation of Internet communications and the federal uniformity goals established by years of Commerce Clause jurisprudence.

The “dormant” Commerce Clause restricts the powers of states to regulate interstate commerce. Barclays Bank, PLC v. Franchise Tax Board of California, 512 U.S. 298, 310 Fn. 9, 114 S.Ct. 2268, 129 L.Ed.2d 244 (1994). State laws that

regulate activity requiring a national regulatory scheme, but which impose multiple inconsistent burdens on interstate commerce are generally found invalid. See, e.g., CTS Corp. v. Dynamics Corp. of America, 481 U.S. 69, 88-90, 107 S.Ct. 1637, 95 L.Ed.2d 67 (1987); Southern Pac. Co. v. State of Ariz., ex. rel. Sullivan, 325 U.S. 761, 767, 65 S.Ct. 1515, 89 L.Ed. 1915 (1945); Bibb v. Navajo Freight Lines, Inc.,

359 U.S. 520, 529, 79 S.Ct. 962, 3 L.Ed.2d 1003 (1945). In addition, state laws that regulate activities outside the state’s borders may also be invalid since a state may not export its own domestic policies onto other states by enacting laws regulating activities occurring outside its borders. Edgar v. Mite Corp., 457 U.S. 624, 641-43, 102 S.Ct. 26, 29, 73 L.Ed.2d 269 (1982); Baldwin v. G.A.F. Seelag,

Inc., 294 U.S. 511, 521, 55 S.Ct. 497, 79 L.Ed. 1032 (1935). Even if a state law is

not invalid under the foregoing test, it may still be invalid under the balancing test articulated in Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc., 397 U.S. 137, 90 S.Ct. 844, 25 L.Ed.2d 174 (1970). The Pike test is only used if the statute passes the discriminatory test and the inconsistent burden test. Campeau Corp. v. Federated Dept. Stores, 679 F. Supp. 735, 738-39 (S.D. Ohio 1988). Under the Pike balancing test, the court balances the burden placed on interstate commerce based on the state law against the local benefit derived from the law. Pike, supra, 397 U.S. at 142. The state law is invalid if the burden on interstate commerce is clearly excessive compared to the putative local benefit. Id.

All of the aforementioned decisions evaluating the constitutionality of state laws regulating the availability of sexually explicit materials to minors on the Internet have concluded that the statutes at issue violate the Commerce Clause, in addition to First Amendment principles. Dean, supra; PSI Net, supra; Engler, supra; Johnson, supra; Pataki, supra. Florida’s obscenity Statute suffers from precisely the same constitutional deficiency when applied to online communications. The Internet is distinctly different from other modern media such as radio and television (cable or satellite). Online communications are not “broadcast” into one’s home or community. A 132-133. Instead, computer users must request access to online files that are stored on host computers located in remote places – in this case, The Netherlands. A 132-133. Website operators

cannot block users in geographic locations. A 133. Therefore, operators cannot be constitutionally subjected to the vagaries of fifty (50) different states’ laws relating to the distribution of online content. With obscenity regulation, the constitutional problems are compounded: Obscenity is purportedly regulated by “local” community standards. Website operators would therefore not only be expected to comply with multiple inconsistent statewide regulations, but further required to discern the distinctions between each community’s standards, within each state, without the ability to block receipt of the website material by users in specific geographic areas, unlike radio or television stations, which can readily avoid such markets. These factors create unique concerns that are applicable exclusively to publishers and distributors of online materials.

The Pataki decision is of particular relevance to the instant case. There, the Court concluded that since the Internet has become an important conduit for commercial activity, virtually any regulation affecting its operation is subject to Commerce Clause scrutiny. Pataki, supra, at 969 F.Supp. 169-173.

The Statute at issue in the instant case violates the Commerce Clause in several respects: Initially, the obscenity Statute purports to regulate conduct occurring outside Florida’s borders. It should be noted that the website at issue in the instant case is hosted outside of the United States’ borders; in Amsterdam, Netherlands. A 132. Users can submit content from anywhere in the world without

prior approval from Petitioner WILSON. A 133. Chapter 847, Fla. Stat. (2005), does not contain any limiting language designed to curtail the application of Florida’s obscenity laws only to activities occurring in the State of Florida. The obscenity statutes purportedly regulate the online distribution of any obscene materials to any resident in the State of Florida, regardless of where the website is hosted, and irrespective of the location from which the materials originate.

The courts have noted that website operators have no reliable means of limiting the geographic distribution of erotic materials on the Internet. ACLU v. Reno, 217 F.3d 162, 175 (3d Cir. 2000) (“Web publishers are without any means to limit access to their sites based on geographic location of particular Internet users.”); Ashcroft v. ACLU, 535 U.S. 564, 575 (2002) (plurality opinion, Nitke v.

Ashcroft, 253 F.Supp.2d 587, 603 (S.D. NY 2003). This was confirmed by Petitioner WILSON, in his Affidavit. A 133. Many of the images contained on the website came from end users in other countries, such as Iraq and Afghanistan. A 135-136. The images at issue in the bond revocation matter could have come from anywhere in the world. Interestingly, given the fact that Petitioner WILSON had moved outside of Polk County, and the Tenth Judicial Circuit, Respondents are purportedly attempting to regulate online activity that has no connection with Polk County Florida, other than the fact that Investigator Gates decided to download certain materials onto his computer. There is no rational basis to apply Florida

law, or Polk County community standards, to this international distribution of images subject only to federal law. The Commerce Clause was included in the United States Constitution just to avoid such anomalies.

Since distribution of adult-oriented material on the Internet is, by its very nature, interstate commerce,11 a cohesive national scheme of regulation is required, and the Statute is subject to “dormant” Commerce Clause analysis. International commerce is subject to Commerce Clause restrictions just like interstate commerce. Walbash, ST. L. & P. RY. CO. v. Illinois, 118 U.S. 557, 574-75, 7 S.Ct. 4, 30 L.Ed. 244 (1886) (“For the regulation of [commerce with foreign countries and among the states] there can be only one system of rules, applicable alike to the whole country.”). By allowing state-level obscenity laws to be applied to Internet

media, this Court would be authorizing inconsistent regulation of interstate commerce in precisely the way that the Commerce Clause forbids.

Even if the Statute does not inconsistently regulate interstate commerce, it fails the “Pike Test” since the burdens on interstate commerce outweigh any putative local benefits conferred by the Statute. See Pike, supra. Given the

11 Reno v. ACLU, supra, American Book Sellers Foundation for Free Expression v. Dean, supra; PSI Net, Inc. v. Chapman, supra; Cyberspace Communications, Inc.

  1. Engler, supra,; ACLU v. Johnson, supra,; American Libraries Association v. Pataki, supra,; Center for Democracy & Technology v. Pappert, supra,; Southeast Booksellers Ass’n v. McMaster, supra.

existence of several federal obscenity statutes12 that already regulate the online distribution of obscene materials, any additional benefits derived by the almost identical state level of regulation is de minimis at best. Any allegedly obscene content distributed via Internet websites could be readily addressed by the United States Department of Justice, which boasts in news reports that it has recently created a well-funded group of investigators and trial attorneys to investigate and prosecute obscenity violations by commercial adult websites.

The Florida obscenity Statute regulating obscene materials on the Internet provides little in terms of local benefit,13 given the existence of the federal legislation. When balanced against the burden on interstate commerce that is created by the existence of a state statute, seeking to regulate international online commerce, the Statute must fall under the Pike Test.

Finally, the application of Chapter 847, Fla. Stat. (2005) to the Internet has the effect of exporting Florida’s domestic policies (or as here those of a distinct and unique county) onto other states. As observed in Pataki at 177, an Internet user or webmaster may not intend for his website to be accessible to Florida customers, but cannot prevent Floridians from accessing his messages or content, and cannot prevent such content from passing through Florida computers. Thus,

12 18 U.S.C. §§ 1462, 1463 & 1465.

13 In fact, the Record reflects no impact on Florida (or Polk County) from the website other than that caused exclusively by Investigator Gates’ deliberate

accessing of some of its images.

by allowing the State of Florida, and in this case, Polk County, to export its domestic policies with regard to obscenity into other states, the Statute is rendered per se invalid under the extraterritoriality analysis espoused in Edgar, supra and Healy v. The Beer Institute, 491 U.S. 324, 336, 109 S.Ct. 2491, 105 L.Ed.2d 275

(1989).

Free expression would be impermissibly curtailed if Internet users were required to comply with multiple inconsistent state obscenity regulations. Just like the rail and the highway regulations in earlier cases, the Internet would be severely burdened if users were “lost in a welter of inconsistent laws imposed by different states with different priorities.” Pataki, supra at 182. Inconsistent state regulations of the Internet forces website operators into the “Hobson’s Choice” of: 1.) Complying with the most censorial community standard; or, 2.) Forgoing communications protected in the user’s state (and many others); or, 3.) Risking prosecution based on the geographic14 fortuity of the unknown recipient. “Further development of the Internet requires that users be able to predict the results of their

Internet use with some degree of assurance. Haphazard and uncoordinated state regulation can only frustrate the growth of cyberspace.” Pataki at 183.

Aside from the “dormant” Commerce Clause concern, Chapter 847, Fla. Stat. (2005), is also specifically preempted by federal Internet obscenity law,

14 Again, the geographic fortuity here is that of a single county or judicial district.

where online distribution is concerned. When the federal government decides to regulate a specific field or industry, any inconsistent state laws may be rendered invalid to the extent they attempt to regulate that same field.15 Federal preemption can be explicitly stated in the statute’s language, or implicitly contained in the structure and purpose of the regulatory scheme.16

In the field of obscenity regulation, Congress has adopted the comprehensive Communications Decency Act of 1996. This Statute evidences a clear intent to regulate a specific activity or industry, i.e. the commercial distribution of obscene materials on the Internet. Moreover, Congress’ intent to preempt state law is evident from Section 230 of the Act, which provides for express preemption of any inconsistent state laws:

Section 230. Protection for private blocking and screening of offensive material

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    1. Protection for ”Good Samaritan” blocking and screening of offensive material

      1. Treatment of publisher or speaker

15 Preemption derives from the Supremacy Clause, Article VI, Clause 2 of the United States Constitution; see, English v. General Elec. Co., 496 U.S. 72, 70-79, 110 S.Ct. 2270, 110 L.Ed. 2d., 65 (1990) [Enumerating the three circumstances in which state law is preempted under the Supremacy Clause as: 1) where Congress explicitly defines the extent to which its enactments preempt state laws; 2) where a state law regulates conduct in a field that congress intended the federal government to occupy exclusively; and 3) to the extent that state law actually conflicts with federal law.]

16 Moralis v. TransWorld Airlines, Inc., 504 U.S. 374, 383, 112 S.Ct. 2031, 119

L.Ed.2d 157 (1992).

No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.

      1. Civil liability

No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be held liable on account of –

        1. any action voluntarily taken in good faith to restrict access to or availability of material that the provider or user considers to be obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, excessively violent, harassing, or otherwise objectionable, whether or not such material is constitutionally protected; or

        2. any action taken to enable or make available to information content providers or others the technical means to restrict access to material described in paragraph.17

    1. Obligations of interactive computer service

A provider of interactive computer service shall, at the time of entering an agreement with a customer for the provision of interactive computer service and in a manner deemed appropriate by the provider, notify such customer that parental control protections (such as computer hardware, software, or filtering services) are commercially available that may assist the customer in limiting access to material that is harmful to minors. Such notice shall identify, or provide the customer with access to information identifying, current providers of such protections.

    1. Effect on other laws

      1. No effect on criminal law

Nothing in this section shall be construed to impair the enforcement of section 223 or 231 of this title, chapter 71 (relating to obscenity) or 110 (relating to sexual exploitation of children) of title 18, or any other Federal criminal statute.

      1. No effect on intellectual property law

17 So in original. Probably should be ”subparagraph (A).”

Nothing in this section shall be construed to limit or expand any law pertaining to intellectual property.

      1. State law

Nothing in this section shall be construed to prevent any State from enforcing any State law that is consistent with this section. No cause of action may be brought and no liability may be imposed under any State or local law that is inconsistent with this section.

      1. No effect on communications privacy law Nothing in this section shall be construed to limit

the application of the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 or any of the amendments made by such Act, or any similar State law…[Emphasis Added]

As is evident by the above-quoted language, Congress has specifically preempted the states from enforcing inconsistent state law. A host of cases have recognized Section 230 preemption, including the Florida Supreme Court in Doe v. America Online, Inc., 783 So.2d 1010 (Fla. 2001). There, a parent sought to hold America Online, Inc., an Internet Service Provider, responsible for allowing a user to market obscene photographs and videotapes of the parents’ minor son. The court concluded that Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act (CDA) preempted all Florida law causes of action. Id. at 1017.

A significant body of case law has developed since the enactment of the CDA, affirming the preemptive effect of Section 230 immunity on state laws. E.g., Associated Bank-Corp v. Earthlink, Inc., 2005 WL 2240952 (W.D. Wis. September 13, 2005); Barrett v. Fonorow, 799 N.E.2d 916 (Ir. Ct. App. 2003); Blumenthal v. Drudge, 992 F.Supp. 44 (D. D.C. 1998); Corbis Corp v.

Amazon.com, Inc., 351 F.Supp.2d 1090 (W.D. Wash. 2004); Does v. Franco Prods, 347 F.3d 655 (7th Cir. 2003); Doe v. Oliver, 755 A.2d 1000 (Conn. Super. Ct. Mar. 7, 2000); Donato v. Moldow, 865 A.2d 711 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. Jan. 31, 2002); Smith v. Intercosmos Media Group, Inc., 2002 WL 31844907 (E.D.

La. Dec. 17, 2002); Batzel v. Smith, 2003 WL 21453358 (9th Cir. June 24, 2003); Green v. America Online, Inc., 318 F.3d 465 (3d Cir. 2003); Hart v. Internet Wire, Inc., 145 F.Supp.2d 360 (S.D. NY June 14, 2001); Novak v. Overture Servs., Inc., 309 F.Supp.2d 446 (E.D. NY 2004); OptInRealBig.com, LLC. v. Iron Port Sys., Inc., 323 F.Supp.2d 1037 (N.D. Cal. 2004); Stoner v. eBay, Inc., 2000 WL 1705637 (Cal. Super. Ct. Nov. 7, 2000). While little has been written about the effect of Section 230 on inconsistent state criminal laws, it appears that criminal laws are not excluded from the scope of the preemption. While Congress specifically mentioned in the legislation that Section 230 had no effect on federal criminal law relating to obscenity or sexual exploitation of children, or any other “federal criminal statute” [emphasis added], no such limiting language can be found with regard to the preemptive effect on state criminal law. The section merely states:

No cause of action may be brought and no liability may be imposed under any state or local law that is inconsistent with this Section. Section 230(d)(3).

In light of the clear overlap and inconsistent regulation of state and federal obscenity matters, there can be no doubt as to Congress’ intent to preempt inconsistent state obscenity regulations. Section 230 is designed to prevent the imposition of liability on those who do not create content posted on a website, such as Petitioner WILSON. A 133. Yet Respondents are trying to do exactly that, using the state obscenity laws. This renders Florida’s obscenity inconsistent laws inconsistent with the effect of Section 230’s immunity provisions. Given the consistent preemptive effect on other similar state laws, as interpreted by the courts across the country, this Court should find that Chapter 847, Fla. Stat. (2005) is preempted by Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act of 1996.

As a result of the above, any attempt to invoke Florida’s obscenity prohibitions to regulate Internet transactions must be dismissed based on inconsistency with the Commerce Clause and federal preemption.

In light of the above, Petitioner WILSON has established that Florida’s obscenity statute is preempted with regard to its application to distribution of online content. Therefore, this law could not form a valid basis for the underlying violation, let alone bond revocation in the above-styled case.

  1. The Evidence Against Petitioner WILSON was Seized in Violation of the Fourth Amendment, Under Binding Precedent From This Court, and Should Have Therefore Been Suppressed.

The evidence introduced against Petitioner WILSON in this case was obtained by Investigator Gates by becoming a member of the website, and copying the images and video clips at issue in the bond revocation proceedings. SA. Investigator Gates admitted that no warrant had been sought, nor obtained, prior to copying the materials for use in the bond revocation hearing. He did not contend that he received any prior permission to do so, but instead relied upon his status as a member of the website which authorized him to view the materials posted on the website. SA.

This case is on all fours with this Court’s decision in Miragaya, supra. There, the defendant, who owned a video store, was charged with possession of obscene video tapes with intent to sell or deliver. Id. at 263. The Sheriff’s Officers obtained a membership card from the defendant’s video store authorizing rental of video tapes for a twenty four hour period, and thereafter rented three (3) video tapes for the Sheriff’s Department and made copies thereof. The copies were made to preserve evidence to be presented to the State Attorney for possible charges. Id. No warrant was obtained prior to making the copies. This Court held that the officers’ act of copying the rented video tapes constitutes a seizure of the defendant’s property, without a warrant. The lawful retention of materials alleged

to be obscene depends on the issuance of a warrant for the materials prior to the officers’ obtaining them. “Only when a warrant has been issued is the retention not a prior restraint.” Id. at 264. The Court therefore ordered suppression of the video tapes based on violation of the Fourth Amendment.

The holding in Miragaya is directly applicable with the instant case. Respondent SHERIFF’s act of copying the images and video clips after becoming a member of Petitioner WILSON’s website, but prior to seeking a warrant, constitutes an illegal seizure under the Fourth Amendment, and a prior restraint on protected speech under the First Amendment. Therefore, Petitioner WILSON’s objection to the introduction of the evidence in support of the obscenity allegations should have been sustained, under the exclusionary rule, and the evidence suppressed. Failure to honor binding precedent from this Court in a factually indistinguishable situation constitutes a departure from the essential requirements of law.

  1. CONCLUSION

This case illustrates one of the clearest and most egregious examples of how the obscenity statute can be misused by law enforcement seeking to interfere with First Amendment rights. Petitioner WILSON remains incarcerated based solely on his continued distribution presumptively protected speech, before any final judicial determination that anything is obscene, and without any indication that he presents

a danger to the community. Given the strong Florida constitutional right to bail, and the myriad of constitutional violations committed throughout the proceedings below, Petitioner WILSON’s continued incarceration under these circumstances is patently unlawful and unconstitutional.

WESTON, GARROU, DEWITT & WALTERS

Lawrence G. Walters Florida Bar No.:776599 781 Douglas Avenue

Altamonte Springs, Florida 32714 (407) 389-4529 (phone)

(407) 774-6151 (fax)

www.FirstAmendment.com Attorneys for Petitioner WILSON

CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

I HEREBY CERTIFY that a copy of the foregoing has been sent via overnight delivery to: Charlie Crist, Florida Attorney General, The Capitol PL-01 Tallahassee, FL 32399; Bradford Copley, Esquire, Polk County State Attorney’s Office, 255 North Broadway, Second Floor, Bartow, FL 33830, Sheriff Grady Judd, Polk County Sheriff’s Office, 455 North Broadway Avenue, Bartow, FL 33830, and Richard D. Mars, Esquire, 343 West Davidson St., Suite 103, Bartow, FL 33831, this 20th day of December, 2005.

Motion for Stay

IN THE SECOND DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL

CHRISTOPHER M. WILSON,

Petitioner,

v.

GRADY JUDD, in his official capacity as Sheriff of Polk County, Florida, and JERRY HILL, in his official capacity as State Attorney in and for the Tenth Judicial Circuit,

Respondents.

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APPEAL CASE NO.:

LT CASE NO.: CF-05-7738

10th Judicial Circuit, Polk County, Florida

Emergency Relief Requested Pursuant to Fla.R.App.P. 9.300(c)

EMERGENCY APPLICATION FOR STAY PENDING CONSIDERATION OF FULL PETITION FOR WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS

  1. The Emergency Relief Sought

Petitioner Christopher M. Wilson (hereafter “Petitioner”), pursuant to Fla.R.App.P. 9.300 and 9.3101, moves this Court, on an emergency basis, to issue an immediate order staying, pending this Court’s consideration of his full Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus, the order of the lower court entered on December 16, 2005 in the case of State v. Wilson, Polk County Circuit Court No. CF-05-7738, revoking his bond and remanding him to custody pending trial. A. 231. Petitioner thus seeks a stay

1 Petitioner sought a stay from the Lower Court but the Court refused to consider the request. Therefore, Petitioner alternatively requests that this Motion be considered a motion to review the Lower Court’s refusal to consider a stay.

order requiring his immediate release from custody, and reinstatement of his original bond, pending a determination of the accompanying Petition, on the merits.

Petitioner also requests, on an emergency basis and pending this Court’s consideration of his full petition for writ of habeas corpus, an order enjoining respondents from any further attempts to revoke his bond or remand him to custody pending trial, where the sole basis for such attempts would be the allegation that any allegedly obscene materials were posted on his website, in the absence of any allegation that he has exhibited any images or other media which have previously been determined obscene in any final judicial action.

  1. The Grounds Offered In Support of This Requested Emergency Relief

Petitioner incorporates, as grounds in support of this emergency application, those portions of his accompanying Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus which assert that the actions of Respondents constitute a facial violation of the First Amendment as either a prior restraint, state action impermissibly chilling expression, or prior punishment, in violation of the free speech guarantees of the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution and parallel provisions of the Florida Constitution.

It is Petitioner’s position that, as a matter of law, incarceration based solely on probable obscenity, and prior to a final jury determination thereof, or at least absent an allegation that the exhibition occurred after a prior judicial determination of obscenity,

constitutes an impermissible prior restraint on First Amendment rights utterly inconsistent with state and federal constitutional safeguards.

While Petitioner readily concedes that for all offenses other than obscenity, a finding of probable cause that new violations have occurred while one is free on bail is more than sufficient grounds for the revocation of a prior bail order. However, an entirely different principle comes into play when the alleged crime is one of obscenity. This is because until sexually explicit materials are proven obscene in a final judgment, they are presumptively protected by the First Amendment.2 This fact precludes a bond revocation under circumstances that ordinarily would allow a bond revocation. This is but one instance of a common principle perhaps best articulated in

Castro v. Superior Court, 9 Cal.App.3d 675, 686, 88 Cal.Rptr. 500, 509 (1970): “[W]hat is permissible when ordinary criminal conduct is involved, frequently comes to grief when tested against the First Amendment.”

For purposes of this emergency application only, Petitioner assumes, arguendo, the probable obscenity of all the images the State has relied upon in seeking the revocation of his bond, even though he is confident that, following a trial before a jury

2 See, e.g., Heller v. New York, 413 U.S. 483, 93 S.Ct. 2789, 37 L.Ed.2d 745 (1973),

holding that, prior to a final judicial determination of obscenity, sexually oriented materials are “presumptively protected under the First Amendment.” Id. at 491, 93 S.Ct. at 2794. Similarly, in Roaden v. Kentucky, 413 U.S. 496, 93 S.Ct. 2796, 37 L.Ed.2d 757 (1973), the Court held that bookstores and commercial theaters are “presumptively under the protection of the First Amendment.” Id. at 504, 93 S.Ct. at 2801. The same presumption attaches to a website exhibiting sexually oriented materials, and to all the materials on such site. ACLU v. Reno, 521 U.S. 844, 112 S.Ct. 2329, 138 L.Ed.2d 874 (1997).

of his peers, the images will not in fact be found obscene, nor will he be found criminally responsible for their presence on his website. (The uncontroverted evidence is that all of the allegedly obscene images were posted on Petitioner’s website by members of the public without Petitioner’s prior or subsequent awareness of their existence on his website until such fact was brought to his attention by Respondents.)

Because Petitioner’s incarceration was based solely upon the allegation that his website posted allegedly obscene items while he was free on bail pending charges that other items on his website were obscene, the mere fact that the State sought his incarceration on this ground has forced him to remove all of the sexually oriented images from his website and has effectively put him out of business, all prior to any jury determination, or final judicial determination, that any of the items on his website were in fact legally obscene, or that he was criminally responsible for their exhibition.

Consequently, the novel procedures employed here by the State3 have

3 Petitioner’s attorneys, who have specialized in this area of the law for over 30 years, are unaware of any prior prosecution anywhere in the United States where one charged with alleged obscenity offenses was incarcerated prior to trial solely on the basis that they continued to distribute or exhibit allegedly obscene items (not yet found to be obscene) pending their trial on obscenity charges. The unprecedented nature of this action was confirmed by an independent, expert censorship attorney who has studied proceedings in obscenity cases for decades, and has found no instance of bond being revoked under these circumstances. A. 229.

effectuated an immediate and de facto pre-trial prior restraint of enormous and unconstitutional proportions (forcing the closure of the primary sections of a website with a large worldwide membership on which were typically posted approximately 270,000 different sexually oriented images at any one time prior to its forced closure by the State. A. 130-131). Because, as noted above, all sexually oriented media materials are presumptively protected by the First Amendment until proven otherwise in court, the State has caused a serious (and to Petitioner’s awareness, unprecedented) ongoing restraint of First Amendment rights which increases with each additional day that the website is forced to remain closed.

As shown in Point IV of the accompanying Memorandum, this ongoing restraint of expression entitles Petitioner to an immediate stay of his bail revocation order (and to a temporary injunction prohibiting additional bond revocation motions based solely on additional allegations of unproven obscenity) so he can re-open his website at the very least, pending this Court’s consideration of his full Petition for Habeas Corpus. The legal basis for this application is set forth below.

MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF EMERGENCY APPLICATION

Pursuant to an order issued on December 16, 2005 revoking his bail bond and remanding him to custody, A. 231, Petitioner Christopher Wilson (hereinafter “Petitioner”) is presently in the custody of Respondent Grady Judd, in his official capacity as Sheriff of Polk County, Florida (“SHERIFF”) and shall remain so, unless

released by this Court, pending trial on charges that certain images found on a website he is charged with operating were obscene in violation of local community standards in Polk County, Florida4. Respondent Jerry Hill, in his official capacity as State Attorney in and for the Tenth Judicial Circuit (“STATE ATTORNEY”), successfully moved to revoke that bond and impose pretrial detention without bail based on allegations that new and different photos appeared on Petitioner’s alleged website after his initial arrest5 which the State likewise believes to be “obscene” under Polk County, Florida community standards.

4 This notwithstanding that: (1) the computer server on which the website has been maintained is located in The Netherlands; (2) Petitioner never sent any materials to, or specifically solicited any persons within, Polk County, Florida; (3) there was no suggestion that Petitioner, or any persons working under his control, had any prior awareness of any of the particular allegedly obscene materials charged in this case, nor that any of them had approved the placement of these particular images on the website; (4) the website typically maintained over 250,000 photos at any given point in time, approximately 95% of which were put on there unilaterally by users throughout the world authorized to access the website, without any prior review, knowledge or approval of Petitioner or those assisting in operating the website; (5) it would be a physical impossibility to run such a website successfully if the operator had to preview each separate photo before it could be posted on the website; and (6) the only connection to Polk County, Florida is that, at the time of the alleged offenses, Petitioner is alleged to have previously resided there. A. 129-138. Petitioner does not concede that Polk County community standards can be legally applied to materials disseminated via the Internet, as argued in his pretrial motion relating to that issue.

5 As indicated in Petitioner’s affidavit submitted below in opposition to the State’s motion to revoke bond, Petitioner caused all sexually oriented images to be removed from the website when he learned for the first time that the State considered their maintenance to be a violation of the conditions of his pre-trial release. A. 130-131.

Believing that it may treat an alleged obscenity offense no differently than any other offense allegedly committed while one is free on bond, the Respondent STATE ATTORNEY filed, and the lower court granted, a motion that the trial court “revoke the defendant’s bond and remand him to jail awaiting trial. A. 98

It should also be noted that, prior to the hearing, Petitioner, through his Affidavit, informed the trial court that he had no money left after paying the premium on his original bond with which to post any additional or supplemental bond. A. 137. Consequently, he informed the court that even if it were to deny the motion to remand him to custody, any order imposing a new or modified bond would be the de facto equivalent of an order remanding him to custody because Petitioner’s website has been closed, and the existing bond consumed all of Petitioner’s resources but for those necessary to obtain continuing legal representation. This fact was uncontroverted at the bail revocation hearing.

THE PETITIONER’S LEGAL POSITION

The First Amendment prohibits the revocation of bond, increase of bond, or imposition of a new bond requirement, solely on the basis of allegations of one or more new obscenity offenses occurring while on bond (where none of the offenses have resulted in convictions, and where the defendant is otherwise in compliance with all independent pre-trial detention criteria set forth in 907.041, Fla.Stat. (2005)), and does so in all cases, but at the very least under circumstances, as here, where such an order would constitute either de jure or de facto pre-trial detention.

LEGAL ARGUMENT

The notion that pre-trial detention of obscenity defendants under these circumstances6 is unconstitutional is clear under any of a variety of different aspects of First Amendment law including, but not limited to:

    1. Pre-trial detention7 for unproven obscenity offenses is an impermissible form of prior restraint of the Petitioner and his website, not different in any mean-

6 I.e., circumstances where, but for the asserted new obscenity violations, no revocation of the existing bail would be authorized by §907.041, Fla.Stat. (2005), Florida’s pre-trial detention statute.

7 As used herein throughout, the term “pre-trial detention” is a reference to both de jure pre-trial detention and de facto pre-trial detention where bail is set in an amount beyond the defendant’s means.

ingful way from any of the numerous forms of prior restraint which have been universally condemned as prohibited by the First Amendment.

    1. Pre-trial detention for unproven obscenity offenses under the circum- stances of this case, unless reversed on appeal, will cause an impermissibly chilling impact on websites throughout the nation, if not the world, and violate the First Amendment because substantial amounts of constitutionally protected material will be removed from the marketplace, due to the inability to determine obscenity in advance of a jury determination, and particularly given that, under the State’s theory, web-posted material must comply with the community standards of every local community in America. Also, this type of bail revocation procedure, if allowed, would not merely chill, but guarantee the total elimination of any and all “user- submission” type websites (of all types, sexually oriented or not) where the majority of the material on the website is placed there directly by individual users without prior approval of the website owner.

    2. Pre-trial detention for unproven obscenity offenses is nothing less than “prior punishment,” a concept abhorrent to First Amendment values.

I

PRE-TRIAL DETENTION FOR UNPROVEN OBSCENITY OFFENSES IS AN IMPERMISSIBLE FORM OF PRIOR RESTRAINT.

In Near v. Minnesota, 283 U.S. 697, 51 S.Ct. 625, 75 L.Ed. 1357 (1931), the

Supreme Court first recognized the bedrock constitutional principle that prior

restraints on expression violate the First Amendment. Since that time, that Court has repeatedly stated that “[a]ny system of prior restraints of expression comes to this Court bearing a heavy presumption against its constitutional validity.” Heller v. New York, supra, 413 U.S. 483, 491 (1973), quoting New York Times Co. v. United States, 403 U.S. 713, 714 (1971), quoting Bantam Books, Inc. v. Sullivan, 372 U.S. 58, 70

(1963). Accord: Organization for a Better Austin v. Keefe, 402 U.S. 415, 419 (1971);

Carroll v. President and Commissioners of Princess Anne, 393 U.S. 175, 181 (1968);

Southeastern Promotions, Ltd. v. Conrad, 420 U.S. 546, 558-559 (1975); and Vance v.

Universal Amusement Co., 445 U.S. 308, 316, fn. 13 (1980).

In Minneapolis Star and Tribune Co. v. Minnesota Commissioner of Revenue, 460 U.S. 575, 583, fn. 6 (1983), the Court reaffirmed that prior restraints “strike to the core of the Framers’ concerns” and accordingly compel a standard of scrutiny even higher than that applied to most regulations challenged as violative of the First Amendment.

The question presented by the appeal of this bond revocation order is whether the de facto or de jure detention of one accused of exhibiting obscene materials on an internet website pending trial on those charges constitutes an impermissible prior restraint of expression where:

      1. the grounds for bail revocation consist solely of new additional unproven allegations of obscenity offenses;

      2. there has been no conviction or jury finding that any of the charged materials are obscene;

      3. the Petitioner has already posted a bond in the maximum amount he could possibly afford and would not have enough money to meet any increase in his bond or the setting of any additional bond, and would be forced to remain in custody pending trial if any such change in his bond status were ordered;

      4. there is no evidence or even suggestion that Petitioner had ever even seen or been aware of any of the particular assertedly obscene photos that were hand-picked by the State for this prosecution, and in fact, there is affirmative uncontroverted evidence demonstrating that the photos were supplied to the website anonymously by any of thousands of potential users of the website without Petitioner’s advance knowledge;

      5. it is abundantly clear that Respondents’ unstated primary goal is and has been the closure of Petitioner’s website;

      6. no convictions have been returned by juries in obscenity cases in this jurisdiction in the last 20 years, obscenity cases against websites are rarely initiated in this jurisdiction, and this case involves a website with significant political value;

      7. but for these asserted, but unproven, obscenity offenses, Petitioner has already demonstrated that he meets all the criteria under the state’s pre-trial

detention statute, FSA 907.041, for remaining free under the previously set

bond amount pending trial;

      1. Petitioner has not otherwise in any way violated any terms of his existing bond; and

      2. Respondents failed to request removal of the allegedly obscene material from the website after the arrest, and later declined Petitioner’s counsel’s request to provide any guidance as to what materials Respondents contend are obscene. A. 215.

In Near v. Minnesota, supra, the Court held that it will “cut through mere details of procedure” to analyze realistically “the operation and effect of the statute in substance.” 283 U.S. at 713. See also Kingsley Books v. Brown, 354 U.S. 436, 441 (1957) (“The judicial angle of vision in testing the validity of a statute . . . is ‘the operation and effect.'”)

Here, it is clear that the operation and effect of the Florida pre-trial detention statutes, as construed and applied by the prosecution, is not merely to allow Petitioner reasonable bail pending the trial of rarely-filed and controversial charges, but to silence Petitioner’s website before that trial takes place (as well as the websites of all other website owners in the jurisdiction, if not the state).

As Justice White wrote in Schad v. Borough of Mount Ephraim, 452 U.S. 61, 68 (1981), “the standard of review is determined by the nature of the right assertedly threatened or violated rather than by the power being exercised or the specific limitation imposed.” Here, the nature of the right assertedly threatened is the right to operate a website without fear of imprisonment at least until such time as Petitioner has been convicted of exhibiting any obscene materials. Consequently, the standard of review is under the First Amendment standards of prior restraint rather than the normal standards applicable generally to criminal bail revocation proceedings.

The pernicious evil of this type of bail revocation proceeding is best revealed by the following point:

Even if Petitioner wins at trial, and does so in each succeeding trial the State may bring against him, the State will still have achieved its goal because any defendant’s website (including the website in the present case) has no choice but to close down if the only alternative is the incarceration of those who operate it pending the opportunity for a fair trial on the underlying obscenity charges. But if the State may force the pre-trial detention of one charged with obscenity violations pending trial, simply for continuing to maintain a website the defendant believes to be constitutionally protected, then no such defendant, once obscenity charges are filed, will ever dare to continue to maintain a challenged website pending trial as it would insure the loss of their liberty, even if, as said above, none of the charges are ever

found valid at trial. In short, this bail-revocation strategy is a novel and outrageous assault on fundamental constitutional rights; its purpose and effect on the Petitioner is clearly that of a prior restraint. See, e.g., Bantam Books, Inc. v. Sullivan, 372 U.S. 58 (1963), indicating that a prior restraint can be achieved through impermissible intimidation as well as by more traditional means.

However, for yet a separate reason, the State’s abuse of the bail revocation statutes in this case attempts imposition of an impermissible prior restraint. Specifically, after his initial arrest, Petitioner, through counsel, requested guidance from the State as to the type of sexually oriented photos which the State would deem to be prohibited obscenity. A. 215. Not surprisingly, the State declined this invitation. This makes the net effect of the obscenity statutes and the pretrial detention statutes (as the State is attempting to apply them here) very analogous to blanket civil injunc- tions prohibiting exhibition of any obscene materials. Such injunctions were roundly condemned in both Vance v. Universal Amusement Co., Inc., 445 U.S. 308 (1980) and Ladoga Canning Corp. v. McKenzie, 370 So.2d 1137 (Fla. 1979).

In both these cases, the State and Federal Supreme Courts found injunctions against disseminating any obscene materials to be an unconstitutional prior restraint because they would impermissibly chill protected expression more than analogous criminal proceedings if those who would disseminate such material had “to guess at their peril which of their publications are not obscene under the criteria set forth in the

injunctions.” Ladoga, 370 So.2d at 1141.8 Obviously, in a civil injunctive proceeding, one is deprived of the significant protections available in a non-petty criminal prosecution (such as charges of obscenity under Florida law), e.g., trial by jury, requirement of unanimity by at least six jurors, requirement of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, etc.

Moreover, another rationale for these rulings was hinted at in Vance which is highly analogous to the circumstances of the present case. Vance concluded that someone against whom a blanket civil obscenity injunction had been imposed could be jailed for contempt prior to a final trial on the merits of the obscenity issue.9

8 Ladoga also reaffirmed that “a publication may not be suppressed merely because it contains certain poses or actions.”

9 See Vance, 445 U.S. at 312, n.4 where the majority rejects Justice White’s dissent observing that “[e]ven if it were ultimately determined that the film is not obscene, the exhibitor could be punished for contempt of court for showing the film before the obscenity issue was finally resolved.”

Moreover, in that same footnote, the majority indicates that even if the injunction was against exhibiting a specific named film, the danger is that such an injunction could be issued solely on a showing of a probability of success on the merits and thus, one could be jailed for contempt before the merits were ever ultimately resolved. Unquestionably, the Court was cognizant of the fact that the same procedural defect would lie if the temporary injunction was a blanket one against exhibiting any unnamed obscene film. The danger is that prior to a final determination of obscenity, the exhibitor could be punished for contempt based on a mere probable cause determination. Yet that, effectively, is precisely what has happened here.

For each of these reasons, the State’s revocation of Petitioner’s bail violated the First Amendment and Petitioner urges the Court to stay enforcement of that order pending full review of his entire habeas petition.10

II

PRE-TRIAL DETENTION FOR UNPROVEN OBSCENITY OF- FENSES UNDER THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THIS CASE WILL, UNLESS REVERSED ON APPEAL, CAUSE AN IMPERMISSIBLY CHILLING IMPACT IN VIOLATION OF THE FIRST AMENDMENT.

10 As stated by Justice O’Connor in Arcara v. Cloud Books, Inc., 478 U.S. 697 (1986), a case where the Court rejected an argument that a prior restraint was present:

“If … a city were to use a nuisance statute as a pretext for closing down a bookstore because it sold indecent books …, the cases would clearly implicate First Amendment concerns and require analysis under the appropriate First Amendment standard of review.” Id. at 708.

Likewise here, the State has used the pre-trial detention statutes as a pretext for closing down a website because it showed allegedly obscene photos, without bothering to wait for a jury determination of whether the materials violate the applicable community standards. Clearly prior restraint analysis applies here.

Apart from the absolute prior restraint impact which the prosecution’s bail revocation tactic has already had upon the Petitioner, it also violates the First Amendment for another distinct reason, its chilling impact in deterring others not before the court from establishing or maintaining sexually oriented websites of any type, and particularly of the “user-submission” type as is involved here. Specifically, Petitioner’s alleged website is one where most, if not all, of the images on the website are provided by the public, not by the website owner, and approximately 95% of them are placed there unilaterally by approved users once they are granted access to the site.

A. 134. In essence, it is a quintessential public forum with a scope and reach that could not even have been dreamed of by the framers of the Constitution.

The significance of this type of “user-submission” website is highlighted by Petitioner’s affidavit herein which states that this particular website served a dual purpose of providing a forum for sexually explicit materials but also for photographs and video clips taken by our armed forces in Iraq and Afghanistan. A. 135-136. This latter aspect of the site apparently became increasingly popular because, once soldiers realized that their photos would be posted on the website, they sought to submit increasingly candid photos of how an actual war looks on the ground to those who are participating in it. A. 136. This serves a political purpose consistent with the most fundamental aspects of First Amendment protection as it allows an informed electorate substantial and unique additional information that would otherwise not be

available to it to assist it in evaluating the credibility of statements by its elected politicians.11

In any event, if the State’s revocation of Petitioner’s bond is allowed to stand based on nothing more than the postings of allegedly obscene photos on a “user- submission” website, the State will have accomplished a remarkably chilling effect upon all similar such websites throughout Florida, if not the nation.12 Notably, Polk County residents cannot be blocked from receiving the website content at issue. A. 132.

Moreover, the only answer to protecting “user-submission” websites from such prosecutorial tactics would be to implement a method of monitoring each and every photo posted on the website. However, as indicated in Petitioner’s accompanying affidavit, such a mechanism would die a still birth because no successful “user- submission” website system could afford the amount of personnel that would have to be employed to monitor each and every photograph submitted before it was allowed

11 Indeed, Petitioner strongly believes, though cannot yet prove, that it was political pressures generated by a desire to close this aspect of the site that led to the initiation of this highly novel obscenity prosecution. Whether these beliefs can ultimately be proved or not is beside the point. It is obvious that the bail revocation statutes, as applied here, have the potential for enormous abuse of First Amendment rights, even if those are not the circumstances ultimately motivating the present prosecution.

12 This is particularly true given the State’s effort to control Petitioner Wilson’s Internet activity even after he left the confines of Polk County and the Tenth Judicial Circuit. A. 132.

on the website. A. 134-135. In essence, “user-submission” websites have the same impossible task of self-review, except magnified by far greater numbers of items to review, than the bookseller in Smith v. California, 361 U.S. 147 (1959). (In Smith the Court held that criminal obscenity charges could not be filed based simply on a strict liability theory.13) However, the big difference between the two is that the user- submission website does not offer individual images for sale, and functions more as a specialized internet bulletin board. Such a medium cannot exist if it must review and self censor each item placed on there by users.14

13 Smith stated:

There is no specific constitutional inhibition against making the distributors of food the strictest censors of their merchandise, but the constitutional guarantees of the freedom of speech and of the press stand in the way of imposing a similar requirement on the bookseller. 361

U.S. at 152-153.

14 As Smith went on to point out:

By dispensing with any requirement of knowledge of the contents of the book on the part of the seller, the ordinance tends to impose a severe limitation on the public’s access to constitutionality protected matter. For if the bookseller is criminally liable without knowledge of the contents, and the ordinance fulfills its purpose, he will tend to restrict the books he sells to those he has inspected; and thus the State will have imposed a restriction upon the distribution of constitutionally protected as well as obscene literature. * * * And the bookseller’s burden would become the public’s burden, for by restricting him the public’s access to reading matter would be restricted. Id. at 153.

Also, if website users could no longer post any submissions without being subject to the prior scrutiny of the webmaster, that would deter a great percentage of all submissions, and not necessarily because of a fear of potential criminal charges, but simply due to the combinations of inconvenience, potential embarrassment, and a desire for anonymity in expression.

For each of these reasons, bail modification and/or revocation under these circumstances independently violates the First Amendment due to its impermissible chilling impact on the expressive rights of not only Petitioner, but of countless others not before the court whose rights can be asserted herein under the relaxed rules of standing applicable in First Amendment cases.

III

PRE-TRIAL DETENTION FOR ONE OR MORE UNPROVEN OBSCENITY OFFENSES IS IMPERMISSIBLE PRIOR PUNISH- MENT PROHIBITED BY THE FIRST AMENDMENT.

In discussing prior restraint cases, the Supreme Court has occasionally noted the distinction between restraints imposed prior to a final determination of obscenity, and those imposed as “subsequent punishment” only after a final determination of obscenity with all constitutional safeguards afforded to the defendant before such a determination is made. See, e.g., Alexander v. United States, 509 U.S. 544, 113 S.Ct. 2766, 2773 (1993): “[W]e have interpreted the First Amendment as providing greater protection from prior restraints than from subsequent punishments.” Given the

presumption that all expressive materials are protected by the First Amendment, defendants in obscenity cases have historically been allowed to continue distributing materials pending a final judicial determination of obscenity. See, State v. U&L Theatres, Inc., 307 So.2d 879, 881 (Fla. 3d DCA 1975) (citing precedent).

This is the first case of which undersigned counsel are aware where a state elected to impose not only a prior restraint, but went so far as to impose a prior punishment by incarcerating an individual before any materials he allegedly exhibited were ever found obscene. If prior restraints are impermissible, then, by shear force of logic, prior punishments are necessarily more so.

Finally, the requirement of subsequent punishment for expression violations serves extremely important purposes. It ensures that no punishment will be imposed until an appropriately instructed jury of the defendant’s peers has the opportunity to evaluate the allegedly obscene materials and determine for themselves whether those materials violate the applicable community standards.

A court, sitting without a jury, may constitutionally make civil determinations of obscenity calculated to provide advance notice. However, because the determina- tion of obscenity is based upon assessment of community standards, it is indispens- able, where one’s liberty is at stake, that such determinations of community standards be made by a jury of one’s peers representing a fair cross-section of the community.

Although the Supreme Court has never directly ruled on this specific issue, in the case of Ballew v. Georgia, 435 U.S. 223 (1978), the Court concluded that an obscenity conviction returned by a unanimous five member jury violates the Sixth Amendment (holding that a minimum of 6 is required) and thus found it unnecessary to determine whether a six member jury is independently required in an obscenity case as a matter of First Amendment law. However, the Court strongly intimated that such would be the case:

We do not rely on any First Amendment aspect of this case in holding the five-person jury unconstitutional. Nevertheless, the nature of the substance of the misdemeanor charges against petitioner supports the refusal to distinguish between felonies and misdemeanors. The application of the community’s standards and common sense is important in obscenity trials where juries must define and apply local standards. [Citation omitted.] The opportunity for harassment and overreaching by an overzealous prosecutor or a biased judge is at least as significant in an obscenity trial as in one concerning an armed robbery. This fact does not change merely because the obscenity charge may be labeled a misdemeanor and the robbery a felony. 435 U.S. at 241, n.33.

For these reasons, any punishment imposed for engaging in allegedly illegal expression prior to a conviction of such charges, affording full due process rights, would constitute a violation of the First Amendment.

IV

WHERE, AS HERE, IMMEDIATE RELIEF IS REQUIRED TO PREVENT CONTINUATION OF AN ONGOING PRIOR RESTRAINT, THE SUPREME COURT HAS RECOGNIZED THAT IN THE ABSENCE OF IMMEDIATE APPELLATE REVIEW, A STAY SHOULD BE AVAILABLE AS A MATTER OF RIGHT.

Pending this Court’s consideration of Petitioner’s full petition for writ of habeas corpus, the State’s ongoing de facto prior restraint of his website causes ever- increasing First Amendment damage. For example, each day that his website remains closed down will be an additional day when more users of that website learn, for the first time, that the website is closed. Such users may never return due to their lack of any basis for concluding that it will be reopening. Consequently, the First Amendment injury is not only immediate, but grows greater with each continuing day of this restraint.

Where, as here, Respondents have caused an ongoing prior restraint, substantial Supreme Court precedent recognizes that if immediate appellate review of the restraint is not available, the petitioner is entitled to an interim stay as a matter of right until the reviewing court can provide full appellate review of the restraint. See, e.g., National

Socialist Party of America v. Village of Skokie, 432 U.S. 43, 44, 97 S.Ct. 2205, 2206,

53 L.Ed.2d 96 (1977), stating:

If a State seeks to impose a restraint of this kind, it must provide strict procedural safeguards, [citation omitted] including immediate appellate review . . . . Absent such review, the State must instead allow a stay.

Likewise, in M.I.C., Ltd. v. Bedford Township, 463 U.S. 1341, 1343, 104 S.Ct.

17, 18, 77 L.Ed.2d 1442 (1983), under circumstances remarkably similar to the present ones, Justice Brennan, acting in his capacity as Circuit Justice, issued emergency injunctive relief on behalf of the owner of a theater subject to a preliminary injunction enjoining it from exhibiting unnamed and allegedly obscene films. Justice Brennan held:

But here, as in National Socialist Party of America v. Village of Skokie, 432 U.S. 43, 44, 97 S.Ct. 2205, 2206, 53

L.Ed.2d 96 (1977), and Nebraska Press Assn. v. Stuart, 423 U.S. 1327, 1329-1330, 96 S.Ct. 251, 253-254, 46 L.Ed.2d

237 (1975) (Blackmun, J., in Chambers), the State’s highest Court has refused either to lift the challenged restraint or to provide for immediate appellate review. Such a failure indicates that the state court has decided finally to maintain the restraint in effect during the pendency of review. In this situation, I have no doubt that a Justice of this Court has full power to issue a stay.

Faced with situations similar to that presented here, this Court has repeatedly required that when a State undertakes to shield the public from certain kinds of expression it has labeled as offensive, it must ‘provide strict procedural safeguards . . . including immediate appellate review.

Absent such review, the State must instead allow a stay.'” 463 U.S. at 1342-1343, 104 S.Ct. at 18.

See also Nebraska Press Assn. v. Stuart, 423 U.S. 1319, 96 S.Ct. 237, 46 L.Ed.2d 199

(1975); and Nebraska Press Assoc. v. Stuart, 423 U.S. 1327, 96 S.Ct. 251, 46 L.Ed.2d

237 (1975).

For all the reasons above, prior to this Court’s review of the full merits of Petitioner’s entire Habeas Petition, issuance of an immediate stay is necessary to prevent ongoing injury to First Amendment rights.

CONCLUSION

For all the reasons above, pending this Court’s full review of his entire accompanying Habeas Petition, the First Amendment entitles Petitioner to a stay of the trial court’s bond revocation order and to an interim injunction preventing any further bond revocation motions where the basis for such motions consists of nothing other than additional unproven allegations of obscenity violations.

WHEREFORE, Petitioner requests that the court grant emergency, preliminary relief as follows:

  1. Grant a stay of the lower court’s bond revocation order;

  1. Order immediate release of the Petitioner and reinstate his original bond pending a full determination of the Petition on the merits; and

  2. Prevent Respondent STATE ATTORNEY from seeking any future bond revocation based on allegations of new obscenity offenses based on materials that have not been determined obscene in final judicial action.

JOHN H. WESTON

California State Bar No. 46146

Pro Hac Vice application pending

G. RANDALL GARROU California State Bar No. 74442 Pro Hac Vice application pending

LAWRENCE G. WALTERS

Florida Bar No.: 0776599

WESTON, GARROU, DeWITT & WALTERS

By LAWRENCE G. WALTERS

781 Douglas Avenue

Altamonte Springs, Florida 32714 Voice: (407) 389-4529

Fax: (407) 774-6151

Attorneys for Petitioner WILSON

CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

I HEREBY CERTIFY that a copy of the foregoing has been sent via overnight delivery to: Charlie Crist, Florida Attorney General, The Capitol PL-01 Tallahassee, FL 32399; Bradford Copley, Esquire, Polk County State Attorney’s Office, 255 North Broadway, Second Floor, Bartow, FL 33830, Sheriff Grady Judd, Polk County Sheriff’s Office, 455 North Broadway Avenue, Bartow, FL 33830, and Richard D. Mars, Esquire, 343 West Davidson St., Suite 103, Bartow, FL 33831, this 20th day of December, 2005.

THE SILVER LINING?

THE SILVER LINING?

Looking for the ‘good’ in §2257

By: Lawrence G. Walters Weston, Garrou, DeWitt & Walters

www.FirstAmendment.com

With all of the industry outcry and vociferous objections to the recently-amended Section 2257 regulations, many in the industry have failed to recognize that this otherwise burdensome legislation may have some unintended positive effects. While the entire statute may be unconstitutional, and the courts should certainly strike down portions of the regulations as invalid, the law may provide some unintended and unexpected benefits for the adult entertainment industry.

Industry experts have long been preaching about the positive aspects of 2257 compliance such as the creation of defenses against child pornography charges. In essence, if a webmaster or content producer complies with 2257, he or she should never be successfully prosecuted for child pornography. Theoretically, it is possible for a minor to slip through the cracks by presenting a forged driver’s license or passport, but given the criminal intent requirements1 associated with child pornography violations, 2257 compliance should provide a defense to all but the most egregious violations involving the knowing use of a minor in explicit imagery.2 However, the creation of a specific mechanism for the commercial production of sexually explicit content may result in more than just a defense to child pornography. Read on…

1 See U.S .v. X-citement Video, 513 U.S. 64, 115 S.Ct. 464, 63 USLW 4019, 130 L.Ed.2d 372 (1994) [criminal intent as to model’s age required for most child pornography offenses, even if not specifically written into the law.]

2 Nothing contained in this article constitutes legal advice on child pornography offenses or any other legal issue. Please consult with your personal attorney if anything in this article impacts you.

Since the proliferation of digital cameras and cheap webcams, the creation of sexually explicit materials has spread from the valleys of southern California to virtually every state, county and city throughout the United States of America. The adult industry flourished in the State of California during the 1970’s and 80’s as a result of a California Supreme Court decision holding that the state’s “pandering” laws could not be enforced against those involved in the production of commercial erotica, consistent with the state constitution.3 However, that decision is only binding in the State of California, and despite popular perception, it provides no protection for the countless photographers, cam girls and other content producers located in the other 49 states. That leaves non-California content producers in a state of legal limbo as to whether their activities are constitutionally protected, or whether they fall within traditional notions of prostitution wherein individuals are hired to perform sexual activity. Until recently, this issue remained under the radar as most professional adult production companies set up shop in Southern California. However, the legality of erotic content production will now likely confront one or more courts outside of California, as law enforcement and prosecutors grow bolder in their fight to preserve “societal decency” and garner political support while using the adult industry as a scapegoat.

Enter Section 2257: The federal government may have unwittingly, yet formally, legalized and authorized the creation of hardcore adult materials, so long as 2257’s age verification procedure is followed. After all, Section 2257, and its implementing regulations found at 28 C.F.R. § 75 et. seq., specifically contemplate the commercial production and display of depictions of actual human beings engaged in various forms of sexual activity; even including bestiality. Law enforcement would be hard-pressed to prosecute content producers who strictly followed the dictates of 2257’s records compilation and maintenance requirements, for any sort

3 People v. Freeman, 250 Cal. Rpt. 589 (Cal. 1988) U.S. cert. den. 488.S.311(1988).

of prostitution-related offense based on the activity that is specifically defined and regulated in federal statutes and regulations. In other words, how could the U.S. government authorize and regulate the creation of commercial adult materials if such activity constituted an obvious violation of the country’s prostitution, solicitation, or assignation laws? In fact, it appears that the government has conceded that the adult industry may legitimately create depictions of actual sexually explicit conduct so long as it follows the rules in doing so.

It is just this sort of legitimacy that right wing conservative groups have feared all along. Recently, the Family Research Council objected to the adoption of a .xxx tld for the adult industry since it feared that such actions would legitimize the adult web and end up providing adult sites with de facto protection from obscenity prosecutions.4 Similarly, the Concerned Women of America has objected to zoning ordinances for brick and mortar adult entertainment establishments on the same theory, i.e., that such laws lend legitimacy to adult businesses. In its effort to strictly regulate the adult industry, Congress and the Department of Justice may have provided just the sort of legitimacy that these groups fear. Even obscenity prosecutions may be rendered more difficult for the prosecutors as a result of the 2257 regulations. Certainly, in order to pursue such a prosecution, the government would need to prove that something beyond the depiction of actual sexually explicit conduct occurred since such activities are impliedly licensed by the federal regulations.

State prosecutors may face even more difficulty in pursuing adult content producers for violations arising out of the creation of adult material given the legal concept of “federal preemption.” When the federal government decides to regulate a specific field or industry, any inconsistent state laws may be rendered invalid to the extent they attempt to inconsistently regulate that same field.5 Federal preemption can be explicitly stated in the statute’s language, or implicitly contained in the structure and purpose of the regulatory scheme.6 The nuances of federal preemption are beyond the scope of this article, however it suffices to say that the enactment of Section 2257, and the recent adoption of the amended regulations give potential defendants in state prosecutions a new set of arguments and defenses given the apparent permission to create adult materials granted by federal law.

Imagine the look on the face of the sheriff or prosecutor when he first learns that his well- thought-out sex crime prosecution against an adult content producer in Small Town America may be gutted by the existence of a specific federal statutory procedure authorizing the creation of sexually explicit imagery. Anecdotal evidence already exists of local law enforcement agents’ ignorance of Section 2257 and associated regulations of the adult industry. Given the government’s obvious intent to create one specific and recognized method for producing adult materials, the industry may have gained significant protections against state level prosecutions for prostitution or even obscenity related offenses. While this may come as little comfort for those content producers and webmasters struggling to comply with the burdensome dictates of the new records keeping regulations, the industry must always strive for legitimacy and mainstream recognition. Section 2257 may be just the vehicle for that to occur.

© Lawrence G. Walters (2005)

Lawrence G. Walters, Esquire is a partner with the law firm of Weston, Garrou & DeWitt, with offices in Orlando, Los Angeles and San Diego. Mr. Walters represents clients involved in all aspects of adult media. The firm handles First Amendment cases nationwide, and has been

5 Preemption derives from the Supremacy Clause, Article VI, Clause 2 of the United States Constitution; see, English v. General Elec. Co., 496 U.S. 72, 70-79, 110 S.Ct. 2270, 110 L.Ed. 2d., 65 (1990) [Enumerating the three circumstances in which state law is preempted under the Supremacy Clause as: 1) where Congress explicitly defines the extent to which its enactments preempt state laws; 2) where a state law regulates conduct in a field that congress intended the federal government to occupy exclusively; and 3) to the extent that state law actually conflicts with federal law.]

6 Moralis v. TransWorld Airlines, Inc., 504 U.S. 374, 383, 112 S.Ct. 2031, 119 L.Ed.2d 157 (1992).

involved in much of the significant Free Speech litigation before the United States Supreme Court over the last 40 years. All statements made in the above article are matters of opinion only, and should not be considered legal advice. Please consult your own attorney on specific legal matters. You can reach Lawrence Walters at Larry@LawrenceWalters.com, www.FirstAmendment.com or AOL Screen Name: “Webattorney.”

OBSCENITY IN THE DIGITAL AGE

OBSCENITY IN THE DIGITAL AGE: THE RE-EVALUATION OF COMMUNITY STANDARDS

By: Lawrence G. Walters, Esq. and Clyde DeWitt, Esq.

Weston, Garrou, DeWitt & Walters

Introduction

Constitutionally protected erotic expression “is often separated from obscenity only by a dim and uncertain line.”1 That line is the tripartite test articulated in 1973 by a quintet of Supreme Court decisions, the centerpiece of which was Miller v. California.2 The Miller Test determines whether a speaker should be hailed as a contributor to the marketplace of ideas or jailed like a common criminal. Due to the inherent vagueness of the Miller test, in a 1977 obscenity case, Supreme Court Justice Powell identified that “the dicey business of marketing [adult] films [is] subject to possible challenge.”3 Given the 2003 PROTECT Act’s ratcheting up of the minimum sentences for federal obscenity convictions4 and the Supreme Court’s 1993 approval of wholesale forfeitures for as few as two related obscenity convictions, the stakes are significantly higher now.5

Generally, the Miller test holds that, in order to strip erotic speech of its presumed constitutional protection so that the disseminator may be punished, a prosecutor must establish, in very general terms, that the materials at issue (a) appeal to the prurient interest in sex, (b) contain patently offensive representations of nudity or sexual activities, and (c) lack serious artistic, scientific, or literary value. While the particulars of each of those prongs of the Miller test are beyond the scope of this article, what is important here is that prong (a) and prong (b)both are a function of “local community standards;” prong (c) is not a function of community standards, but rather what a “reasonable person” would conclude.6 This article questions the definition of “community” in this day and age, when online communities have blurred all past definitions of that term. In short, what is a “community” in the Internet era?

In the context of sale of three-dimensional objects such as books and films, the concept of “community standards” is hopelessly unworkable. It is even more cumbersome in the environment of the Internet. Any recognizable definition of a “local community” is quickly disappearing in the age of ubiquitous and homogenous media brought about by satellite and cable television, international news channels, and more recently, the Internet. Yet prosecutors, and to some extent the courts, have continued to cling to the archaic notion of “contemporary community standards” as measured by local geographic boundaries. As the United States, and indeed the world, becomes more transient, standardized, uniform, and homogenized, the ability of one community to isolate itself by erecting a fictitious legal barrier, designed to keep out certain categories of erotic speech, is quickly evaporating and the law must keep pace.7

The time has come for courts to accept the diminished reality of local geographical standards and the development of a variety of national communities, whose standards must be considered in the context of American obscenity law. Assuming the Miller test is not too vague for the imposition of criminal sanctions in every instance – 4 of the 9 Justices in the Miller quintet believed it was8 – the definition of “community” must be reexamined given the realities

6 Pope v. Illinois, 481 U.S. 497 (1987).

7 Ironically, in Miller, 413 U.S. at 32, despite the rapid homogenization of the country that was developing then due to migration and national communication, the Court moved from the then-prevailing view that obscenity should be

measured by a national standard to local standards, Chief Justice Burger explaining, “It is neither realistic nor constitutionally sound to read the First Amendment as requiring that the people of Maine or Mississippi accept public depiction of conduct found tolerable in Las Vegas, or New York City.”

8 Justice Brennan’s dissent in Miller, 413 U.S. at 47, incorporating his dissent in Paris, 413 U.S. at 73, makes a

powerful case for the proposition that obscenity cannot be measured with sufficient specificity to adhere to the Due Process Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the Constitution and, indeed, nearly carried the day.

of the current decade. Although a complete reassessment of the local community standards requirement of the Miller test is certainly justifiable with respect to all forms of erotic media, the most timely place for such recognition to evolve is in relation to Internet content, which does not exist in any geographic space, and which cannot be blocked from receipt by any particular, local community.

  1. The Miller Test in Cyberspace

  1. Reno v. ACLU

The first opportunity the United States Supreme Court took to consider application of the Miller Test in the context of online content was in response to the challenge brought by the American Civil Liberties Union to the Communications Decency Act of 1996 (“CDA”).9 At issue were provisions of the CDA that prohibited the transmission of “indecent” communications by means of a telecommunications device to persons under the age of 18, or sending patently offensive communications through use of an interactive computer service to persons under the age of 18.10

The Supreme Court invalidated the CDA in a unanimous decision. Finding that it

constituted a content-based regulation of speech, the Court subjected the CDA to the strict scrutiny standard of review.11 The Court found that the act’s lack of a precise definition of prohibited behavior would create confusion as to what was truly prohibited,12 and due to the “obvious chilling effect on free speech” the CDA was void for vagueness.13 The potential stigma of a criminal conviction and the severe penalties including up to two years’ imprisonment for

9 Reno v. ACLU, 521 U.S. 844 (1997).

10 47 U.S.C. § 223 (a, d) (2002).

11 Reno v. ACLU at 872.

12 Reno v. ACLU at 871 (noting that serious discussions about birth control practices, homosexuality, First Amendment issues raised by the Appendix to the Pacifica opinion (438 U.S. 726), or the consequences of prison rape might be perceived by speakers or law enforcement as violating the CDA).

13 Reno v. ACLU at 872 (citing e.g. Gentile v. State Bar of Nev., 501 U.S. 1030, 1048-1051 (1991)).

each violation would likely cause speakers to remain silent rather than approach the zone of impermissible conduct.14

The government argued that although the CDA regulated speech that was not deemed harmful to adults, but was deemed harmful to children, precedent supported such regulations. The government specifically relied on Ginsberg v. New York,15 City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres Inc,16 and Federal Communications Commission v. Pacifica Foundation.17 However, the Court held that these cases actually supported the ACLU’s position rather than that of the government.18

The Ginsberg decision permitted the government to restrict the commercial sale of materials deemed “harmful” in the hands of a minor, but merely “indecent” in the hands of an adult. However, the law reviewed in Ginsberg did not bar parents from acquiring prohibited materials for their children. Under the CDA, parental consent or even parental participation in

the acquisition of material on AIDS prevention could still hold the provider of that information criminally liable.19 Furthermore, the Ginsberg case applied only to commercial transactions, and the material was required to be “utterly without redeeming social importance for minors.”20 The CDA has no such limitations.

Renton dealt with a zoning ordinance that prohibited adult movie theaters from residential neighborhoods in an attempt to minimize secondary effects of such businesses. The target of the

14 Reno v. ACLU at 872 (citing e.g. Dombrowski v. Pfister, 380 U.S. 479, 494 (1965)).

15 390 U.S. 629 (1968) (Government was permitted to forbid the sale of materials to minors not obscene to adults because the state has an independent interest in the welfare of its youth and the right of parents to regulate the

content of material consumed by children in their household).

16 475 U.S. 41 (1986) (The Court upheld zoning ordinances designed to keep pornographic theaters out of residential areas).

17 438 U.S. 726 (1978) (Upheld FCC sanctions administrative sanctions against a radio station that broadcast George

Carlin’s “seven dirty words” routing because the words were deemed offensive in the context of an afternoon broadcast with children in the audience).

18 Reno v. ACLU at 864.

19 Reno v. ACLU at 865.

20 Id at 867.

regulations was not the speech itself, but crime and diminished property values.21 The government’s contention that it was merely engaging in a zoning of cyberspace was rejected due to the fact that the CDA applied to all of cyberspace.22 Upholding this reasoning would have been analogous to the government placing a zoning ordinance from Key West to Kodiak, while asserting that it was not a blanket provision.

Pacifica was distinguished by the Court in that the FCC had a history of regulating radio content and the broadcast targeted was “a significant departure from traditional program content.”23 The FCC regulations were “time, place, and manner” restrictions, and not blanket prohibitions on speech.24 Finally, and most importantly, the Court distinguished radio from the internet as a medium because of radio’s potential to invade the home unchecked, whereas a series of affirmative steps is required in order to receive internet content.25 In addition, its analysis that the Internet is not radio’s younger brother comes from the recognition that radio’s scarce number of frequencies make each channel a public resource.26 The Internet’s boundless size defies the importation of radio’s rules.27 The Court’s wisdom in refusing to apply rules properly shackled upon a medium developed in the age of the horse and buggy should not be cast aside in its discussion and application of the term “Community.”

The Court’s decision in Reno began the slow descent into a swirling morass of online censorship jurisprudence, which has plagued the High Court ever since, and has yet to be

21 Id at 867.

22 Id at 868.

23 Id at 867.

24 Id.

25 Id.

26 See id. at 870 citing Red Lion Broad Co. v. FCC, 395 U.S. 367, 399-400 (1969).

27 Id.

resolved.28 Although this early case (1997) involved only one prong of the Miller Test, pertaining to patently offensive material, the Court took the opportunity to compare the elements of the Miller Test to those used by the CDA.29 The Court noted that the CDA criminalized all patently offensive communications, whereas the Miller Test significantly limited the scope of materials not protected by the First Amendment by requiring that “the [offensive materials also] appeal to the prurient interest, and…lack serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value.”30 In noting the “wholly unprecedented” scope of the CDA as defining a new category of criminal speech, a unanimous Supreme Court struck down the challenged portions of the law as overbroad and a violation of the First Amendment.31

  1. Revisiting Miller v. California

A brief review of the basic requirements of the Miller Test is in order: In 1973, the United States Supreme Court finally settled on a definition of “obscenity,” for purposes of regulating erotic materials, after much wrestling, agonizing and debate.32 Notably, Miller was a 5-4 decision that reportedly went the other way on the first vote. The dissenters took the position that regulation of erotica involving only adults could not be accomplished without violating the

Bill of Rights. The compromise reached in Miller gave us the “basic guidelines” that the trier of fact must apply in cases involving allegedly obscene materials:

    1. [W]hether the average person, applying contemporary community standards would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest;

    2. [W]hether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and

28 Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition, 535 U.S. 234, 122 S.Ct. 1389, 152 L.Ed.2d 403 (2002); Ashcroft v. American

Civil Liberties Union, 532 U.S. 1037, 121 S.Ct 1997, 149 L.Ed.2d 1001 (2001); Ashcroft v. American Civil

Liberties Union, _ U.S. _, 124 S.Ct 2783, 159 L.Ed.2d 690 (2004)

29 Reno, 521 U.S. at 873-74.

30 Id. at 873 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).

31 Id.

32 Miller, 413 U.S. 15.

    1. [W]hether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value.33

The federal statutes governing obscenity, including a part of the CDA not at issue in Reno, incorporate that definition in an effort to separate unprotected criminal speech from expression protected by the First Amendment. The concept of “local community standards” applies only to the first two prongs of the test involving prurient interest and patent offensiveness.34 A jury applies its understanding of the standards of the local community from which it comes to decide whether that community accepts, or at least tolerates, the erotic materials at issue. Therefore, the specific geography chosen for prosecution is inextricably linked to the determination of whether the material is sufficiently “sexual” and “offensive” enough to constitute obscenity.35

  1. Miller as an Anachronism

The primary justification for the community standards test is to ensure jurors view the material from the perspective of the average adult, rather than from that of the most sensitive or susceptible member of the community.36 Secondarily, the community standards test purportedly attempts to preserve the rights of states and their respective communities to define, for themselves, what level of erotic speech is to be tolerated within a specific geographic area.37

However, little guidance has been provided by the courts as to the proper geographic contours of the “community” to be used in evaluating allegedly obscene works. In Hamling v.

33 Miller, 413 U.S. at 24 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).

34 Smith v. United States, 431 U.S. 291, 301 (1977) (indicating that community standards tests should be used to judge patent offensiveness).

35 Nitke v. Ashcroft, 253 F.Supp.2d 587, 601 (S.D.N.Y. 2003).

36 Ashcroft v. ACLU, 535 U.S. 564, 575 (2002) (Plurality opinion). See generally Pinkus v. United States, 436 U.S.

293 (1978).

37 Miller, 413 U.S. at 32; Jacobellis v. State of Ohio, 378 U.S. 184, 197-98 (1964) (Warren, C.J., dissenting)

(although decided before Miller approved the societal value prong, Miller quoted with approval Chief Justice Warren’s observations in this case).

United States38 and elsewhere,39 the High Court has indicated trial courts may actually define the relevant community for the jury, or allow jurors to determine for themselves where the geographic boundaries of the community lie. This stunning lack of guidance on such an important element of the Miller Test has resulted in widely varying “communities” being used by various courts at different times. For example, the Supreme Court in Miller v. California40

approved an area comprising the entire State of California as an acceptable community from

which jurors could draw inferences as to the proper standards in an obscenity case. In other cases, lesser geographic areas have been approved, as small as a single county within a state41 or a tri-county area.42 Using this approach, the community standards test simply results in the application of “local” attitudes as a result of a limited geographic area, typically that from which the jury is drawn, but there is no requirement that the “community” be made up of any specific geographic space.43

The nature of the test therefore contemplates that material encompassed within its definition may be found criminally obscene in one jurisdiction, whereas the very same material may be found to constitute protected speech in another.44 However, this result was not found to be problematic by the Supreme Court, which held that the existence of a federal statute incorporating varying community standards did not chill speech to such an extent so as to render

38 Hamling v. United States, 418 U.S. 87, 104-06 (1974).

39 Jenkins v. Georgia, 418 U.S. 153, 157 (1974).

40 Miller, 413 U.S. at 30-31.

41 Davison v. State, 288 So.2d 483, 487 (Fla. 1973) (rejecting consideration of the community standards of the entire state).

42 Skywalker Records, Inc. v. Navarro, 739 F.Supp. 578, 587-88 (S.D. Fla. 1990) (holding that the appropriate community to be considered was the geographic area comprising Broward, Palm Beach and Dade Counties).

43 Hamling, 418 U.S. at 104-05.

44 Miller, 413 U.S. at 32. In fact, there have been instances where the same motion picture has been found obscene

by one jury and not obscene by another – in the same city, same courthouse and before the same judge, with the two trials occurring within weeks of each other.

the statute unconstitutional.45 Thus, publishers and speakers are left with little guidance as to which geographic community’s standards will be applied in determining whether the speaker’s expression is protected by the First Amendment or treated as criminal conduct.

Enter the World Wide Web. The Internet has been called “the most participatory form of mass speech yet developed.”46 According to the Court, the Web is a “unique and wholly new medium of worldwide human communication.”47 Significant distinctions exist with regard to online communications as opposed to more typical broadcast or print media. “[T]he vast democratic [forums] of the Internet” have not historically been subject to the type of governmental regulation and supervision that has been upheld in relation to the broadcast and print industry.48 One of the primary reasons for this difference in degree of regulation is the fact that the Internet is not as intrusive on the viewer or listener as is radio or television.49 It has been specifically held that “communications over the Internet do not ‘invade’ an individual’s home or appear on one’s computer screen unbidden. Users seldom encounter [Internet] content ‘by accident.’”50

Importantly, it has been held that each medium of expression must be analyzed in terms of its own unique elements, and may present its own problems.51 For example, certain justifications for regulation of the broadcast media have been held to be not applicable to other speakers.52 In earlier cases, courts have relied on the history of extensive governmental

45 Hamling, 418 U.S. at 106.

46 Reno v. ACLU, 521 U.S. 844, 863 (1997) (quoting ACLU v. Reno, 929 F.Supp 824, 883 (E.D. Pa. 1996)).

47 Reno v. ACLU, 521 U.S. at 850.

48 Id. at 869 n.33.

49 Id. at 869.

50 Id. (citing ACLU v. Reno, 929 F.Supp at 844 (E.D. Pa. 1996)).

51 Southeast Promotions, LTD. v. Conrad, 420 U.S. 546, 557 (1975); ACLU v. Reno, 217 F.3d 162 (3rd Cir. 2000),

cert. granted by, Ashcroft v. ACLU, 532 U.S. 1037 (2001), vacated by, Ashcroft v. ACLU, 535 U.S. 564 (2002), remanded to, ACLU v. Ashcroft, 322 F.3d 240 (3rd Cir. 2003), cert. granted by, Ashcroft v. ACLU, 124 S.Ct. 399 (2003), aff’d and remanded to, Ashcroft v. ACLU, 124 S.Ct. 2783 (June 29, 2004).

52 Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC, 395 U.S. 367 (1969); FCC v. Pacifica Foundation, 438 U.S. 726 (1978).

regulation of the broadcast media, the scarcity of available frequencies, and the invasive nature of radio and television as a basis for regulation of content.53 In other cases, dealing with obscene telephone messages, the Court has noted that placing a telephone call is not the same as turning on a radio and being taken by surprise by an indecent message.54 Those distinctions alone warrant a fresh approach when it comes to application of community standards to online media.

Notably, the community standards test was developed at a time when obscenity prosecutions were primarily localized in nature and distributors intentionally chose the geographic areas in which they distributed or displayed their material.55 Purveyors of adult materials could at least theoretically evaluate the particular community standards applicable in a given jurisdiction, and make a considered, intelligent decision whether to disseminate those

materials in a given locality, based on the results of their investigation. The presence of multiple retail outlets where comparable materials may be rented or purchased by the public may heavily impact a distributor’s decision to make certain erotic materials available in a given community, for example. The existence of a particularly conservative jurisdiction had no impact on the print

media distributor’s ability to sell or display erotic materials in more liberal jurisdictions, given this ability to pick and choose distribution points.56 This theoretical ability to “geotarget” distribution of traditional adult materials formed the rational foundation for the earlier federal obscenity cases.57

53 Red Lion, 395 U.S. at 399-400; Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v. FCC, 512 U.S. 622, 637-638, (1994); Sable

Communications of California v. FCC, 492 U.S. 115, 128 (1989).

54 Sable Communications, 492 U.S. at 128.

55 E.g., Paris Adult Theatre No. I v. Slaton, 413 U.S. 49, 58, (1973).

56 Nitke, 253 F.Supp.2d at 603.

57 Id.; Hamling, 418 U.S. at 106.

Where online speech is involved, distributors have no reliable means of limiting the geographic distribution of erotic materials on the Internet.58 The Internet does not function in relation to the physical, geographic world, and these crucial differences between the “brick and mortar” and cyber dimensions affect the First Amendment analysis. “The Internet is wholly insensitive to geographic distinctions, and Internet protocols were designed to ignore rather than document geographic location.”59 Those considerations require a dramatically different First Amendment analysis in the context of application of a community standards test to online media. As observed by the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, “the unique factors that affect communication in the new and technology-laden medium of the Web [create] crucial differences between a brick and mortar outlet, and the online Web that dramatically affect a First Amendment analysis.”60 Unlike traditional retail outlets for erotica, the Web is not “geographically constrained,” rendering geography a virtually meaningless concept when it comes to the Internet.61

The United States Department of Justice (“DOJ”) currently takes the position that

Internet content can be prosecuted in any jurisdiction from where it is sent, through which it

58 ACLU v. Reno, 217 F.3d 162, 175 (3rd Cir. 2000) (“Web publishers are without any means to limit access to their sites based on geographic location of particular Internet users.”); Ashcroft v. ACLU, 535 U.S. 564, 575 (2002) (Plurality opinion); Nitke, 253 F.Supp.2d at 603. Although various geotargeting software devices have been made available in recent times, none have proved effective at blocking a geographic area as small as a county, as would be required to avoid exposure to obscenity prosecutions based on a particular county’s conservative community standards.

59 Cyberspace Communications, Inc., v. Engler, 55 F.Supp.2d 737, 744 (E.D. Mich. 1999), aff’d., 238 F.3d 420 (6th

Cir. 2000), summ. judg. granted same grounds, 142 F.Supp.2d. 827 (E.D. Mich. 2001).

60 ACLU v. Reno, 217 F.3d 162, 174-175 (3rd Cir. 2000) (quoting Reno v. ACLU, 31 F.Supp.2d 473, 495 (E.D. Pa.

1999)) (internal quotation marks omitted).

61 That is not to say the community-standards test did not wreck havoc on national distributors of traditional erotic

media. Where distribution was national, the distributor was effectively responsible for learning the community standards of hundreds of divisions of the 93 federal judicial districts, the statewide standards of such diverse states as Illinois, Texas, and California, which all embrace standards of the entire state, and the various counties of states such as Florida and Indiana, where county standards apply. As difficult as it is to predict the standards of one’s own community, expecting anyone to predict the standards of hundreds of other communities is totally unrealistic. Worse, there is no way to judicially learn the standards in advance. Adult Video Ass’n. v. United States Dept. of Justice, 71 F.3d 563 (6th Cir 1995) (upholding the trial court’s refusal to issue a declaratory judgment as to whether a particular motion picture was obscene.).

passes, or where it is received.62 For example, in one of the most recent federal obscenity prosecutions against an adult Web site operator, the defendants were prosecuted in the Western District of Pennsylvania, despite the fact that they operate their website from, reside in, and, with respect to the relevant transactions, never left the State of California.63 One of the counts against the defendants in that case involved transmitting allegedly obscene video clips to computers in

the Western District of Pennsylvania, where the materials were downloaded by government agents.64 Therefore, this concern is real, not conjectural. People will go to jail or be set free depending on the ultimate resolution of the “community standards” issue. Historically, the DOJ has ordinarily prosecuted obscenity cases in the place of receipt, which is almost always more conservative than the place from where the material was sent.65

The government’s position on local community prosecution raises a significant constitutional concern, often called a “heckler’s veto.” Purveyors of adult material online cannot comply with the CDA, which prohibits distribution of obscene materials online, or any other law premised on application of local community standards, by tailoring their speech to each individual community’s standard. In order to offer erotic materials online, those materials must

62 United States v. Thomas, 74 F.3d 701 (6th Cir. 1996), cert. den. 519 U.S. 820 (1996) (holding venue proper in district from which viewer accessed defendant’s bulletin board files); Memorandum of Law in Support of Motion to Dismiss, filed in Nitke v. Ashcroft, et. al., Case No. 01-Civ-11476 (S.D.N.Y. 2002) (noting that a prosecution for sending obscene material from one place to another is appropriate in the district from which it was sent, the district in which it is received, or any district through which it passes). See also Ashcroft v. ACLU, 535 U.S. at 601 (“[P]rosecution may be proper ‘in any district in which [an] offense was begun, continued, or completed.’” (quoting 18 U.S.C. §3237(a))). Thus, “it seems likely that venue would be proper where the material originates or where it is viewed.” Ashcroft v. ACLU, 535 U.S. at 602.

63 United States v. Extreme Associates, Inc., et. al., 2005 W.L. 121749 (W.D. Pa. January 20, 2005).

64 Id. The trial court in the above-referenced case ultimately dismissed all of the counts, finding that the federal obscenity law is unconstitutional. The court reasoned that the government failed to meet its burden of demonstrating

the existence of a compelling governmental interest to justify the restrictions on speech in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558 (2003), which, as interpreted by this Court, prevented the government from using the establishment of a “moral code” as a justification for obscenity laws. That decision is likely to be appealed by the government, and the issue of which community’s standards to apply was never resolved. 65 In a spate of obscenity prosecutions in the late 1980s and early 1990s targeting adult video manufactures in Los Angeles, prosecutions materially all were brought in the conservative jurisdiction to which the materials were shipped, including Oklahoma City, Dallas, Tallahassee, Memphis and Flagstaff, Arizona.

be compliant with the lowest common denominator – the most conservative community’s standards – given that all online materials are contemporaneously available in every community.66 That is so because the Internet publisher cannot avoid distributing to more restrictive areas.67 Publishing materials for viewing by any community makes them available for all. In order to avoid liability under a law based on local community standards, the Internet publisher would need to severely censor its publications to comply with the most conservative of communities.68

Sent back to the drawing board by the Supreme Court when it rejected the CDA, Congress made a second attempt to “clean up the internet” by drafting the Child Online Protection Act (COPA). Before the ink was dry on President Clinton’s signature, the same groups that challenged the CDA filed suit seeking an injunction enjoining enforcement of the

COPA, on the grounds that it was overbroad and restricted adult access to constitutionally protected material.69

In the district court opinion granting injunctive relief against COPA, the court found that the act created an “impermissible risk of suppression of ideas.” As an example, the court used the site of Mitchell Steven Tepper, operator of the Sexual Health Network, which provides information about sexuality to the disabled for profit. Tepper’s site is clearly beyond what Congress sought to prohibit, but was just as clearly in violation of COPA.70

66 Nitke, 253 F.Supp.2d at 604.

67 ACLU v. Reno, 217 F.3d 162, 169-170 (3rd Cir. 2000), rev’d on other grounds, Ashcroft v. ACLU, 532 U.S. 1037

(2001), vacated by, Ashcroft v. ACLU, 535 U.S. 564 (2002), remanded to, ACLU v. Ashcroft, 322 F.3d 240 (3rd Cir. 2003), cert. granted by, Ashcroft v. ACLU, 124 S.Ct. 399 (2003), aff’d and remanded to, Ashcroft v. ACLU, 124 S.Ct. 2783 (June 29, 2004).

68 Id. at 174

69 See Kelly M. Doherty, www.obscenity .com: An Analysis of Obscenity and Indecency Regulation on the Internet, 32 AKRON L. REV. 259, 280 (1999).

70 See Reno II at 485.

Despite Congressional intent to limit only minor access to commercial pornography, nothing in the text of COPA did so, and the term “commercial pornographers” never appeared in the statute.71 Just as its parent, the CDA “burned down the house to roast the pig,” COPA had identical pyromaniac tendencies.

The concern with the “heckler’s veto” caused the Third Circuit Court of Appeals to invalidate COPA, which also incorporated the community standards test to determine which online materials must be accompanied by some form of age-verification device.72 While the United States Supreme Court ultimately determined that this constitutional concern, by itself, did not render the statute substantially overbroad for purposes of the First Amendment, it did

generate a significant degree of concern among at least six United States Supreme Court Justices as to how local community standards could be applied to Internet communications.73 For example, Justice O’Connor, in her concurrence, stated:

I agree with Justice Kennedy that, given Internet speakers’ inability to control the geographic location of their audience, expecting them to bear the burden of controlling the recipients of their speech, as we did in Hamling and Sable, may be entirely too much to ask, and would potentially suppress an inordinate amount

of expression.74

Justice O’Connor further opined that adoption of “national standards” may indeed be appropriate in cases involving online media.75 Although noting that Supreme Court precedent does not forbid adoption of a national standard, she also observed that Miller called such standards potentially “unascertainable,”76 and “unrealistic.”77 If generalizations about the standards applicable to the people of a state of the size and diversity of California were

71 See Reno II at 480.

72 ACLU v. Reno, 217 F.3d 162 (3rd Cir. 2002).

73 Ashcroft v. ACLU, 535 U.S. at 585-86.

74 Ashcroft v. ACLU, 535 U.S. at 587 (O’Connor, J., concurring).

75 Id. at 588.

76 Miller, 413 U.S. at 31.

77 Id. at 32.

discernable in 1973, why would similar generalizations not be possible for the nation as a whole, in an era of instantaneous, nationwide (and indeed worldwide) communication?78

Although Justice O’Connor was the only Justice in that case to specifically call for adoption of national standards for Internet speech, five other Justices expressed varying degrees of concern about the application of local community standards to online media. For example, Justice Breyer observed:

To read the statute as adopting the community standards of every locality in the United States would provide the most puritan of communities with a heckler’s Internet veto affecting the rest of the nation. The technical difficulties associated with efforts to confine Internet material to particular geographic areas make the problem particularly serious.79

Justice Breyer ultimately concluded that COPA intended to use the standards of the adult community as a whole, in the United States, as opposed to some specific geographic standard, and thereby avoided invalidating the law on those grounds.

Justice Kennedy, joined by Justices Souter and Ginsberg, expressed concern about subjecting Internet speakers to the standards of the most puritanical community in the United States, through application of local community standards.80 That concern, alone, was not sufficient to invalidate the law under consideration, but the Justices did reaffirm the important requirement that each mode of expression has its own unique characteristics, and therefore must be accessed for First Amendment purposes by the standards best suited to it.81 Justice Stevens found significant distinction between online communications and those sent through the mail, as

78 Ashcroft v. ACLU, 535 U.S. at 588-89.

79 Ashcroft v. ACLU, 535 U.S. at 590 (Breyer, J., concurring).

80 Ashcroft v. ACLU, 535 U.S. at 590-91 (Kennedy, J., concurring).

81 Id. (citing Southeast Promotions Ltd., v. Conrad, 420 U.S. 546, 557 (1975); Id. (“Indeed, when Congress purports to abridge the freedom of a new medium, we must be particularly attentive to its distinct attributes, for ‘differences

in the characteristics of new media justify…differences in the First Amendment standards applied to them.’” (quoting Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC, 395 U.S. 367, 386 (1969))). [WE’RE NOT SURE IF WE CAN USE TWO IDS]

in Hamling, or over the telephone lines, as in Sable, because the sender could avoid destinations with the most restrictive senders.82 In previous cases, he noted, local community standards were upheld based on the sender’s ability to tailor his messages to the communities it chose to serve, thus creating a permissible burden on the speaker to comply.83 However, the sender of Internet transmissions must necessarily display his message to all of the millions of Americans who have access to the Internet if he chooses to display that message to one; accordingly this “fundamental difference in technologies,” requires a difference in the rules applicable to that particular medium.84 Even after a second visit to the United States Supreme Court, the case involving application of community standards to the Internet has not yet been resolved, and the High Court has once again remanded the matter for additional fact-finding in light of advances in filtering technology since the original rulings.85

  1. Problems with Defining “the Community” in Obscenity Cases

  1. Standardization of Geographic Boundaries

Despite substantial litigation regarding the proper community standard to be applied in resolving obscenity cases since the advent of the Internet, the issue remains an open question. While the question is certainly a difficult one, and subject to a variety of different analyses, the changes in technology, and society in general, militate for a reconsideration of the concept of community standards in obscenity cases. While the standards of a nation as a whole may have been inherently unknowable or indiscernible at the time Miller was decided in 1973, that is not necessarily the case thirty years later. For better or worse, our nation has adopted commonalities from coast to coast, and is much more homogenized than it once was in the pre-Miller culture.

82 Ashcroft v. ACLU, 535 U.S. at 602 (Stevens, J., dissenting).

83 Id. at 605.

84 Id. at 606.

85 Ashcroft v. ACLU, 124 S.Ct. 2783 (2004).

Instead of fifty unique states with their own identifying characteristics and cultures, Americans now eat the same McDonaldsTM hamburgers, drink the same StarbucksTM coffee, and wear the same GAPTM clothes. While many mourn the loss of uniqueness and distinction that was once pervasive throughout our nation, the reality is inescapable. Whereas differences existed as a matter of course a few decades ago, cultures such as the Amish must now go to great lengths to sequester themselves from the mind-numbing sameness that has taken over the United States like a plague. No county is an island in this day of worldwide media and entertainment, where we have as much in common with acquaintances across the country as we do with our next door neighbor.

It is not only the Internet that requires reevaluation of the concept of local community standards; it is the progress of mankind itself. The standardization of information brought about by the Internet is merely a symptom of an ever-increasing wave of uniformity that tends to average out all people, of all nations and cultures. The absurdities resulting from attempts to judge online media by the standards of some local city, county, or state is merely one example of how technological progress and convergence of all media distribution mandates a reevaluation of the standards by which we judge protected speech from illegal obscenity.

  1. Technological Advances Allow Greater Monitoring of Standards

Interestingly, whatever standards that might exist in this country are becoming easier to quantify and determine, from a technological standpoint. In prior cases, evidence of community standards often came from introduction of “comparables,” i.e., other similar erotic materials that are accepted or tolerated within the ideal community. Often, this evidence took the form of retail sales information generated from nearby adult media outlets that were willing to cooperate and provide such information.

As one can imagine, such proprietary revenue information was often difficult to extract from competitors, or those local businesses that simply chose not to get involved in a criminal prosecution. With the advent of Internet traffic monitoring technology, detailed statistics can be generated, identifying the level of consumption (and therefore acceptance) of various types of adult material in the United States. Current traffic monitoring programs allow for the detailed analysis of consumption of a particular adult website, or even specific pages within an adult website, by number of hits, page views, bandwidth and various other categories. Web traffic from the United States can be readily excised from foreign traffic, to provide immediate, real time, accurate information as to the desirability or acceptance of a particular website in the United States. Never before has such accurate information been available in regards to comparable material, or even the allegedly obscene material itself. For better or worse, the standards that do exist are becoming easier to prove, and more capable of dissection and analysis on various relevant levels, given advances in technology.

  1. Reduced Presence of Adult Materials in the Community

While the concept of community standards is undergoing a radical shift, it is also becoming less relevant as the presence of the materials in the community is becoming more and more intangible. The existence of modern adult media is barely felt by the community as compared to when Miller was decided. For example, Internet images do not have any real presence in the potentially offended community, since they only exist on the server from which they are requested by the user, and on the computer on which they are received. With filters, children or particularly sensitive adults will not accidentally pass by or encounter materials that violate a particularly conservative community’s standards as they might have in the ‘70’s or ‘80’s when the vast majority of adult materials were obtained from retail outlets or theaters.

Unlike the physical presence of an X-rated movie in a rundown cinema with a suggestive marquis bearing the title for all passersby to see, online materials only exist for a brief nanosecond on the community’s telephone lines, coaxial cable or satellite waves that bring them into the requester’s personal computer. Pay-per-view satellite and cable television have little, if any, physical presence in a given community, and should likewise be amenable to a national

standards analysis. Given the right to possess even obscene materials in the privacy of one’s home,86 and the developing right to personal sexual autonomy,87 the community can hardly object to this manner of “presence” within the geographic community. Most modern media share these transmission characteristics, and thus should not implicate the same concerns that

were addressed in Miller and its progeny, relating to each community’s right to regulate the type of erotic material whose presence is tolerated within the confines of the local community.

  1. Development of Cultural Communities

While the community standards of the nation as a whole have tended to ‘average out’ and eliminate the differences in communities based on geography, other distinguishing factors have created unique ‘communities’ defined by non-geographical factors. Perhaps the beginning of this analysis must be from a sociological perspective, rather than a legal one. In 1973 Chief Justice Burger proclaimed, “It is neither realistic nor constitutionally sound to read the First Amendment as requiring that the people of Maine or Mississippi accept public depiction of

conduct found tolerable in Las Vegas, or New York City.”88 The fundamental principle

overlooked by that statement that is truer now than it was then is that a good many New Yorkers moved there from Mississippi and vice versa. And, realistically, the notion of “community” has evolved, as well. For a dramatic example, given the proliferation of national, Spanish-language

86 Stanley v. Georgia, 394 U.S. 557 (1969).

87 Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558 (2003).

88 Miller, 413 U.S. at 32.

television networks, the values of an American who is Spanish-speaking is more likely to be influenced by the national viewing audience of those networks than the average resident of his county, judicial district or state. The same is true of members of the National Rifle Association, Republicans, Democrats, gays, African-Americans, sports fans, and so on.

In 1973, people watched ABC, CBS, NBC, PBS and a smattering of local independents in larger markets; they read their local newspapers and Newsweek. Now, they are more likely to read magazines focusing on their particular area of interest or the particular group into which they fall, watch cable or satellite television with the hundreds of available specialty channels, and “bookmark” Web pages that they check regularly for their particular interests – whether it be Notre Dame football or growing roses. And they go to the local Notre Dame Football organization or attend the Rose Convention. Indeed, with the shrunken world, “communities” are defined not by neighborhoods, but rather by station in life and interests. A Baby Boomer is profoundly more likely to share the view of the average Baby Boomer across the country than of the average Generation X’r in his or her own county or state.

A particular problem with the concept of community standards in states like Texas, California and Illinois arises from the fact that people are more likely to agree with those in the same station in life than those in the same state; people from Chicago are more likely to have values consistent with people from Los Angeles than with people from Downstate Illinois; and those people are more likely to have values consistent with people from the agricultural central valleys of California than Chicago.

Turning to the Internet, current notions of “community standards,” as noted, reduce speech to the lowest common denominator. Arguably, reducing Internet speech to that acceptable in the most conservative community is not unlike “reducing adult population to

reading only what is fit for children” – “to burn the house to roast the pig.”89 It is time for the courts to recognize that those offended by materials that are not offensive to a substantial group of others will have to pay a price for living in a free society – switch to another channel, rent a different DVD or install Net Nanny on their computers.

Conclusions

If the obscenity test is to continue to embrace the concept of “community standards,” recognition must be given the modern definition of “community.” Where the test is applied to Internet transmissions accessible throughout the entire world, the courts must change the contours of the “community standards” test to recognize a mode of communication that nobody dreamed of when that concept was developed by the courts.

Ultimately, lawmakers and the courts will need to move to some form of regulation of the time, place, and manner of distribution of hard core erotic speech, as opposed to outright criminalization using obscenity laws based on the increasingly irrelevant concept of community standards. Restrictions that minimize the physical impact on the community, and the viewer’s ability to shield himself or herself from accidental exposure to erotic speech, will take precedence over the limited modern utility of obscenity laws. Tomorrow’s erotic content regulations will likely involve concepts such as labeling, filtering, warnings, and the like, instead of outright bans as have been used in the past. To the extent that state and federal governments have a legitimate interest in regulating the distribution of erotic materials in a given community, such regulation will only be successful in the Digital Age if it takes the form of valid time, place, and manner restrictions, as opposed to full content bans.

89 Butler v. State of Mich., 352 U.S. 380, 383 (1957) (striking down a statute prohibiting speech “tending to the corruption of the morals of youth”).

(Lawrence Walters and Clyde DeWitt are partners in the Orlando and Los Angeles offices, respectively, of Weston, Garrou, DeWitt & Walters, www.FirstAmendment.com. Both, along with the other members of the firm, have extensively litigated, lectured and written on issues arising from governmental attempts to regulate erotic speech over the Internet, as well as more traditional media such as motion pictures, print media and live performances.)

Obscenity Press Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CRM

THURSDAY, MAY 5, 2005 (202) 514-2008

WWW.USDOJ.GOV TDD (202) 514-1888

OBSCENITY PROSECUTION TASK FORCE ESTABLISHED TO INVESTIGATE, PROSECUTE PURVEYORS OF OBSCENE MATERIALS

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Assistant Attorney General Christopher A. Wray announced today that the Criminal Division is establishing an Obscenity Prosecution Task Force dedicated exclusively to the investigation and prosecution of obscenity cases.

The Director of the Task Force and will work closely with Bruce Taylor, Senior Counsel to the Criminal Division’s Assistant Attorney General, who will provide guidance in his capacity as Counsel to the Task Force.

In addition to trial attorneys from the Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section of the Criminal Division, the Task Force will draw upon the expertise of several other Criminal Division sections: the Organized Crime and Racketeering Section, which will contribute strategic guidance in prosecuting complex criminal cases; the Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section, which will bring experience in seizing assets obtained through criminal activity; and the Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section, which will assist in investigations focused on the Internet and other high-tech methods of distributing obscenity. The Task Force also will be supported by CEOS’s High-Tech Investigative Unit, which consists of computer and forensic experts with knowledge of the Internet and other interactive computer systems such as peer-to-peer networks.

The Task Force will be dedicated to the investigation and prosecution of the distributors of hard-core pornography that meets the test for obscenity, as defined by the United States Supreme Court. Although the Task Force will create a singular focus for the prosecution of obscenity cases, CEOS will continue to prosecute obscenity cases in addition to child pornography, child exploitation and trafficking crimes. As in past obscenity cases, Justice Department prosecutors will continue to work in coordination with U.S. Attorneys’ Offices, the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service and other federal and local law enforcement partners.

“The Justice Department is committed to respecting and protecting the First Amendment rights of all individuals. However, the welfare of America’s families and children demands that we enforce the laws on the books, and that is what this Task Force is designed to do,” said Assistant Attorney General Wray. “With the creation of this Task Force, our commitment to law enforcement in this vital area is taken one step further.

“Advances in technology and mass marketing, particularly over the past decade, have enabled the traffic in obscenity to take on a more national and even global reach,” Wray added. “The special challenges that obscenity cases pose in the computer age require an equally specialized response. A coordinated Task Force of prosecutorial expertise is the best way to meet those challenges.”

Transcript of Hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee

Transcript of Hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Property Rights, held March 16, 2005

NOTE: THE FOLLOWING IS NOT AN OFFICIAL TRANSCRIPT

SEN. SAM BROWNBACK: Welcome to this first meeting of the Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Property Rights of the

U.S. Senate Committee on Judiciary of this session of Congress. I hope to be holding a number of different hearings on various topics; this is the first one we’re kicking off with. We appreciate all of you joining us. I would note my colleague, ranking member Senator Feingold, I believe his amendment is actually up on the floor, is what I’ve been told, so he may be late coming back and forth for this. Now, that situation may change, and if we hear differently, we’ll adjust. We may have to break into some of your testimony if he comes here at a particular time and he has to get back to the floor; we’ll accommodate the opening statement that he would make.

The editor and publisher of Adult Video News, the journal of the pornography trade, stated recently that ‘It’s scary how much money is made on porn,’ and of this, there can be little debate. The porn industry has grown rapidly in the last decade. Part of the reason for this growth is that the nature of and access to sexually explicit material in the marketplace has been radically transformed and expanded. According to many legal scholars, another reason for the industry’s growth is a legal regime that has undermined the whole notion that illegal obscenity can be prosecuted.

Indeed, just last month, federal judge Gary Lancaster of the Western District of Pennsylvania threw out a 10-count Justice Department indictment against Extreme Associates, purveyors of the most vile sort of pornography.

Defendants were in the business of producing films that, according to one report, ‘even porn veterans find disturbing.’ A co-owner of Extreme Associates even boasted that the films which depict rape, torture and murder represent ‘the depths of human depravity.’ He [ph.] also found they admitted the films covered by the indictment met the legal definition of obscenity.

Judge Lancaster not only dismissed the indictment but also took the case as an opportunity to rule all federal statutes regulating obscenity unconstitutional as applied to these admittedly infringing defendants. In order to achieve this result, 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. Amazingly, even if such a right existed, it would not apply to the defendants since they were producers and not consumers of the material.

There was a reason why Judge Lancaster had to bypass First Amendment jurisprudence in reaching the results he wanted. Numerous First Amendment precedents distinguish between protected speech and illegal obscenity. For example, the Supreme Court held almost half a century ago that ‘implicit in the history of the First Amendment is the rejection of obscenity as thoroughly without redeeming social importance.’ Thirty years ago, the Court rejected the notion that ‘obscene, pornographic films acquire constitutional immunity from state regulation simply because they are exhibited for consenting adults only.’ Rather, the Court specifically held that there are legitimate state interests at stake in stemming the tide of commercialized obscenity. It also been held – it was – it also has held it to be categorically settled that obscene material is unprotected by the First Amendment. If the Extreme Associates decision stands, we will have gone from the flat statement of former justice William Brennan, who advocated perhaps the most expansive vision of constitutional liberty of any justice in Supreme Court history, that obscenity ‘was outside the protection intended for speech and press,’ and we will be going to the notion that obscenity cannot constitutionally be prosecuted at all. Many constitutional scholars believe that blatant judicial activism, as exemplified in the Extreme Associates decision, has been responsible in large part for creating a climate in which the porn industry has flourished. I was pleased to learn that the Department of Justice is appealing Judge Lancaster’s ruling; such a ruling effectively would gut decades of precedent. I also have been encouraged by recent statements by Attorney General Gonzales that he would make it a top priority to vigorously prosecute those who violate federal obscenity statutes. In a recent speech to the Hoover Institute, the attorney general stated, ‘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.’ This renewed effort is particularly important since mainstream American companies seem increasingly willing to associate themselves with pornography, even hardcore pornography. Over half of all pay-per-view movies in hotels across the country are now pornographic. According to recent studies – recent reports, Adelphia Communications, reversing a long- standing policy, just became the first leading cable operator to offer the most explicitly – explicit category of hardcore porn. Los Angeles Times writes that, ‘Adelphia joins a marketplace already teeming with ways to procure hardcore sexual content. The Internet has become a carnalcopia of graphic images, videos and cartoons. Echostar Communications Corporation, the nation’s second ranking satellite TV provider, has offered XXX programming for several years on its Dish Network. Satellite leader DirecTV Group, Incorporated, peddles fare that falls just shy of XXX.’

The explosion of sexually explicit material is not a problem that exists in the vacuum of constitutional theory. Government has a compelling and real-life interest in the matter because of porn’s adverse effects on individuals, families and communities in the forms of criminality, in addiction and family break-up.

Several months ago, I chaired a hearing where scientists and psychologists testified about the growing problem of addiction to sexually explicit material which is destroying individuals and their families, adversely affecting productivity at work and negatively impacting healthy child development.

Four years ago, a scientific survey found that six percent of respondents met the criteria for a full-fledged pornography addiction. Other estimates of the percentage of the population suffering from an addiction to porn are considerably higher. Seventy-two million Internet users visit pornographic Websites per year. One expert in cyber-addiction asserts that 15 percent of online porn addicts develop sexual behavior that disrupts their lives. She writes that, ‘the Internet is the crack cocaine of sexual addiction.’

The expanded reach and pervasiveness of pornography also affects our families and our children. According to recent reports, one in five children ages 10 to 17 has received a sexual solicitation over the Internet, and nine out of 10 children ages 8 to 16 who have Internet access have viewed porn Websites usually in the course of looking up information for homework.

There is strong evidence that marriages are also adversely affected by addiction to pornography. At a recent meeting of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers, two-thirds of the divorce lawyers who attended said that excessive interest in online pornography played a significant role in divorces in the past year. Pornography by itself, not as part of an accusation of adultery, has begun to arise with alarming frequency in divorce and custody proceedings, according to divorce experts. Pornography had an almost non-existent role in divorce just seven or eight years ago. Roughly 65 percent of the people who visit the Center for Online Addiction do so because of marital problems created by pornography, according to the founder of the Center. Now, just recently, we have in Southern California examples of human trafficking, of individuals trafficked into the porn industry for use by the porn industry.

These and others demonstrate effects providing – provide an important real- life backdrop to this hearing, which will emphasize two well-established legal principles. First is that the Supreme Court has clearly and repeatedly held that obscenity does not merit First Amendment protection. The second is that the government has a legitimate and constitutionally valid interest in regulating obscenity through, among other things, enforcement of relevant federal and state statutes. We also will hear the opposing view, that the First – and for the first time, 14th – Amendment protects – protections applied to obscene material that has traditionally been seen as harm outside of those protections.

We have a distinguished panel to speak today. First is Professor Robert Destro, Catholic University of America’s Columbus School of Law. Professor Destro is co-director and founder of the Interdisciplinary Program in Law and Religion, and he previously served as Commissioner on the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.

Second is Patrick Trueman, senior legal counsel of Family Research Council. Mr. Trueman previously has served as the chief of the Child Exploitation and Obscenity Sections of the Criminal Division at the U.S. Department of Justice.

Our final panelist is Professor Frederick Schauer – did I say it right? – Schauer of Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government. Professor Schauer is a former professor of law at the University of Michigan, chair of the section on constitutional law of the Association of American Law Schools, and Vice-President of the American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy. It’s an excellent panel on a current and tough topic.

Gentlemen, thank you very much for being here today. As I mentioned, if Senator Feingold comes in, we may have to break into your testimony to hear his opening statement. We’ll just play that as it goes along. We’ll run the time clock at seven minutes; you’re entitled to – if you need to go a little longer, that’s fine; we just have the one panel here today, and if you want to put your full statement in the record and then just summarize, that’s acceptable as well. And your full statements will be placed in the record.

Professor Destro, thank you for joining us.

PROF. ROBERT DESTRO: Thank you, Senator. Thank you for having me today.

And I would, with your permission, put my statement into the record without objection.

All right. Let me – I’m just going to do a little bit of summarizing of the testimony. I think there’s nothing more boring than just reading it into the – into the record. Let me start out with something that – I’m going to use a kind of a common name, but you know, the importance of name-calling in constitutional law, and in this area, when you’re talking about the regulation of the sex industry, you know, if you call it pornography, it’s not protected, you know, but if you call it speech, it is protected. Now, in constitutional law, we have a name for that name-calling. It’s called characterization, and in constitutional law, it’s – he or she who controls the initial characterization usually wins the case. And what my testimony is about today is the perspective with which I think this committee should look at the – look at the issue of regulation of this topic.

Now, you can start by looking at this as a question of market regulation, and focus on the pornography industry. That has certain advantages to it, in that, you know, what you’re really talking about is business transactions and lots of money and lots of – lots of illegal behavior. And if you focus on it from that perspective, you never really even get to the First Amendment unless you are of the view that Justice Douglas was, that sex acts between consenting adults were a form of free speech, and he talked about that in Griswold v. Connecticut. But setting that aside, nobody else really takes that view.

Or you could look at it as a perspective of, we’re going to be regulating content. That then gets you into the content and the perspective of speech, and in really almost an endless morass of First Amendment analysis where you get into the question of how much redeeming social value is there in this particular movie or videotape or Website or virtual reality, and you get into kind of almost unanswerable questions about just how – you know, how much, you know, under the Court’s decisions, does this really appeal to someone’s prurient interest? I suppose the easy answer to the question is that if they’re willing to pay for it, it must appeal to them.

And so that’s why I think that a case like Extreme Associates is such an interesting case, because it quite properly, in my view, ignores the First Amendment. The judge, I think, took great pains not to mention the First Amendment. The problem is that as he did so, he ignored the rest of the Constitution at the same time, and that he forgot John Marshall’s, you know, oft-quoted comment that ‘it’s a Constitution we’re expounding’, and he focused only on the rights side and not on the regulatory pieces of this puzzle.

He creates a right to privacy that, if taken to its logical conclusion, would legalize outcall prostitution, because if indeed you have a right to sexually explicit material that’s made by others out in Hollywood or wherever they make it, I suppose you could make the same argument that under Griswold and Lawrence, you would have a right to have it made right in your living room. At least, under the judge’s reading of the – of those 14th Amendment cases, the Congress’s power to regulate the economy and the industry just drops out of the equation altogether.

So what – you know, what I’d like to suggest is – is an initial question, which is, as this committee opens its deliberations, whether its goal is to score easy symbolic points, you know, which brings me back to that question of whether or not you’re going to be in this to do some finger- pointing or name-calling, or whether or not you want to regulate certain very specific behaviors that are both easily defined and not constitutionally protected.

So if you – let me give you some examples. The sale of sex as a commodity is against the law in almost all the states. A few years ago, our law review published a – published an interview, so it’s a couple of law professors sit down with Larry Flynt, and as many of you know, Larry Flynt has always been held up as the paragon of the defenders of First Amendment values.

And the article I didn’t think was very good – I mean, the writing around Larry Flynt’s interview was not very good – but Larry Flynt’s interview was actually quite fascinating, because, you know, they asked him about the First Amendment; he says, ‘Well, no, that wasn’t really the point.’ He said that his goal really was to open up – and I’m putting words in his mouth, but it’s the rough equivalent – he wanted to have a chain of sex stores, you know, that in the end, he thought that there should be a freedom to buy and sell sex just like you did any other commodity. I thought, well, finally, you know, he’s

actually – you know, when you get the Larry Flynt unvarnished, he’s a salesman, and that’s what I would suggest that we’re looking at here, is that we’re looking at the sale of sex as a commodity; we’re looking at sex slavery and trafficking, which is a serious problem not only here in the United States but around the world.

In the case of Extreme Associates, you’re looking at exploitation, at battery and at all kinds of other behaviors that certainly can be regulated under the criminal law, and it seems to me that if you were – even if you take Professor Schauer’s view that the primary focus should be on the regulation of child pornography, that’s simply another example of exploitation, and I would say, yes, let’s go ahead, and we’ve already started with that; we’ve all gotten quite [ph.] agreement on that; now let’s look at the other kinds of exploitation that need to be regulated as well. So my suggestion to the committee is that, you know, you too, like the judge in Pennsylvania, Judge Lancaster, you too can avoid the First Amendment. You can do it if you’re clear and if you focus on the commercial aspects of what’s going on.

Thank you.

SEN. BROWNBACK: Thank you very much. Mr. Trueman.

PATRICK A. TRUEMAN: Thank you very much, Chairman Brownback, and thank you for your leadership on this issue of obscenity.

I, as you mentioned, served as the chief of the Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section of the U.S. Department of Justice at the end of the Reagan administration, through the entire administration of President George Herbert Walker Bush. I worked under three attorneys general and they had – those three attorneys general Meese, Thornburgh and Barr had a very active effort under way to prosecute producers and distributors of obscenity. We brought many cases all across the country.

The nature of obscenity with respect to its constitutional status had been clear for decades before this, but the Justice Department prior to the term of Attorney General Meese for 20 years had not prosecuted obscenity hardly at all. Then the Justice Department reversed course because of the Attorney General’s Commission on Pornography, when it issued its findings, it called

for a strike force or task force of attorneys at the Justice Department to lead the effort against the producers and distributors of obscenity. That is something that Mr. Meese established. It later became what’s called the Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section of the Criminal Division.

It goes without saying that the leadership of the attorney general, the nation’s chief law enforcement official, is critical in defeating crime, and that was certainly the case with General Meese and his two successors in the Bush administration, General Thornburgh and General Barr. Each took a strong hand in making sure that U.S. attorneys across the country as well as federal investigative agencies pursued obscenity cases.

During my several years at CEOS, we found that obscenity law was quite workable, and moreover well understood by jurors who had to make decisions on the guilt or innocence of fellow citizens. To those who argue that the prosecution of obscenity crimes is a waste of time or an unwise use of resources, I’d like to point out that during the time that I was chief of CEOS, we received more than $24 million in fines and forfeitures as a result of our aggressive prosecution efforts. That is more than the budget of CEOS during those years. And I would point out that the public expects the Justice Department to enforce the law. Some want to say that if you enforce obscenity laws, you will necessarily reduce the number of prosecution of child exploitation laws. However, I don’t believe that’s true, that one can be pitted against the other. Sure, there’s finite resources, but I think when the public looks at the lack of enforcement on obscenity, they may say, Why is the Justice Department spending tens of thousands of dollars prosecuting Martha Stewart and incarcerating her, whereas the pornographer who is spamming illegal pornography into my son’s e-mail account goes free?

There were two large-scale obscenity prosecution projects undertaken by the Department of Justice when I worked for CEOS. One was Project PostPorn, which targeted mail-order distributors of illegal pornography, obscenity, who advertised their material by buying up mailing lists of – indiscriminately of people across the country, including children, and would send sexually explicit advertisements. Advertisements themselves were found to be obscene in many of our cases. In that case, Project PostPorn, we had 24 individual – excuse me, 50 individual or corporate convictions in 24 cases spread across 20 federal districts, U.S. attorney districts. That prosecution effort effectively ended the practice of sending pornographic advertisements through the mail by these companies.

For the second large-scale prosecution project, we targeted the major producers and suppliers of obscene material in the United States. With the cooperation of the Los Angeles Police Department Vice Squad, we assembled a list of the top violators of federal obscenity laws, which was about 50 companies at the time. Most of them were located in the Los Angeles area. We brought then all the United States Attorneys who had an interest in prosecuting obscenity together in a Los Angeles conference, outlined who these distributors were and these producers, with the help of the Los Angeles Police Department, and divided up the cases in about 30 United States Attorneys’ districts, and then we vigorously prosecuted these companies, about 20 of which were convicted, and I think there were at the time, probably of those 20 companies, something in the neighborhood of 75 to 100 individual convictions.

Our prosecution strategy in this project was ultimately to bring cases against all the major producers and distributors, and against a wide variety of material. We didn’t just select the hardest of the hardcore material; we wanted juries to decide what they found to be obscene in their district, and that’s the nature of what Miller v. California, the seminal obscenity case by the Supreme Court, allows. We believed it was important to let juries decide what was obscene, and we found that juries, looking at a variety of materials, from the hardest to the most mild of what we considered to be obscene, regularly said that the material was obscene and were willing to convict. I’ve done several grand juries myself, where we asked the people in the jury to decide whether the material is obscene, and my own experience has been that people who regularly watch movies that are obscene, will ask questions in the grand jury about – saying that they didn’t know it was obscene; are they doing something illegal? But yet those people, when told that yes, in fact it may be obscene, will also vote for an indictment on obscenity against a pornographer.

By the end of the administration of President Bush, we were successful not only in gaining convictions throughout the country but in actually changing the nature of hardcore material that was produced in the United States.

Themes of rape, incest, bestiality, pseudo-child pornography, all common themes prior to our prosecution efforts, disappeared from store shelves in many cities, and were no longer produced at all by the major producers of obscene material. Many of the distributors of hardcore pornography that had

not been prosecuted refused to ship products into states where we brought prosecutions.

I will end here just by saying that I am encouraged by the attorney general’s recent statement that he will vigorously prosecute obscenity. I think that you’ll find that he has the public’s support in doing so, and that the juries across America will convict. I encourage the Department to prosecute on a wide variety of material; don’t be afraid to prosecute anywhere in the country. We got convictions in Las Vegas, so-called sin city; in Los Angeles, Minneapolis, Florida – wherever we brought cases, we got convictions.

I would ask, Mr. Chairman, that my full statement be introduced into the record.

SEN. BROWNBACK: Without objection, thank you very much. I know you’re getting over the flu, so thanks for hanging in there. And if he starts to motivate [ph.] the witnesses, I would move too. But thanks for making it.

Professor Schauer.

PROF. FREDERICK SCHAUER: Thank you. And I would like to enter my statement in the record, and in addition, before I start, I would like to thank you for starting this hearing somewhat later than hearings normally start in this city; this was done as an accommodation to me because of my class schedule, and I very much appreciate it.

I should mention at the outset, I have been writing about the law of obscenity for about 30 years now, including a book entitled ‘The Law of Obscenity.’ I also served in 1985 and 1986 as a commissioner of the Attorney General’s Commission on Pornography. I was the principal draftsman of the commission’s findings and recommendations.

But I should say that although there are many people who believe that obscenity law as it now exists is unconstitutional and violates the First Amendment, I am not one. I have long believed that obscenity as strictly defined by the 1973 case of Miller v. California lies outside of the coverage of the First Amendment. I still believe that. But that obscenity prosecutions as defined according to Miller v. California and seven other cases decided on that day and a number of cases decided thereafter, remains

constitutionally permissible under the First Amendment, that does not as you know end the inquiry. The inquiry then moves to the question of, under what circumstances would the constitutionally-permissible-under-the First- Amendment prosecution of obscenity be desirable? In addressing that question, I ask the committee and I ask you to at least take into account three considerations.

The first of those considerations is guided, Mr. Chairman, by your own statement in the article you wrote with Senator Hatch about the Extreme Associates case, that judges should not ignore the law in favor of their own agenda. I one hundred percent agree with that. I also believe, however, and I would hope that you would agree, that ignoring the law in favor of their own agenda is not only a judicial vice, but is also potentially a prosecutorial vice. I raise this issue because I believe the same applies to prosecutors, and I raise the issue against the background of two specific and possibly some number of other examples.

I am troubled by Professor Destro’s statement in his written statement that obscenity law is a mess and that we need legislative redefinition and legislative resuscitation along different lines in light of the fact that obscenity law is now a mess. Somewhat more troubling to me are the continuing statements from 1986 until the present, most recently last spring in an event at which I was present, by Mr. Bruce Taylor, now senior counsel at the Department of Justice and with principal responsibility for obscenity prosecution, that there ought to be a per se rule about what is or is not obscene, and that – and here I quote from him – ‘penetration clearly visible,’ the important component of the standard for determining what is or what is not obscene.

These and other efforts to move or change or adjust or modify the existing and in my view constitutionally permissible Miller v. California standards from 1973 are a cause of some concern to me, and I would ask you, Mr.

Chairman, in investigating this issue, to seek assurance on behalf of the committee the prosecution will be in accordance with the Miller standards strictly defined rather than be used as a way of modifying, expanding, changing, redefining, resuscitating or in some other way changing the existing, and as I said, in my view constitutionally-permissible-under-the- First-Amendment law of obscenity.

I also believe that priorities are a genuine issue. I agree with Mr. Trueman that one cannot say that there is one thing that is top priority and everything else ought to be eliminated simultaneously. No sensible policy analyst, and I am now surrounded by many of at my institution, would believe that.

Nevertheless, as long as we divide up the prosecution, as long as we divide up the agenda, as long as we divide up the structure of the Department of Justice the way we do, that unless there is a substantial infusion of new funds, there is a high risk that an increase in obscenity prosecutions will be at the expense in the short term, the intermediate term of child pornography prosecutions. To do so, to substitute obscenity prosecutions for child pornography prosecutions, would in my view be an unfortunate reallocation of scarce governmental resources away from what in the view of myself and many others is the most pressing issue.

Finally, if I may make reference back to the Report of the Attorney General’s Commission on Pornography, it has been mentioned a number of times in this hearing – I don’t want to play [ph.] too much pride or place here – it can be read by everybody – nevertheless, if we are to go back to the report and draw guidance from that report, in my view, one of its central teachings was that it divided the category of Miller-defined legal obscenity into the categories of material that endorsed and promoted explicitly violence against women, material that endorsed and promoted explicitly the degradation of women, and material that was neither endorsing of violence against women nor that was endorsing the degrading of women. In light of those three categories, the Attorney General’s Commission recommended prosecution of legal obscenity in the first category and in the second category, but as to the third category, the commission made no recommendation.

I am troubled here in part by the attempt to use the report of the commission as endorsement for the prosecution of legally obscene materials that neither promote nor endorse explicitly the violence against women, but I am much more concerned, Mr. Chairman, by the fact that the issues of violence against women, the issues of degradation of women, the issues that frame the Report of the Attorney General’s Commission on Pornography, seem to have so significantly dropped off the agenda of these hearings. The agenda – the issues have been dramatically transformed from the issues as they were understood by the Attorney General’s Commission, and I would very much hope, in thinking about what to prosecute, or whether to prosecute, the enormously pressing issue of violence against women and what might foster it, and the evidence about that, not be removed from center stage.

Thank you.

SEN. BROWNBACK: Thank you. It’s an excellent discussion, and for me, a great tutorial calling on the hearing we had last fall about the addictiveness of pornography and the impact on families, so we get to – the factual basis of what we’re having and the legal arguments taking place here are very useful, to put those side by side.

I want to enter into the record an article from the Los Angeles Times dated March 5th of this year, about a probe into human trafficking to the sex slave trade, and I want to get – I want to draw your attention to this, if I could, particularly, I think Professor Schauer on this one, if I could. And I met with a city councilman just yesterday, Councilman Cardenas, about this topic. I don’t know – have you seen this article?

PROF. SCHAUER: I have not seen it, no.

SEN. BROWNBACK: Okay. I hope we’re finding – I worked with Senator Wellstone and his wife on sex trafficking before his – their untimely deaths, and it’s a topic that – it’s one of the lead slavery issues in the world today, and what we’re finding in this, apparently, we’re seeing people trafficked into the pornography industry for porn. This is just a quote here from the article: ‘A lot of people are promised jobs once they come here, but when they get here, they’re forced into labor or the sex trade.’ That’s a lawyer with the Department of Health and Human Services, and apparently this is a lucrative business to move people into.

I take it from your statement, Professor Schauer – pardon me on that – this would clearly fall in the category, what you think we should be prosecuting, because it is violence against women.

PROF. SCHAUER: I think there is – there is an issue here that we need to address, that distinguishes obscenity from child pornography. I have absolutely no doubt that the underlying conduct that you have just described ought to be prosecuted with the greatest vigor that the law has available. The underlying conduct is conduct that undeniably exists. It existed in 1985 and 1986. It is recounted in great detail in the Report of the Attorney General’s Commission. However, it is an existing and pretty well settled across the spectrum of the First Amendment and across the spectrum of First

Amendment authorities that the fact that the underlying conduct is itself illegal and appropriately prosecutable does not necessarily mean that photographs of it, films of it or descriptions of it can themselves be prosecuted. Child pornography is a notable exception to that, and when the Supreme Court, in New York v. Ferber in 1982, allowed the prosecution of child pornography on the theory that the underlying conduct was illegal and exploitative, it made clear to reaffirm that this was a principle that applied to child pornography and that it was not at the time changing its underlying views about whether that principle applied to obscenity.

On the existing state of the law, the illegality or appalling exploitation of the underlying conduct justifies drying up the market for photographs and films of that conduct – for child pornography, yes, but on the existing state of the law, for adult obscenity, no. That is to some extent consistent with a wide arrange of cases including the Pentagon Papers case, Landmark Communications v. Virginia, Bartnicki v. Vopper and others, in which the illegality of the underlying conduct does not affect the question of First Amendment protection. The less obscenity is moved into the child –

SEN. BROWNBACK: Let me – let me just narrow [ph.] my question on that then, because I’ve been working on this for some period of time and this is really an awful trade, and I’ve met with girls who’ve been trafficked in Nepal and Israel and Thailand and America, and that’s where this is taking place, and we’re even finding reports – we haven’t verified this, but people doing the pornography filming in a foreign country, developing country, and then shooting it in here – because then you don’t have to traffic somebody in; you just traffic the film in. But if you don’t address that marketplace basket here, aren’t you just continuing to ask for more that – as I understand, you’re saying, prosecute the crime that’s being conducted but don’t prosecute the distribution of material, and yet this has been okay overseas that we’ve started seeing this being brought in or people going over to film in places, central Asia, and shooting it in – aren’t you going to have to get at the product to be able to truly address this?

PROF. SCHAUER: In order – All I’m suggesting is that in order to get at the product, existing law would have to be changed dramatically. I don’t deny the economics of the fact that when one dries up the product, one makes it harder to engage in the underlying conduct. That’s what the Supreme Court said in Ferber, the economics of that relationship exists. I am here in part consistent with the earlier things that I’ve said, to warn against, for pragmatic

reasons as well as constitutional ones, of pressing too hard against existing and well-settled law, and in this area, the law is pretty well settled. I would enthusiastically support redoubled prosecution of the underlying conduct and the fact that the underlying conduct is itself aimed at potentially being part of the film is no First Amendment defense whatsoever. I would agree with you entirely, the underlying conduct is something we should deal with. I would like to deal with it within the boundaries of existing law, because attempts to change the existing law are always fraught with danger.

SEN. BROWNBACK: Professor Destro, you talked about regulating on this. What about regulate the filming of somebody that’s trafficked into here, or let me draw the example we did – or I did earlier about overseas, the filming of this by – then the movement of the product into this marketplace. How would you regulate or deal with that?

PROF. DESTRO: Well, I agree with Professor Schauer. The reason that I say that the law is a mess is that if you’re trying to get at it in terms of what is the effect of the film on the viewer, then you’re gonna run into all these – the well-settled law that he described, and I don’t disagree with the description of that at all. My suggestion is that, you know, what you do is that you focus on the underlying behavior that’s going on here, and when what you have is trafficking in – I mean, these people are accessories to prostitution, and the – you’re going to have to, just like you do in trying to interdict the drug trade, to figure out where the important pressure points are going to be, and so if you can – you can easily prosecute someone for the – not so much under a pornography theory but under an accessory to prostitution theory.

SEN. BROWNBACK: Overseas? Overseas? Let’s say this filming takes place somewhere overseas in a developing country.

PROF. DESTRO: Well, you could make the – you could make the importation, you know, of that kind of material, focusing on the underlying behavior, illegal, too. Congress does control the borders, and it can do it, but if you are an accessory to prostitution in another country and you’re bringing in your wares, whether they’re the people or they’re the products of their labors in those countries, I think if you keep the focus on that behavior, you’re gonna be on much stronger grounds.

SEN. BROWNBACK: Mr. Trueman, if the Extreme Associates case is allowed to stand, upheld, will we be able to prosecute any obscenity cases in the future?

MR. TRUEMAN: No, I can’t imagine that you would. I think that Extreme Associates – the ruling itself is so extreme that obscenity prosecution would go by the wayside.

Can I add something on this – about something that was said here today? SEN. BROWNBACK: Yes, certainly.

MR. TRUEMAN: I just want to take issue with something that Professor Schauer said here with respect to him. He mentions that the Attorney General’s Commission divided up the nature of pornography into material that’s violent or in the second category degrading to women, should be prosecuted; other pornography, the commission didn’t form an opinion on, and I think he has argued that just those two categories should be prosecuted.

I think there’s a real danger in the Justice Department drawing these lines. Communities should draw the lines. The Supreme Court has outlined what may be found to be obscene. Now, at the Justice Department when I was there, we would bring prosecutions for a variety of material. We wouldn’t just go after the pornographer and pick the worst film, which we would likely get a conviction on, because then the community standard becomes that that material – you know, that worst film – meets the community – it’s out of bounds for that community. But if you bring a prosecution across the range of material a pornographer is selling or distributing in the beginning, and the jury convicts on all of it as obscene, then you’ve established a community standard, and pornographers are thinking, We’ve got to stay out of that state or that community because a variety of material has been found to be obscene. I think that’s wise, to let your community decide rather than the Justice Department.

SEN. BROWNBACK: This is just as a layman question, and as somebody who runs for public office and then meets people all the time: The people are just fed up with getting hit with this stuff in their face all the time, and their kids on the Internet and at the grocery store when they exit or on a billboard or – and it wasn’t that long ago it wasn’t this way, and this industry is a very

large industry now. I don’t know how many billions; I’ve seen different numbers on it, but it is a substantial business. Is it because of the lack of prosecution that we see the pervasiveness of pornographic material in America today?

MR. TRUEMAN: Yes, I certainly think it is. And by the way, we have a witness who turned in one of our biggest cases, a prominent man, who told us that there’s as much money under the table in the pornography industry as there is above, and we certainly think that’s true, and did at the time in the Justice Department. But the – when there’s a lack of prosecution, the people don’t have a voice. The prosecutor substitutes his judgment for the judgment of people, the juries who decide these questions. If the prosecutor ignores the law and refuses to prosecute, as we’re seeing across the country, and then the pornographers have free rein of the community.

You’re also seeing, as a result of this lack of prosecution, mainstream companies, as you pointed out in your opening statement, thinking, What’s the down side? Now, you mentioned Adelphi [sic] Communications, the cable company – just one of the cable companies that’s distributing potentially obscene material. There’s also many hotel chains that are distributing potentially obscene material. By the way, we opened an investigation of hotel chain distribution of obscenity when I was at the Justice Department. Apparently that was closed in the next administration. But these corporations would not venture into this area if they knew the Justice Department was serious about enforcing obscenity law. When I was at the Justice Department, we prosecuted what was at the time the only satellite distributor of obscene material. I mentioned it in my testimony. That company was distributing material via a GTE satellite. We prosecuted them in Utah, where we had a complaint. Utah, under the GTE –

[Tape change; approx. 10 seconds lost]

MR. TRUEMAN: (continuing) – Sullivan, a prominent Washington attorney, to Utah to tell the U.S. Attorney’s office that GTE didn’t realize until the grand jury began that they could be indicted for distributing obscenity even though they were only a conduit for the obscenity. They cut that company off and refused to allow it.

Again, I think things have changed now, so what I’m saying is, if you begin prosecuting these mainstream companies, Dow-traded or NASDAQ-traded

companies are not going to continue distributing obscene material for fear of losing shareholder value.

SEN. BROWNBACK: Thank you. We’ve just gotten a vote call, so I’m going to turn to Senator Feingold for any statement he might want to make before we have to go over and vote.

SEN. RUSSELL FEINGOLD: Well, Mr. Chairman, I want to apologize – in fact, the vote is on the Feingold amendment and that’s the reason why I wasn’t here, and I certainly would not have chosen this time to offer my PAYCO [ph.] amendment but I was not given a choice by – I want to apologize to you, Mr. Chairman, for not being here, and also to thank you.

You wanted to hold this hearing a few weeks ago and because of not getting certain testimony at that time, you were kind enough to postpone the hearing, and I really appreciate that. I look forward to working with you as the chairman of this committee. I will simply put my statement in the record, and I want to thank the witnesses for coming and I also will review the record, perhaps submit some questions on Friday, if that would be acceptable.

SEN. BROWNBACK: It is so.

SEN. FEINGOLD: I thank you, Mr. Chairman. SEN. BROWNBACK: Thank you.

If I could, Mr. Trueman – I’ve had some attorneys say to me that they would prosecute these form of cases but they’re local prosecutors and they will come up against national lawyers on the other side of the case, and they need information and assistance; they don’t know how to prosecute, on a local basis or a state basis, an obscenity case. Do you offer any – is there any help for them in prosecuting these cases?

MR. TRUEMAN: Well, the pornography defense bar is very small. There’s about nine or 10 attorneys who defend the – these cases when they are brought [ph.] around the country, whether it’s a federal prosecution or a local prosecution. A local county prosecutor will be overwhelmed with pre-trial motions and find that their office is spending a huge percentage of their budget on one obscenity prosecution, and win or lose, they usually don’t give [ph.] a second one. That is the intent, I think, of the pornography industry.

Reuben Sturman, when he was alive, and identified by the way by the Attorney General’s Commission on Pornography as the top pornographer, offered to provide defense counsel to any pornography shop carrying his material, and – so local prosecutors have a difficult time; I’ll acknowledge that. They can get help from the Justice Department in terms of pre-trial motions. Bruce Taylor at the Justice Department, as mentioned here earlier, has participated in more cases than anyone; he’s got a brief bang [ph.] that’s, I think, available to anyone. Justice Department also has them. But this is the reason why I always advocated, when I was at the Justice Department, and still do, that prosecutions should primarily be done by the U.S. Department of Justice, because they can match, shot for shot, the defense bar in these – in these cases. The Justice Department won’t be overwhelmed, they won’t stop [ph.] to take a case just because it’s been drawn out and expensive to do, so I think it’s vital that the Justice Department gets back to a point of vigorously prosecuting.

SEN. BROWNBACK: I have to say, gentlemen, I’m very pleased with your testimony and information on this. This is very a troubling topic to me today in our society because I have intel [ph.] previously on this, its impact on families, expansion taking place, trafficking now into it, an extremely lucrative business, and it’s something that spans the political spectrum. This is something that the councilman I’m working with in Southern California is a Democrat; remember, Paul Wellstone and I worked on the trafficking issue

  • it is really hurting this society today, and I’m hopeful that we can get some vigor in constitutionally prosecuting cases of this nature because of its impact on the overall society and culture, and it must be done constitutionally and it must be done wisely in us moving forward, but I also believe it must be done, and if you don’t do these sort of issues, your society continues to further and further engage and to allow and you just continue to, as Senator Moynihan would say, define deviancy downward. He, I got to work with on cultural issues before, and I consider him a great tutor before he left the Senate and passed away, would always view culture as one of the central issues, and in many cases, more important than government. But here you have government kind of allowing the culture to move in a way that’s not there in the law, that if you don’t enforce it, nothing particular happens.

I would appreciate any further thoughts any of you might have on this, because if we are looking at an increased prosecution in this area, it needs to be, must be constitutionally, must be done wisely, and hopefully effectively so that what is constitutional is allowed; what isn’t, isn’t, and we don’t

further harm our families. I get more complaints from people than anything about, ‘Look, I just don’t want the culture to attack my family anymore. I just

  • I’d rather have a culture that buttresses, builds it up,’ and then when cases come along where you effectively eliminate all prosecution of obscenities if they’re moving forward, I can hear those same families saying to me, ‘Now what do I do?’ in the society, so I do hope you can help us as we move forward on this.

Appreciate the panel, of your work. Many of you have worked a great deal in your professional lives on this particular topic.

I will keep the record open for seven days should other members wish to submit their statements or other materials for the record.

Thank you very much. Hearing’s adjourned.

What is a Website Review?

WHAT IS A WEBSITE REVIEW?

By: Lawrence G. Walters, Esq.

Weston, Garrou, DeWitt & Walters

www.FirstAmendment.com

  1. INTRODUCTION

A substantial percentage of adult webmasters are still operating without having had their website reviewed by an attorney. Various reasons are offered for this, including: “I know the law,” “I stick to soft-core content,” “My friend told me what his lawyer said,” or, “What is a website review?” None of those excuses justify the unacceptable risk of publishing online content that has not passed legal clearance; however, this article will attempt to address the last excuse which focuses on the webmaster’s fundamental lack of familiarity with the legal review process. Mainstream publishers have utilized attorneys for pre-publication content review for decades, and publishers of erotic print and film media are typically diligent about legal clearance; however the culture of the adult Internet community often bypasses this most basic industry standard.

  1. SCOPE OF REVIEW

Many webmasters believe that a website review consists largely of an attorney getting paid to look at a bunch of erotic content for compliance with obscenity standards, only to render an opinion that the laws are too vague for any kind of concrete advice, and that the content might be found obscene by somebody, somewhere in the country, at some time. While obscenity laws are by far the most difficult and complex issue that is considered in connection with a website review, the scope of such a review involves substantially broader issues. Typically, our firm breaks down a website evaluation into the following general categories:

  1. Corporate Formation/Structuring;

  1. Online Agreements;

  1. Intellectual Property Concerns;

  1. Infringement on the Rights of Others;

  1. Age Verification/2257 Issues;

  1. Obscenity/Content Issues.

Certain business models may implicate additional, specialized legal concerns, such as public filming, unique fetish issues, intoxication, spam/marketing concerns, or sweepstakes matters, however the above-referenced categories will apply to the vast majority of adult websites published on the Web.

  1. Corporate Formation/Structuring

One of the first, most basic issues to be addressed is the form of corporate entity being used to operate the website, if any. Many webmasters still operate as sole proprietors, despite the many benefits and “cheap insurance” a corporation provides, particularly as an asset protection device. A website review should include an inquiry as to the current status of the operator’s corporation, and a confirmation that all applicable corporate documents have been prepared, including notices, waivers, minutes, bylaws, and stock certificates, necessary to comply with the formalities of incorporation. Some clients have come to our firm after having filed articles of incorporation for their corporate entity several years ago, and never having paid any more attention to the corporation since that time. Typically, a corporation must conduct annual corporate meetings, generate organizational minutes, Bylaws and written actions, in order to legally maintain itself as a valid corporate entity. The specific formalities differ from state to state, but failure to observe these technical requirements could result in a creditor “piercing the corporate veil” and holding the shareholders of the corporation liable for corporate debts. Therefore, it is essential to confirm that the corporate house is in order, and all relevant documents are contained in the Corporate Book. A more complex issue that should be addressed in the corporate review is the potential for foreign incorporation and operation of the website from an offshore location. Websites can be run from virtually any location, given Internet technology, and this opens up a world of possibilities, in terms of offshore incorporation. The benefits can be substantial in terms of tax savings and asset protection, and thus all options should be considered in the course of the corporate review.

  1. Online Agreements

Many adult websites are severely lacking in the area of online agreements. Given the E-SIGN legislation, electronically signed into law by President Clinton in 2000, webmasters can often form binding electronic contracts with their users, affiliates, or content providers, by posting the agreements to the website in the proper manner. At the very least, typical adult website should incorporate the following online documents:

    1. Warning Page/Disclaimer, including Age Verification;

    1. User Terms & Conditions;

    1. A Privacy Policy;

    1. An Affiliate Agreement

    1. A Spam Policy; and,

    1. A DMCA Designation.

Each of these agreements provides different legal protections, and should be incorporated to assist in reducing the webmaster’s exposure to liability. Many issues can be addressed by proper online agreements, such as the procedure for dispute resolution, venue, choice of law, arbitration, attorney’s fees, digital rights transfer, risk of loss, indemnification, payment terms, etc. In the absence of these terms, a court may impose a variety of “reasonable” terms that the webmaster may not like, or worse yet, may determine that no contract exists. Certain information, like DMCA Designation, is required in order to take advantage of certain ‘safe harbors’ under federal law. Online agreements are a fairly easy and inexpensive way to significantly reduce potential liability from a variety of sources, including users, affiliates, and the government.

  1. Intellectual Property Concerns

Websites can be copyrighted, ideas can be patented, and brand names can be trademarked. Webmasters, overall, do a poor job of protecting their own intellectual property and securing the bundle of available IP rights associated with their site. Software coding can ordinarily receive copyright protection, as can graphics, images, video, and the overall “look and feel” of a website.

If a webmaster has come up with a unique business model or online invention, he or she can obtain patent protection to prevent others from copying that idea or invention. Many online patents have issued, and while some are controversial, the industry is only in the beginning stages of patent right protection. While patent lawyers are a specialized breed, and are specially licensed to practice before the United States Patent & Trademark Office, (“USPTO”), your adult website attorney should be able to identify ideas, concepts, or business models that may qualify for patent protection, and refer you to an appropriate specialist to prosecute patent registration, if desired.

As the online industry matures, the focus is moving away from domain names in favor of online brand names. Online branding is certainly the wave of the future, and the best way to protect infringement on, or dilution of, your unique brand is to register a trademark or service mark with the USPTO. The process is not terribly complex or costly, while the end result, i.e. a registered trademark, is a valuable business asset that should be seen as a welcome addition to your company’s portfolio. A webmaster’s leverage in dealing with competitors using the same or similar trade names is greatly enhanced if the webmaster owns a registered trademark. Much has been written on the benefits of copyright protection, but it is important to remember that copyrights cannot be enforced without a valid copyright registration. The availability of all these means of IP protection should be carefully evaluated and considered, in the course of a website review.

  1. Infringement on the Rights of Others

This category involves a two way street: Are you infringing on anyone else’s rights, and is anyone else infringing on your rights? While webmasters often review their own content from an obscenity compliance viewpoint, that same content must be reviewed with an eye towards potential infringement actions. Displaying another company’s trademarked logo and brand name in the context of an adult video or image is generally asking for trouble, and can lead to an expensive claim. Mainstream companies do not see this exposure as “free advertising,” but instead consider it to be trademark dilution or disparagement, since it portrays the company in a bad light, as having some involvement with the adult entertainment industry. Many costly lawsuits could have been avoided by a content review focused on intellectual property issues. Often, an attorney can identify potentially infringing content that the average person would fail to identify as problematic. Saving one trademark infringement claim can pay for a website review many times over.

Websites should likewise be reviewed for potential copyright infringement concerns. For example, instant member post areas, where users are allowed to post their own images, can provide a forum for widespread copyright abuse. Somebody owns the rights to every image, and those rights must be transferred to the website in order for a legal publication to occur. Remember, just because an image has been floating around the Internet for many years does not mean it is in the “public domain” or that reproducing that image is protected by any form of “fair use.” The potential applicability of any such legal defenses must be carefully evaluated by an attorney trained in copyright law. Certain warnings or disclaimers can help reduce potential exposure in these areas.

Patent infringement is an issue with which the adult Internet industry has become quite familiar, in recent years, thanks to Acacia Media. Many processes on the Internet have been patented, in whole or in part, in the same way that Acacia patented (or bought the patents for) the digital media transfer technology that forms the subject matter of its claims. In the course of a website review, potential patent infringement claims can be identified, and referred to special patent counsel, if necessary.

Other, more esoteric, infringement issues should also be considered, including, if applicable, violations of the Right of Publicity, Right to Privacy, and/or unfair competition. Occasionally, a website may display content under a valid copyright license; however, the photographer may not have obtained a valid transfer of the commercial exploitation/publicity rights, from the models depicted in the image(s). That may entitle the model to pursue the website operator for a variety of claims relating to his/her right to profit from his/her image or likeness, even if a valid copyright license exists. Some websites, particularly those publishing “voyeur” or public filming content need to consider potential claims for invasion of privacy, or “false light” publicity claims, wherein the persons depicted in the content might claim that their privacy rights were violated by the display of private information about them, or the manner in which they were depicted on the website. These concerns are particularly appropriate to the celebrity genre websites or those depicting even ordinary citizens in a less than flattering manner.

Finally, due consideration should be given to potential unfair competition claims under the Lanham Act, or similar state laws, which prohibits competition in such a way that may be deemed “unfair.” The scope of such laws is not well defined and can potentially apply to any marketing plan or scheme that the average person may conclude is “fishy,” or just does not sound right. An attorney who has developed trained instincts for spotting such concerns can provide invaluable advice for the webmaster who tries to push the envelope in regards to marketing and promotion efforts.

  1. Age Verification/2257 Issues

This review category is critically important and may be worth the cost of the entire evaluation. In an effort to smear the industry and prey upon the protective instincts that most parents possess, the government has historically tried to mix the concepts of child pornography and adult erotica. It is critically important that a website strictly avoid involvement by minors as audience or participants. Thus, a careful review of the website’s model release, age verification, and 2257 compliance procedures is essential. The penalties for involvement with child pornography are staggering, and Section 2257 violations are no picnic either.1 The unfortunate reality is that the vast majority of adult websites are not 100% compliant with Section 2257.

Although much has been written about this subject, significant misunderstandings as to the precise requirements of the law still remain. The fact that portions of the original statute have been modified or invalidated by case law, coupled with the fact that substantial amendments to the regulations implementing Section 2257 have been proposed, contribute to the confused state of affairs and misunderstandings amongst webmasters. Legal advice is critical on these issues given the harsh penalties for noncompliance, and the complexity of the law in this area.

Remember, Section 2257 is the webmaster’s friend, since compliance will virtually guarantee that child pornography will not become a problem. Many unsettled issues and nuances exist in this regard, and competent counsel can help guide the average webmaster through issues such as model release indexing, document separation, inspection requirements, acceptable identification papers, requirements for foreign models, live streaming content compliance, model privacy concerns, records custodian duties, and 2257 disclosure statements.

The Attorney General is required, by law, to advise Congress as to how many 2257 inspections it conducts, and how many prosecutions have occurred for noncompliance.2 Therefore, it is widely believed that the Justice Department, acting through the Attorney General, Alberto Gonzalez, who has publicly announced making enforcement of obscenity laws a priority, will initiate a crackdown on 2257 violators in the very near future. Typically, such regulatory violations would be brought as an ancillary and additional count in a multi-count indictment, alleging violations of the obscenity laws, money laundering, forfeiture, conspiracy, and potentially racketeering statutes. By shoring up the 2257 compliance matters, this potential claim is taken away from the government and can no longer be used as a leverage tool against the indicted webmaster.

Finally, on the issue of user age verification, a website review should include an analysis of the options for keeping children away from sexually-explicit content. These options can range from credit card firewalls, to database checks, sworn statements such as the author’s BirthDateVerifier.com program, or even a simple 18 + age statement. Each website will have different needs, and each webmaster’s risk tolerance level varies. However, all the options should be considered in the course of the review, and a final decision made based on a thorough review of the legal implications.

  1. Obscenity/Content Issues

The obscenity issues are likely the most familiar to the average webmaster, and perhaps best understood as part of a typical website review. While no honest attorney will claim to have the psychic ability to identify obscene content on sight, legal guidance in this area is invaluable. Initially, attorneys trained in obscenity law can help webmaster clients understand the types of content that have been historically prosecuted more often than other types of content. The manner in which certain activities are displayed will also have an impact on the obscenity issues. By way of a brief example, a film depicting a woman urinating into a cup in connection with an explanation about female urology issues will likely contain sufficient “scientific value” to prevent a finding of obscenity in any jurisdiction. However, that same activity performed as part of “sex play” for a watersports film, may well be deemed obscene by some jury, somewhere in the country. An understanding of the unique nuances of obscenity law, obtained through the website review, will be invaluable to the webmaster concerned about managing the legal risks in the industry. Display of certain non-explicit content, on the website itself, which is integrated into, and relevant to, the sexually-explicit material may also be useful in hedging one’s bet against an obscenity determination. However, any effort to integrate so-called ‘valuable content’ is extremely tricky, and, if done incorrectly, can be useless – or worse yet – increase one’s legal risk. We are reminded in this regard of what the United States Supreme Court held in another context when it said, “A quotation from Voltaire in the flyleaf of a book will not constitutionally redeem an otherwise obscene publication….”3

Hundreds of reported obscenity cases exist, and attorneys who practice in this field will be familiar with most, if not all of them. Unique arguments are being developed on a regular basis to defend against obscenity prosecutions, and it takes constant, continuing legal education to remain current on the state of the law in this area. Webmasters can gain access to the knowledge base acquired by an adult industry specialist by conducting a website review, and that knowledge translates into power for the webmaster. Aside from any potential defenses or proactive moves that can be considered by the webmaster in the obscenity category, merely gaining some insight into how these cases are prosecuted, and what kind of content has been successfully declared obscene, will allow the typical website owner to sleep better at night.

  1. CONCLUSION

The fear of the unknown causes stress, and stress interferes with level-headed decision making in business. With a detached, objective evaluation of the real risks associated with sexually-explicit websites, the webmaster can make appropriate adjustments to reduce legal exposure on a variety of issues, once that knowledge has been obtained. A competent website review will provide this valuable information and allow the website operator to focus on profitability and success, once the legal concerns have been addressed.

Lawrence G. Walters, Esquire, is a partner with the law firm of Weston, Garrou, DeWitt & Walters, with offices in Orlando, Los Angeles and San Diego. Mr. Walters represents clients involved in all aspects of adult media. The firm handles First Amendment cases nationwide, and has been involved in much of the significant Free Speech litigation before the United States Supreme Court over the last 40 years. All statements made in the above article are matters of opinion only, and should not be considered legal advice. Please consult your own attorney on specific legal matters. You can reach Lawrence Walters at Larry@LawrenceWalters.com, www.FirstAmendment.com or AOL Screen Name: “Webattorney.”

1 Under Title 18, U.S.C. § 2257, and in particular, the recent amendments imposed by the PROTECT Act, each violation of 2257 obligations is a separate five (5) year federal felony, and repeat offenders qualify for a maximum ten (10) year sentence.

2 The Child Abduction Prevention Act of 2003, H.R. 1104 at §12. 108th Congress – First Session.

Dating Site Checklist


Legal Checklist for Operating an Online Dating Site

By: Lawrence G. Walters, Esq.

www.OnlineDatingLaw.com

The following checklist is intended as a starting point for legal compliance pertaining to the operation of an online dating site. This checklist is not intended to substitute for competent legal advice, and the operator is strongly encouraged to consult with the site’s business attorney when utilizing this checklist in any way.

While operating an online dating site does not generate the same high degree of legal risk as, for example, an adult website, online gaming site or online pharmaceutical sales site, an online dating site can create its own unique set of legal concerns. Some of these concerns are common to all Internet businesses while other items pertain specifically to the online dating industry itself.

Therefore, the online dating webmaster should be aware of the following:

1. Corporate Structure. The starting point for any business is its skeleton, or corporate structure. Operating as a sole proprietorship is strongly discouraged, and some form of corporate entity must be utilized when operating the online dating site. The type of corporate entity will vary, depending on a number of factors, including tax considerations, local legal climate, anticipated revenues and asset protection concerns. In some cases, the owners should consider offshore incorporation, given the potential for reduction of legal liability and tax exposure. Various options exist for incorporation, including Subchapter “S” or “C” Corporations, Limited Liability Companies (LLC’s), Limited Liability Partnerships (LLP’s), trusts, etc. Sometimes, more than one corporate entity is necessary to accomplish the goals and objectives. In consultation with your CPA and general counsel, the proper corporate structure should be discussed an implemented.

2. Business Plan. Unfortunately, many Internet entrepreneurs begin without some form of organized business plan. The days of being able to throw together a website and hope for the best are long since over. Various online resources exist to assist in creating a formal business plan, which should consider elements such as the operating budget, promotional tools, target market, niche, website structure, legal concerns, investment capital, growth and development of the site. Many times, the creation of a business plan will help identify the strengths and weaknesses of the business model, and may result in critical alterations before the site is launched. The single greatest reason why most Internet businesses fail is the lack of a coherent business plan, along with insufficient capitalization.

3. Online Agreements. Implementation of well-drafted online legal agreements is critically important for the protection of your business investment. Users and members should be required to adhere to a set of Terms and Conditions which outline the relationship between the site and the user/member, and address such issues as disclaimers, waivers, limitations of liability, assumption of risk, dispute resolution, attorneys’ fees, intellectual property, and a host of other legal and practical issues. Online dating sites, in particular, should include a comprehensive waiver of claims resulting from inappropriate and/or illegal behavior by and between individuals who met through the online dating site. One jury verdict can destroy a successful business, however, a comprehensive set of Terms and Conditions, implemented in a legal manner, can save the site operator significant grief in the event of a claim. Other online agreements should be considered including privacy policies (now required for all websites doing business in California), spam policies (necessary if promoted by bulk email or affiliate marketing), affiliate agreements, DMCA designation, warning page, etc. With proper online agreements, an ounce of prevention of prevention is truly better than a pound of cure.

4. Age Verification. Online dating sites are generally only appropriate for individuals over the age of 18. The Child Online Privacy Protection Act (“COPPA”) also restricts the manner in which certain websites can interact with children. Therefore, some form of age verification should be implemented to screen minors prior to accessing the site. This author’s BirthDateVerifer.comTM technology or some other form of age verification should be considered to avoid use of the site by children.

5. Copyright Protection. Your text, graphics, design and images, along with overall look and feel of your website, are all capable of protection under copyright law. Generally, computer programs can also be copyrighted. Therefore, online dating site operators are encouraged to protect their business assets by registering all available copyrights with the United States Copyright Office. A relatively new procedure exists for registering copyrights, which allows the registration to include changes made to the site on an ongoing basis. You should familiarize yourself with the ways in which copyright laws can help protect your business, and prevent competitors from infringing on your intellectual property.

6. Protect Your Trade Name. Your trade name, generally your chosen domain name, is also your business brand, and the name by which you will be known in the industry. As your business grows more successful, that brand name increases in value, given the goodwill associated with it over time. Popular businesses are often imitated, and you can expect competitors to attempt to trade off of your established business name. In the event you select a distinctive brand name, any competing use that causes consumer confusion may be a violation of our trade name or trademark rights. You should consult with an attorney early in the process, to choose a business name that is capable of trademark protection so that you can prevent competitors from using similar brad names. Due consideration should be given to state and/or federal trademark registration and continued zealous enforcement of trade name rights, including protection against cybersquatters or typosquatters.

7. Promotional Liability. The Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”) is the federal agency with jurisdiction to enforce laws pertaining to unfair competition and/or deceptive trade practices by websites. The scope of what might be considered an “unfair” trade practice is broad, indeed, and websites have been a favorite target of FTC enforcement actions. Information pertaining to such enforcement activity can be found on the FTC’s website www.FTC.gov. Special consideration should be given to “free” products or services, along with any consumer transaction where the user is surprised by some activity or charge. Experienced advertising counsel can help identify concerns for promotional activities and your marketing plan in general. In the event that any promotional activity occurs using unsolicited bulk email, advice should be obtained regarding compliance with the CAN-SPAM Act regulating such activity.

8. Obscenity/ Indecency/ Free Speech Concerns. Many dating sites allow users to post risqué, or sexually explicit images in connection with their profiles, and some tend to appeal to more erotic view points. Any image depicting nudity or sexual activity that appears on an Internet dating site will implicate various legal concerns pertaining to obscenity, indecency, and the Records Keeping and Labeling Law, Title 18 U.S.C. § 2257. This is an extremely complex area of the law, and one to be evaluated only by a specialist in the area. Under current federal law, all images depicting sexual activity posted on a commercial website need to be accompanied by a disclosure identifying the custodian of age records pertaining to the model depicted in the image. Failure to comply constitutes a five year federal felony with no potential for sentence reductions by federal judge upon conviction. Any image that can be categorized as obscene, can result in a variety of charges under state and federal law; some with significant penalties, fines and forfeitures. Careful consideration should be given to any system that allows users to instantly post images of themselves (or others), particularly sexually-explicit images. Use of the Communications Decency Act, Section 230 Immunity, and the DMCA Safe Harbor should be considered in this instance, as well.

9. Employees, Wages, and Taxation. An online dating business is the same as any other business, in various respects. Those employed to perform services for the business must be properly categorized as employees, when appropriate, and paid wages with proper income tax withholdings performed. Careful considerations should be given to such matters as employee handbook creation, overtime, vacation and benefits policies, confidentiality and non-compete agreements and other typical employment matters. Sexual harassment concerns occasionally arise in any business focusing on intimate relationships between human beings. Therefore, a specific policy pertaining to workplace environment and sexual harassment complaints should be considered and implemented.

10. Website Development Issues. Another area of particular concern relates to the development of the online dating site itself. If an independent website development company is chosen to create and maintain the website, appropriate legally binding contracts should be executed dealing with issues such as who owns the copyright to the website content, how the developer will be paid, whose obligation it is to maintain/repair the site, or defects therein, dispute resolution, and what happens if the relationship is terminated.

11. Shareholder Issues. The final consideration on this legal checklist involves the relationship between the owners of the business. If one person is the sole owner of the business, this last consideration may not apply. However, to the extent that various individuals are operating as mutual owners, shareholders, or partners in a particular business venture, their relationship between each other must be clearly set forth and agreed to in an operating agreement

or a shareholder agreement. Inevitably, disputes will arise, and some method must be set forth in writing to address how those disputes will be resolved. The worst scenario is a corporation equally owned by an even number of shareholders, which allows for a deadlock in decision making to occur. In the event of a deadlock, the corporation or business entity may be thrown into receivership, whereby a receiver takes over the operation and decision making functions, so that the business can continue to operate despite the deadlock between shareholders or owners. This is all expensive, time consuming, and emotionally draining on the owners, and should be avoided at all costs. The development of an operating agreement between the owners is a critical part of the creation of the business venture, and the best time address difficult issues between business partners is at the beginning, when there are no disputes. Many issues typically addressed in the shareholder agreement are not often considered or anticipated by the owners, such as the event of death or disability of one or more of the shareholders, the desire to sell shares to a third-party, rights of a divorced spouse to all or part of the business, and other such uncomfortable matters. Many of these concerns can be addressed by simple legal tools like insurance, trusts or incorporation of rights of survivorship into the ownership structure. All of these issues should be considered and addressed before any disputes arise to allow for the smooth functioning of the business and the efficient resolution of disputes or major decision making.

Conclusion

The above checklist represents some of the typical legal matters commonly encountered by online sites. Of course, many others are possible, and your general counsel can explore these numerous legal concerns in-depth. The best time to address of these legal matters is before a legal concern arises, forcing the business into “emergency mode.” Many legal emergencies can be avoiding with minimal preparatory activity, whereas failing to address important legal concerns can result in major disruption, or even destruction of, your online dating business venture.

For more information, check out: www.OnlineDatingLaw.com, by Lawrence G. Walters, Esq.

© Lawrence G. Walters 2005). Noting contained in the forgoing article constitutes legal advice, and all specific legal questions should be directed to your personal attorney. Lawrence Walters practices in the areas of online dating, media and advertising law. The law firm of Weston, Garrou, DeWitt & Walters has existed for over 40 years, and has litigated media cases throughout the country, including 7 cases at the Untied States Supreme Court. Mr. Walters can be reached at Larry@LawrenceWalters.com, www.FirstAmendment.com, or via AOL screen name “Webattorney.”

Legal Checklist for Operating an Online Dating Site

 

Legal Checklist for Operating an Online Dating Site

By: Lawrence G. Walters, Esq.

The following checklist is intended as a starting point for legal compliance pertaining to the operation of an online dating site. This checklist is not intended to substitute for competent legal advice, and the operator is strongly encouraged to consult with the site’s business attorney when utilizing this checklist in any way.

While operating an online dating site does not generate the same high degree of legal risk as, for example, an adult website, online gaming site or online pharmaceutical sales site, an online dating site can create its own unique set of legal concerns. Some of these concerns are common to all Internet businesses while other items pertain specifically to the online dating industry itself.

Therefore, the online dating webmaster should be aware of the following:

1. Corporate Structure. The starting point for any business is its skeleton, or corporate structure. Operating as a sole proprietorship is strongly discouraged, and some form of corporate entity must be utilized when operating the online dating site. The type of corporate entity will vary, depending on a number of factors, including tax considerations, local legal climate, anticipated revenues and asset protection concerns. In some cases, the owners should consider offshore incorporation, given the potential for reduction of legal liability and tax exposure. Various options exist for incorporation, including Subchapter “S” or “C” Corporations, Limited Liability Companies (LLC’s), Limited Liability Partnerships (LLP’s), trusts, etc. Sometimes, more than one corporate entity is necessary to accomplish the goals and objectives. In consultation with your CPA and general counsel, the proper corporate structure should be discussed an implemented.

2. Business Plan. Unfortunately, many Internet entrepreneurs begin without some form of organized business plan. The days of being able to throw together a website and hope for the best are long since over. Various online resources exist to assist in creating a formal business plan, which should consider elements such as the operating budget, promotional tools, target market, niche, website structure, legal concerns, investment capital, growth and development of the site. Many times, the creation of a business plan will help identify the strengths and weaknesses of the business model, and may result in critical alterations before the site is launched. The single greatest reason why most Internet businesses fail is the lack of a coherent business plan, along with insufficient capitalization.

3. Online Agreements. Implementation of well-drafted online legal agreements is critically important for the protection of your business investment. Users and members should be required to adhere to a set of Terms and Conditions which outline the relationship between the site and the user/member, and address such issues as disclaimers, waivers, limitations of liability, assumption of risk, dispute resolution, attorneys’ fees, intellectual property, and a host of other legal and practical issues. Online dating sites, in particular, should include a comprehensive waiver of claims resulting from inappropriate and/or illegal behavior by and between individuals who met through the online dating site. One jury verdict can destroy a successful business, however, a comprehensive set of Terms and Conditions, implemented in a legal manner, can save the site operator significant grief in the event of a claim. Other online agreements should be considered including privacy policies (now required for all websites doing business in California), spam policies (necessary if promoted by bulk email or affiliate marketing), affiliate agreements, DMCA designation, warning page, etc. With proper online agreements, an ounce of prevention of prevention is truly better than a pound of cure.

4. Age Verification. Online dating sites are generally only appropriate for individuals over the age of 18. The Child Online Privacy Protection Act (“COPPA”) also restricts the manner in which certain websites can interact with children. Therefore, some form of age verification should be implemented to screen minors prior to accessing the site. This author’s BirthDateVerifer.com™ technology or some other form of age verification should be considered to avoid use of the site by children.

5. Copyright Protection. Your text, graphics, design and images, along with overall look and feel of your website, are all capable of protection under copyright law. Generally, computer programs can also be copyrighted. Therefore, online dating site operators are encouraged to protect their business assets by registering all available copyrights with the United States Copyright Office. A relatively new procedure exists for registering copyrights, which allows the registration to include changes made to the site on an ongoing basis. You should familiarize yourself with the ways in which copyright laws can help protect your business, and prevent competitors from infringing on your intellectual property.

6. Protect Your Trade Name. Your trade name, generally your chosen domain name, is also your business brand, and the name by which you will be known in the industry. As your business grows more successful, that brand name increases in value, given the goodwill associated with it over time. Popular businesses are often imitated, and you can expect competitors to attempt to trade off of your established business name. In the event you select a distinctive brand name, any competing use that causes consumer confusion may be a violation of our trade name or trademark rights. You should consult with an attorney early in the process, to choose a business name that is capable of trademark protection so that you can prevent competitors from using similar brad names. Due consideration should be given to state and/or federal trademark registration and continued zealous enforcement of trade name rights, including protection against cybersquatters or typosquatters.

7. Promotional Liability. The Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”) is the federal agency with jurisdiction to enforce laws pertaining to unfair competition and/or deceptive trade practices by websites. The scope of what might be considered an “unfair” trade practice is broad, indeed, and websites have been a favorite target of FTC enforcement actions. Information pertaining to such enforcement activity can be found on the FTC’s website www.FTC.gov. Special consideration should be given to “free” products or services, along with any consumer transaction where the user is surprised by some activity or charge. Experienced advertising counsel can help identify concerns for promotional activities and your marketing plan in general. In the event that any promotional activity occurs using unsolicited bulk email, advice should be obtained regarding compliance with the CAN-SPAM Act regulating such activity.

8. Obscenity/ Indecency/ Free Speech Concerns. Many dating sites allow users to post risqué, or sexually explicit images in connection with their profiles, and some tend to appeal to more erotic view points. Any image depicting nudity or sexual activity that appears on an Internet dating site will implicate various legal concerns pertaining to obscenity, indecency, and the Records Keeping and Labeling Law, Title 18 U.S.C. § 2257. This is an extremely complex area of the law, and one to be evaluated only by a specialist in the area. Under current federal law, all images depicting sexual activity posted on a commercial website need to be accompanied by a disclosure identifying the custodian of age records pertaining to the model depicted in the image. Failure to comply constitutes a five year federal felony with no potential for sentence reductions by federal judge upon conviction. Any image that can be categorized as obscene, can result in a variety of charges under state and federal law; some with significant penalties, fines and forfeitures. Careful consideration should be given to any system that allows users to instantly post images of themselves (or others), particularly sexually-explicit images. Use of the Communications Decency Act, Section 230 Immunity, and the DMCA Safe Harbor should be considered in this instance, as well.

9. Employees, Wages, and Taxation. An online dating business is the same as any other business, in various respects. Those employed to perform services for the business must be properly categorized as employees, when appropriate, and paid wages with proper income tax withholdings performed. Careful considerations should be given to such matters as employee handbook creation, overtime, vacation and benefits policies, confidentiality and non-compete agreements and other typical employment matters. Sexual harassment concerns occasionally arise in any business focusing on intimate relationships between human beings. Therefore, a specific policy pertaining to workplace environment and sexual harassment complaints should be considered and implemented.

10. Website Development Issues. Another area of particular concern relates to the development of the online dating site itself. If an independent website development company is chosen to create and maintain the website, appropriate legally binding contracts should be executed dealing with issues such as who owns the copyright to the website content, how the developer will be paid, whose obligation it is to maintain/repair the site, or defects therein, dispute resolution, and what happens if the relationship is terminated.

11. Shareholder Issues. The final consideration on this legal checklist involves the relationship between the owners of the business. If one person is the sole owner of the business, this last consideration may not apply. However, to the extent that various individuals are operating as mutual owners, shareholders, or partners in a particular business venture, their relationship between each other must be clearly set forth and agreed to in an operating agreement or a shareholder agreement. Inevitably, disputes will arise, and some method must be set forth in writing to address how those disputes will be resolved. The worst scenario is a corporation equally owned by an even number of shareholders, which allows for a deadlock in decision making to occur. In the event of a deadlock, the corporation or business entity may be thrown into receivership, whereby a receiver takes over the operation and decision making functions, so that the business can continue to operate despite the deadlock between shareholders or owners. This is all expensive, time consuming, and emotionally draining on the owners, and should be avoided at all costs. The development of an operating agreement between the owners is a critical part of the creation of the business venture, and the best time address difficult issues between business partners is at the beginning, when there are no disputes. Many issues typically addressed in the shareholder agreement are not often considered or anticipated by the owners, such as the event of death or disability of one or more of the shareholders, the desire to sell shares to a third-party, rights of a divorced spouse to all or part of the business, and other such uncomfortable matters. Many of these concerns can be addressed by simple legal tools like insurance, trusts or incorporation of rights of survivorship into the ownership structure. All of these issues should be considered and addressed before any disputes arise to allow for the smooth functioning of the business and the efficient resolution of disputes or major decision making.

Conclusion

The above checklist represents some of the typical legal matters commonly encountered by online sites. Of course, many others are possible, and your general counsel can explore these numerous legal concerns in-depth. The best time to address of these legal matters is before a legal concern arises, forcing the business into “emergency mode.” Many legal emergencies can be avoiding with minimal preparatory activity, whereas failing to address important legal concerns can result in major disruption, or even destruction of, your online dating business venture.

Coming Soon… www.OnlineDatingLaw.com, by Lawrence G. Walters, Esq.

(©Lawrence G. Walters, PA 2005). Noting contained in the forgoing article constitutes legal advice, and all specific legal questions should be directed to your personal attorney. Lawrence Walters practices in the areas of online dating, media and advertising law. The law firm of Weston, Garrou & DeWitt has existed for over 40 years, and has litigated media cases throughout the country, including 7 cases at the Untied States Supreme Court. Mr. Walters can be reached at Larry@LawrenceWalters.com, www.FirstAmendment.com, or via AOL screen name “Webattorney.”