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ADULT INDUSTRY UPDATE ™
March 2004
By: Lawrence G. Walters
www.FirstAmendment.com

BRUCE TAYLOR REHIRED BY DOJ
Bruce Taylor, a Department of Justice
("DOJ") Special Attorney from 1989 to 1994, was recently
rehired as part of a renewed effort by the government to prosecute
obscenity cases against the adult industry. Taylor was an attorney
for the DOJ during the heyday of its Regan-Bush Sr. anti-porn
effort, which reinforces the current commitment to escalate its
war against adult erotica. As DOJ spokesman Bryan Sierra stated,
"Bruce has vast experience, both at the federal and state
level, prosecuting those kinds of cases. It is all part of our
overall effort to kick-start obscenity prosecutions after a long
absence." The DOJ has also assigned an elite FBI team, to
focus exclusively on the DOJ’s newly invigorated assault on
adult erotica.anti-porn effort. Additionally, President Bush is
seeking an increased budget to fight adult entertainment companies
using obscenity laws, as evidenced by his fiscal 2005 budget
proposal released in February. Given the groundswell of support
from Congress for the concept of obscenity prosecutions in
Congress, this effort should receive all the funding requested by
Bush and Ashcroft. Now that the training sessions have been
completed, the funds set aside, a leader picked and the gumshoes
in place, all signs point to a significant effort coming down the
pipe against the adult industry. The time for legal evaluation and
compliance is now. ‘Nuff said.
SUPREME COURT REVISITS COPA
On March 2, 2004, the United States Supreme Court heard oral
arguments in Ashcroft v. ACLU, which was the government’s
third attempt to have the Child Online Protection Act ("COPA")
declared constitutional. The Court must decide whether if
COPA protects children from adult online content without stifling
adults’ free speech rights. The Third Circuit Court of
Appeal struck down COPA because it allowed the Internet to be
judged by "contemporary community standards" which is
difficult to enforce due to the Internet’s breadth, and the
Philadelphia-based federal appeals court struck down COPA on
broader free speech grounds. The ACLU argued that "COPA’s
bludgeon suppresses an enormous amount of speech protected for
adults and is unnecessary and ill-tailored to address the
government’s interest in protecting children from sexually
explicit imagesconduct." COPA, which has been is on hold
pending the Court’s decision, may impose $50,000 fines and
six-months of jail time for first-time offenders, with increased
fines for repeat COPA offenders. The Court is expected to
render a decision within this term, which closes this summer..
The pending decision in that this case
reinforces the need for some form of age verification protecting
the free areas of adult websites, or free sites themselves.
Various options are available, and the author’s firm allows its
clients to use the method described on www.BirthDateVerifier.com.
Regardless of the method chosen, age verification is becoming a
critical issue both in terms of compliance with COPA (if upheld)
and to prevent the government from accusing webmasters of
providing erotica to children during the expected wave of
obscenity prosecutions on the horizon. Despite the possibility
that COPA may be struck down, compliance is universally
recommended by Industry attorneys.
OBSCENITY PROSECUTIONS
In one of the first federal obscenity cases in
almost a decade, Garry Ragsdale was sentenced to serve 33 months
and his wife, Tamara, was sentenced to serve 30 months for
conspiracy to mail obscene material, transporting obscene
material, and aiding and abetting. The material at issue included
videos entitled "Brutally Raped." The two are
currently out on bail, pending appeal. Others are also
facing federal obscenity charges, including Jon Coil, Rob Black,
and Extreme Video.
A federal grand jury indicted Harold Foote
Hoffman II on March 10, 2004, for transporting allegedly obscene
videos depicting bestiality via Federal Express to an address in
Alabama. If convicted, the indictment orders Hoffman to
forfeit all money and property gained from transporting the
material. United States Attorney Kasey Warner said,
"Our strategy is to focus on cases involving the online
distribution of obscenity for commercial gain and obscenity
involving children." This is the first time that this author
has seen an indictment where a private commercial courier, Federal
Express, as opposed to the United States Mail, was used in a case
involving the transportation of obscene materials, although such
prosecutions have been statutorily authorized for decades. .
In Canada, Steve Sweet, the head of Sweet
Entertainment Group, is currently being tried for allegedly making
and distributing obscene material. The materials at issue
include videos depicting urination, bondage, and
sadomasochism.sadomasochistic play. Sweet will offer
evidence regarding consensual acts displayed in the videos, the
popularity of bondage, the unlikelihood of harm from the videos,
and the widespread nature of bondage sites on the Internet.
This case will raise issues regarding "contemporary Canadian
community standards." This case is also important as a
glimpse into what the future may hold for webmasters indicted for
obscenity offenses here in the United States. This trial may last
as long as six weeks. Until then, Sweet Entertainment is
continuing to provide adult entertainment via its site, www.sweetentertainment.com.
FEDERAL CRACKDOWN ON INDECENCY
Culminating with the now "infamous"
Janet Jackson exposure, the federal government has decided that it
has had enough of Americans deciding what they want to watch and
listen to and is set to come down with new regulations aimed at
accomplishing just that goal. Never mind the fact that the event
at the Super Bowl has been the most-searched in the history of the
Internet, receiving more than three times the number of hits than
as the 2000 election received on the day after voting and five
times as many searches as the day the Space Shuttle Columbia
exploded. Parent groups and the moral majority are pushing
Congress and the Federal Communications Commission
("FCC") to come down on broadcasters over indecency law
violations and the revocation of licenses. The House of
Representatives overwhelmingly voted, 391 to 22, to increase
penalties to $500,000 for the holders of broadcast licenses and
performers who violate federal standards at times when children
may be listening, between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m., and also supported
the revocation of licenses of repeat offenders. The Senate version
of the bill proposes to increase fines to $275,000, with a maximum
fine of $3 million for a 24-hour period for corporations and a
maximum fine of $500,000 for a 24-hour period for individuals. The
passage of the House bill, H.R. 3717, which encompasses only
content broadcast over public airwaves and not cable or satellite
programs, bars the transmission of obscene, indecent, and profane
material. The measure was strongly supported by the White House,
which. The White House said in a statement, "This legislation
will make broadcast television and radio more suitable for family
viewing." This measure may make television safer for
children, but what about those adults who use their brainsour
brain and want the right to choose what theywe watch or who we
listen to? Howard Stern fans across the country did not have a
choice when their favorite disk-jockey was pulled from Clear
Channel Communications’ programming recently over allegedly
"indecent conduct" aired during the broadcast. A
campaign designed to oppose this new decency push by the FCC is
circulating, and can be found here: StopFCC.Com
- The campaign for for free speech.
Free speech is an essential liberty provided to Americans,
yet it is one that we must fight the most to preserve, as
evidenced here.
HILTON CO-OWNER OF SEX TAPE?
A February court hearing suggestedrevealed that
Paris Hilton not only debuted in her first adult film with
ex-boyfriend, Rick Solomon, but she also directed and shot the
film. In response to a $10 million copyright infringement lawsuit
filed by Solomon, Seattle-based Marvad Corp., which is owned by
Solomon's ex-roommate, argued that Hilton played a big role in the
production and shooting of the film, she is the co-owner of the
film's copyright, and that Solomon's failure to acknowledge her on
the copyright registration renders the registration invalid.
Solomon's attorney stated, "When an actor appears in a motion
picture and may help direct scenes… that doesn't change
ownership." The Court has yet to decide on this issue.
SPAM
In an unusual joint effort, some of the United
States’ largest Internet Service Providers are teaming up to
file lawsuits against hundreds of people who have been accused of
violating the CAN-SPAM Act for sending millions of unwanted emails
known as "spam." Much like what the Recording Industry
Association of America did to combat song swapping, Microsoft,
America Online, Earthlink and Yahoo! targeted mostly "John
Doe" defendants in the suit and plan on working together for
future lawsuits.
Since However, since its commencement in
January of this year, the Act has yet to meaningfully reduce thea
significant amount of spam being sent to users’user’s inboxes.
According to Brightmail, a spam filtering company, the volume of
spam has grown continuously since the Act took effect, with spam
taking up as much as 60 percent of emails in January up from the
58 percent in December. Consequently, the Federal Trade Commission
("FTC") has decided to post a Web forum at www.regulations.gov
to gather public thoughts and input about the "war on
spam." The FTC is soliciting comments on modifications of the
Act, its application and whether the public feels like more
regulations are necessary. The FTC also seeks public input on what
other questionable online practices should be added to listings of
"aggravated violations," like e-mail harvesting and
dictionary attacks.
SEX NEWS
Acacia has done it again. Disney Enterprises,
Inc., which owns ESPN, Disney, and ABC News, entered into a
license agreement with Acacia Technologies Group for the Digital
Media Transmission technology. Acacia has licensed more than 116
companies for its technology in all industries, including online
music, adult entertainment, movies, and news industries.
Resolution of the Acacia digital media transfer technology issue
is still pending in the courts. However, until the courts resolve
the validity of the claims, Acacia will continue compelling users
to license its technology.
In other news, Playboy Enterprises, Inc.,
entered into a multimedia venture with France-based men’s
lifestyle publisher 1633SA to start an adult Web site featuring
young men called Playboy.fr, which will be launched in March of
this year. The venture also includes a deal for Playboy to supply
content to cellular phones, which would allow users to download
such things as wallpaper images and streaming video. Playboy
currently operates many other international Web sites in Germany,
Taiwan, Brazil and the Netherlands.
Also, Harvard’s Committee on College Life
approved a plan to distribute and publish its first edition of an
adult-oriented student run magazine, which will be called the
"H Bomb." This magazine will be an official Harvard
publication and distributed during its May commencement
ceremonies. Although the magazine was approved by Harvard, it will
not necessarily be funded by the college. The magazine will
feature articles concerning sexual issues as well as naked
pictures of Harvard undergraduates, with the stipulation that no
naked pictures may be taken inside Harvard buildings. Now that is
what you call a Harvard education.
ARRESTED FOR WHAT?
Elizabeth Book, 42, of Ormond Beach, Florida,
planned a nationally publicized political protest for
"decriminalizing the female breast" for the last day of
Bike Week in Daytona Beach. She filed a federal lawsuit
seeking an emergency restraining order against the City of Daytona
to allow the protest to occur without arrests or harassment, but
the federal court denied the request becausesince it did not have
enough time to hear from the City.other side. The protest
went on as planned, but Book was arrested during the protest when
she bore her breasts, which violates Daytona’s public nudity
ordinance that states a "full and opaque covering" of
the nipple and areola is required, along with half of the outside
surface of the breast below the areola. She will take her
ordinance violation case to court, with the assistance of the
authorAuthor as defense counsel. Book faces a fine of $253 and the
possibility of one year in jail. Book will fight for her
First Amendment right to protest and said, "Do you think for
one minute I would pay them? Never!"
Also, a driver in New York was arrested for
breaking New York state law prohibiting watching television while
driving, as well as another law barring the display of sexually
explicit material in a public place. The driver was arrested after
cruising by police playing a DVD entitled "Chocolate
Foam," which was visible from his passenger-side sun visor
and on screens located in the car’s headrests. Depending on a
motorists’ location, he or she could face fines and even jail
time for the display of X-rated images. Regarding the penalties
involved, supporters of the state law believe, "Those
restrictions would apply if the content is located in a vehicle.
You have effectively moved beyond the privacy of your own
home," stated Jeff Matsuura, Director of the Law and
Technology Program at the University of Dayton.
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 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."
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