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Media Update – July 28, 2005

   1. An Online Artist Challenges Obscenity Law

   2. N.Y. Panel Refuses to Enjoin Anti-Pornography Statute

   3. Judges Uphold Communications Decency Act

   4. New York judges refuse to say Internet obscenity law is unconstitutional

   5. List of 43 newspapers that printed the AP article

   1. An Online Artist Challenges Obscenity Law

   2. N.Y. Panel Refuses to Enjoin Anti-Pornography Statute

   3. Judges Uphold Communications Decency Act

   4. New York judges refuse to say Internet obscenity law is unconstitutional

   5. List of 43 newspapers that printed the AP article

 

An Online Artist Challenges Obscenity Law

 

by Randy Kennedy

New York Times

July 28, 2005

 

In a landmark 1973 case, the United States Supreme Court defined obscenity in part as anything that "the average person, applying contemporary community standards" would find appealing only to prurient interests. But with the growth of the Internet, a difficult question has arisen: Which community's standards apply in cyberspace?

 

On Monday in a case brought against the government by a New York photographer, a panel of federal judges in Manhattan declined to answer that question, but the lawsuit could end up providing the Supreme Court with a chance to address the issue.

 

"I've had to self-censor images from my Web site, which is very, very disappointing to me," Ms. Nitke said in an interview. "It's impossible to know who's going to find what obscene, so everybody just has to make a guess at where the lines are."

 

"She has submitted objective evidence to substantiate the claim that she has been deterred from exercising her free-speech rights," the judges wrote, and this fear is based on a reasonable interpretation of the law.

 

But they ruled that she had not provided enough evidence about varying community standards and harm to free speech to prove that the law itself was unconstitutional.

 

[continued]

 

To read this entire article, go to:

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/28/arts/design/28obsc.html?oref=login

To respond, write to: letters@nytimes.com

 

N.Y. Panel Refuses to Enjoin Anti-Pornography Statute

 

by Mark Hamblett

New York Law Journal

July 27, 2005

 

A three-judge panel has rejected claims that a federal statute prohibiting the transmission of obscene material to a minor is unconstitutionally overbroad.

 

Refusing to enjoin the enforcement of the Communications Decency Act of 1996 (CDA), the panel found that the National Coalition for Sexual Freedom and a New York art photographer failed to present sufficient evidence on the "total amount of speech that is implicated by the CDA" and the amount of protected speech that is "inhibited" by the act.

 

Nor have they shown, the panel held, that different community standards subject them to a greater risk of prosecution than "traditional pornographers, who can control the dissemination of their own materials."

 

[continued]

 

To read this entire article, go to:

http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1122368711307

To respond, write to the editors at letters_to_the_editor@corp.law.com

 

Judges Uphold Communications Decency

 

by Brendan Coyne

New Standard

July 28, 2005

 

A three-judge panel Monday shot down a challenge to a law barring the transmission of a wide variety of speech about alterative sexual expression because of the perceived threat such materials pose to minors.

 

The plaintiff, Barbara Nitke, is an artist who photographs various sexual activities. Her suit challenged the Act as overly broad and unconstitutional, Court papers state. She also holds that the ban has deterred her from exercising her free speech rights.

 

Joining Nitke in challenging the law was the National Coalition for Sexual Freedom (NCSF), which bills itself as an "organization committed to creating a political, legal and social environment in the United States that advances equal rights of consenting adults who practice forms of alternative sexual expression," such as bondage, swinging and polyamory.

 

Following Monday's decision, NCSF attorney John Wirenius said, "artists and citizens who are sexual minorities are disproportionately censored by the government's ability to pick its own forum and standard for obscenity cases."

 

[continued]

 

To read this entire article, go to:

http://newstandardnews.net/content/?action=show_item&itemid=2160

To respond, write to the editors at ed-letters@newstandardnews.net

 

New York judges refuse to say Internet obscenity law is unconstitutional

 

by Larry Neumeister

Newsday

July 26, 2005

 

Obscenity provisions in the Communications Decency Act of 1996 had been challenged by Barbara Nitke, a photographer who specializes in pictures of sadomasochistic sexual behavior, and by the National Coalition for Sexual Freedom, a Baltimore-based advocacy organization.

 

They contended in a December 2001 lawsuit brought in U.S. District Court in Manhattan that the law was so broad and vague in its scope that it violated the First Amendment, making it impossible for them to publish to the Internet because they cannot control the forum.

 

A judge from the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and two district judges heard the facts of the case and issued a written decision saying the plaintiffs had provided insufficient evidence to prove the law was unconstitutional. The panel noted that evidence was offered to indicate at least 1.4 million Web sites mention bondage, discipline and sadomasochism, but the judges said that evidence was insufficient for them to decide how many sites might be considered obscene.

 

[continued]

 

To read this entire article, go to:

http://www.newsday.com/news/local/wire/newyork/ny-bc-ny–sexsites-obscenit0725jul25,0,6680266.story?coll=ny-region-apnewyork

To respond, write to: letters@newsday.com

 

(Webmaster Note: The above link appears to be invalid and I cannot find the article on the Newsday site.)

 

List of 43 newspapers that printed the AP article

***** Or, send a letter to your local paper that ran this AP article:

 

New York Times

Art Daily

Business Week

Forbes

WNBC

Akron Beacon Journal, OH

Boonville Daily News

Bradenton Herald

Canton Daily Ledger, IL

Carthage Press, MO

Ceres Courier, CA

Centre Daily Times, PA

Charlotte Observer, NC

Columbus Ledger-Enquirer, GA

Contra Costa Times, CA

Durant Daily Democrat, OK

First Amendment Center

Gainesville Sun, FL

Kansas City Star, MO

Kansas.com, KS

Kentucky.com, KY

Macon Telegraph, GA

Miami Herald, FL

MLive.com, MI

MSN Money

Myrtle Beach Sun News, SC

New Albany Tribune, IN

Phillyburbs.com, PA

Philly.com, PA

Pioneer Press, MN

Porterville Recorder, CA

Rapid City Journal, SD

Sacramento Bee, CA

San Jose Mercury News

Schaeffers Research, Ohio

Seattle Post Intelligencer

Tahlequah Daily Press, OK

Tallahassee.com, FL

Times  Picayune, LA

Tuscaloosa News, AL

Wilkes Barre Times-Leader, PA

Winnipeg Sun

WRAL.com, NC

 

 

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