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Delivering Weekly Censorship Updates to the Adult Entertainment Industry Vol. X, No. 30, August 3, 2007 - A Member Service of the Free Speech Coalition Stories without byline submitted by FSC contract writer, Scott Ross Contributing writers: Matt Gray and Dave Grimaldi X-Press Editor-in-Chief: Scott L. Lowther Special thanks to Cubik Corp. for formatting and Val Vizmanos for distribution Copyright 2007 Free Speech Coalition. Permission to reprint granted to FSC members; please give credit. FSC Launches 2257 Public Comment Campaign CANOGA PARK, CA - The Free Speech Coalition has launched a campaign to solicit adult industry participation during the public comment period for proposed changes to the 2257 record-keeping law. The Department of Justice released the proposed rules and regulations on July 12 and will accept input on the law through Sept. 10, 2007. Last week the FSC published a "2257 Guide for Public Comment" designed to educate the adult industry on how to respond during the public comment period. "Government regulations must not pose an undue burden on the industry they regulate," said Diane Duke, Free Speech Coalition Executive Director. "The Department of Justice has taken the position that the burden 2257 imposes on the industry is 'negligible'. It is up to us to prove otherwise." An FSC press release reminds adult industry members, "The current regulations are just proposals; therefore, they have no force of law at this time. They merely represent the current thinking of this administration. After the public comment period, the Department of Justice reviews comments and then issues final regulations with an effective date. The process typically takes many months. Unless the proposed regulations are radically changed in ways more favorable to the adult entertainment industry, FSC intends to seek a court order preventing implementation of the proposed "final" regulations after they are announced, but prior to the effective date." "Full industry participation in the public comment period is critical," Duke said. "Failure to speak up now is tantamount to agreeing with the DOJ's assessment of 2257's burden on the industry. If the Department of Justice disregards our input, at the very least, we will have built a solid foundation for our next phase of litigation." The "2257 Guide for Public Comment" has been posted on FSC's website along with answers to frequently asked questions about the proposed regs. Both documents are also available by calling FSC’s main office at 1-866-FSC-9373, when requested by FSC members. Indictment Reveals 3-Year Obscenity Investigation LOS ANGELES, CA - A man who allegedly sold bestiality and scat videos via an online retail site was recently indicted on of an eight counts related to the sell and transportation of the controversial movies, according to an AVN report. Ira Isaacs, who allegedly did business as Stolen Car Films and LA Media, is charged with: the importation or transportation of obscene material, the importation or transportation of obscene material for sale or distribution, and improper recordkeeping for material depicting sexual activity. In addition, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) is seeking criminal forfeiture of the allegedly obscene material, and all assets that derived from the sale of such material. The movies in question are: Gang Bang Horse "Pony Sex Game", Mako's First Time Scat, Hollywood Scat Amateurs No. 7, BAE 20 and Laurie's Toilet Show. With the exception of the first title, all of the movies in question involve both hardcore sex acts and excretion of one form or another, while Gang Bang Horse - "Pony Sex Game" appears to be a bestiality video of European origin. The "improper recordkeeping for material depicting sexual activity" charge stems from an alleged violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2257. Isaacs' attorney, Roger Jon Diamond, told AVN.com that he understood that his client's 2257 documentation were in fact in proper order, but the indictment charges that Hollywood Scat Amateurs No. 7 and Laurie's Toilet Show "did not have affixed thereto a statement describing where the required age documentation records for all performers depicted in the visual depictions of actual sexually explicit conduct could be located" - a labeling violation. The indictment indicates that the government has been targeting Isaacs at least since 2004, and it purchased its first video from him, Gang Bang Horse - 'Pony Sex Game', on May 11th of that year. Subsequent purchases of the "scat" videos were made on July 21, 2006, October 20, 2006 and October 26, 2006. Diamond is currently assessing what strategies he will employ to defend his client against the charges. http://avn.com/index_cache.php?Primary_Navigation=Articles&Action=View_Article&Content_ID=292897 Shreveport Couple Busted for Obscenity at Adult Theater SHREVEPORT, LA - A doctor and his wife were arrested on felony obscenity charges as the couple left an adult video theater earlier this month - but the couple insists they did nothing illegal. The charges against Timothy Reynolds and his wife Pamela stem from a July 13 raid on the Capri adult theater and retail store in Shreveport, where police allegedly observed patrons, including the Reynolds, masturbating. Two other men were arrested in the sweep. Last week Pam Reynolds told reporters that the police mistakenly pulled her and her husband aside as they were leaving the theatre. She denied any participation in the alleged sexual activity. "My wife and I were in a place we shouldn't have been," Tim Reynolds told reporters. "If this is smeared all over the [news], I might as well be guilty." The husband and wife have been offered the option of a pretrial diversion program for first-time, nonviolent offenders. If the couple successfully completes classes and counseling designed to deter future law-breaking behavior, the charges will be dropped. Tim and Pam Reynolds face fines of $1,000 - $2,500 each and up to three years behind bars if convicted of the felony offense. http://www.ktbs.com/viewnews.cfm?news_id=3266 &title=Doctor%20charged%20with%20obscenity%20at%20adult%20movie%20theater INFORMER Editorial Takes Stand against Ohio Strip Club Bill [Ed. Note: The Informer is a weekly periodical distributed in the Cincinnati area.] As Cleveland's SCENE magazine lamented, "only in Ohio!" That's how many felt when they first learned that a small group of self-appointed "guardians of public morality" --one so-called Citizens for Community Values (CCV) from (where else?) Cincinnati-- was brow-beating a bill through the Ohio Senate which would legislate that "non-alcohol adult establishments" (i.e., juice/ dance bars and adult book stores) CLOSE between Midnight and 6 a.m., a ridiculous "no touch" rule that could result in jail sentences of up to 30-days for customers who violate said provision, and other injunctions aimed at driving the adult entertainment industry across the state OUT OF BUSINESS (in fact, the CCV's openly stated intention behind the bill). THE BAD NEWS: Despite near-universal contempt for the bill and its sponsors (as "idiotic") from the press and others across the state, the bill is set to become law on September 4th. THE GOOD NEWS: An effort is now underway by dancers, club owners, and their patrons, free speech activists, and defenders of the adult industry and dance clubs for their place in a lively nightlife scene, to prevent the bill from becoming law on September 4th, through a petition which, rather, would put the provisions of the bill up for a vote in the November elections. The petition to put the bill on the ballot will require 241,000 signatures. The campaign to overturn the law has a new website: www.citizensforcommunitystandards.org Come visit the site and find out how you can sign the petition or make a donation. The INFORMER supports this effort to keep our already economically devastated state from losing yet another industry. We encourage readers to add their names to the petition at the table at Nu Philly Popular & Adult Video (a popular INFORMER distribution point), open 24 hours at 1280 West High Ave. in New Philadelphia (petition tables can be found at other adult establishments around the area, as well). Call Nu Phila Video at (330) 339-4461 for how you can get further involved in the petition effort. Stop the Strip Club Bill! -- The Informer SPEAK NO EVIL... By FSC's team of dedicated federal lobbyists Congress is feverishly trying to pass as much legislation as possible before both the House and Senate adjourn for the month of August (This happens every year. It's an opportunity for Congressmen and Senators to spend a decent chunk of time away from Washington and in their respective districts with the people who got them elected). Before they bolt out of here, however, there's an interesting piece of legislation that could potentially shake-up the broadcasting world. House Energy and Commerce Committee member Charles "Chip" Pickering (R-MS), a vocal proponent of stricter content regulations, is poised to introduce a bill that will "reaffirm the FCC's authority to penalize broadcasters for fleeting utterances of profanity or unscripted airings of sexually explicit images during live programming". Rep. Pickering's bill will mirror Democratic Senator Jay Rockefeller's broadcast indecency bill, which would require the FCC, in enforcing its regulations concerning the broadcast of indecent programming, to maintain a policy that a single word or image may be considered indecent (Rockefeller's bill was approved by the Senate Commerce Committee on July 19th). A spokesman for Pickering said the congressman is "...working with some Democrats, hoping this will be a bipartisan, pro-family piece of legislation". The Parents Television Council and other conservative interest groups hope that Pickering introduces his bill asap, so that hearings may be held and attention raised. We'll be watching. Email Xpress@freespeechcoalition.com for more information. Because of 2257 litigation, it's critical that we have your company's information complete in our database. Are you SURE your company's information is complete? Email UpdateInfo@FreeSpeechCoalition.com to update your company's information now. NOTE: The data we're tracking, related to 2257, has changed. Please update NOW. AUGUST 3-5 - Internext, Hollywood, FL AUGUST 27-30 - Annual Gentlemen's Club Owners Expo, Las Vegas, NV AUGUST 27-30 - STOREROTICA Convention and Tradeshow, Las Vegas, NV SEPT 21-23 - ADULTCON, Los Angeles Convention Center Believe one who has proved it. Believe an expert. -- Virgil, Aeneid, Roman epic poet (70 BC - 19 BC) Character - the willingness to accept responsibility for one's own life - is the source from which self-respect springs. -- Joan Didion (1934 - )
Delivering Weekly Censorship Updates to the Adult Entertainment Industry Vol. X, No. 31, August 10, 2007 - A Member Service of the Free Speech Coalition Stories without byline submitted by FSC contract writer, Scott Ross Contributing writers: Matt Gray and Dave Grimaldi X-Press Editor-in-Chief: Scott L. Lowther Special thanks to Cubik Corp. for formatting and Val Vizmanos for distribution Copyright 2007 Free Speech Coalition. Permission to reprint granted to FSC members; please give credit. Please support our sponsors by selecting the logos above. Industry Mourns Death of Lenny Friedlander, Former FSC President SYLMAR, CA - Lenny Friedlander, 50, owner of New Beginnings and a founder and former president of The Free Speech Coalition, passed away last Sunday. Friedlander began his career in the adult industry in 1978 working for Lanny Cohen at Marlan Distributors and went on to become the company's head of sales before launching New Beginnings, a distribution company. Friedlander served as president of the FSC for six years, and maintained an active role within the organization after he passed its stewardship on to others. Attorney Jeffrey Douglas spoke of Friedlander's dedication to the adult industry and his enormous influence on many friends and colleagues. "The loss is just incalcuable," Douglas told AVN. "Lenny is irreplaceable in every capacity; as a leader of the industry, as a groundbreaking entrepreneur, but most deeply as a friend. I've never known anyone like him. The size of his heart, his extraordinary mind and his ability to inspire are unique. His dedication to the industry and therefore to the Free Speech Coalition was without limitations. He was the most dedicated fundraiser; he understood the importance of the industry uniting, and he made enormous personal sacrifices to keep FSC going, to marshal support... FSC could not be where it is today but for him. He was president for many years and he recruited and inspired scores and scores of people to be involved through their support - essentially, he was personally responsible for the financial health of the organization for many, many years." "Amongst a lot of great memories I have were the times spent on the Free Speech Coalition board with Lenny," said AVN President Paul Fishbein. "Especially the crazy calls late at night at home, when Lenny would come upon a new idea about fighting government suppression. A lot of people don't know what a great president of Free Speech he was, and how he really donated most of his business time raising money and awareness." Friedlander is survived by his wife, son and two daughters. http://avn.com/index_cache.php?Primary_Navigation=Articles&Action=View_Article&Content_ID=293145 FSC Executive Director's Note: Donations in Memory of Lenny Friedlander Directed to the Free Speech Coalition New Beginnings has received numerous calls asking for suggestions of how to contribute in memory of Lenny Friedlander. Lenny was President of the Free Speech Coalition for six years and was an avid supporter. New Beginnings is suggesting that donations be made to the Free Speech Coalition. The Free Speech Coalition will set up a Lenny Friedlander Memorial Fund. Donations to the fund will be acknowledged by a note to the family as well as a note of receipt to the person or company making the donation. A California memorial service for Lenny will be planned within the next few weeks. Thank you for your support of FSC and our important mission. Together, we are making a difference. Judge Denies Motion to Dismiss Extreme Associates Case PITTSBURGH, PA - U.S. District Judge Gary Lancaster has denied a second motion to dismiss the Extreme Associates obscenity case but agreed to a pretrial hearing on the application of the Miller test. Lancaster had previously dismissed the obscenity case against Extreme Associates on the basis of defense arguments that relied heavily upon the Supreme Court's consensual sodomy case, Lawrence v. Texas, to suggest that obscenity laws were unconstitutional. The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the dismissal and reinstated the charges. After the dismissal was overturned, Extreme Associates attorneys H. Louis Sirkin and Jennifer M. Kinsley filed a second motion for dismissal, arguing that federal obscenity statutes are unconstitutional and do not apply to the Internet, arguments Lancaster brushed aside in his July 30 ruling. "The criminal obscenity statutes at issue, as well as the Miller test, have repeatedly been deemed constitutional," Lancaster wrote in his order. Lancaster wrote that the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in overturning his prior dismissal of the case, held that "even if the statutes, and applicable standards, have been called into question due to subsequent events, if there is going to be a change in the law it must come from the top down, not from the bottom up." As an alternative to dismissal of the case, Sirkin and Kinsley moved for a pretrial ruling regarding how the Miller obscenity test would be applied to the case. The defense maintains that the Miller test's reliance on "community standards" is not viable in when the material in question is distributed via the Internet. "Indeed, what is meant by 'community standards' and 'as a whole' in relation to materials transported via the Internet are centrally important to the trial of this matter," Lancaster wrote. "These factors will affect the court's ruling on relevant evidentiary issues and the admissibility of evidence, as well as the drafting of jury instructions and perhaps even jury selection." Kinsley told XBIZ that Lancaster simply "couldn't go to the extent of throwing the whole case out like he did last time [because] there is no case that has answered the specific questions" raised in the latest motion to dismiss. Kinsley said that the upcoming hearing on the question of how the Miller test will be applied could prove "very critical as to what the jury would see" presented as evidence in the case. "The hearing will address what the jury can consider as part of their 'community,'" Kinsley said. Kinsley added that even though some of the material indicted as obscene in the case came in the form of DVDs and not online files, that fact "still leaves a fundamental question of 'community,' because [investigators] ordered the DVDs via the Internet." Kinsley told XBIZ that a status hearing will be held on Aug. 17 to pick a date for the pretrial hearing concerning the application of the Miller test in the case. "There's still a long road to go even before we reach a trial," Kinsley said. http://xbiz.com/news/82732 Five Star/JM Obscenity Trial To Proceed CINCINNATI, OH - According to attorney Jennifer Kinsley, who along with partner H. Louis Sirkin represents JM Productions in a federal obscenity case filed in the District of Arizona, all of the defense motions to dismiss the case have now been denied by the trial judge, and the case will proceed to trial on Oct. 16. They denied Dick Hertzberg's motion to dismiss based on the fact that Castle Books was selling the same titles, and they dismissed motions filed by Jeffrey [Douglas], Al [Gelbard] and ourselves that were basically the same as the Lawrence motions we filed in Extreme," said Kinsley. Kinsley was referring to the motion based on the Supreme Court's consensual sodomy case, Lawrence v. Texas, that she and her partner had filed on behalf of Extreme Associates and its owners in their federal obscenity case in the Western District of Pennsylvania. That motion found favor with Judge Gary Lancaster, who dismissed all charges. Those charges, however, were reinstated by the Third Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals. "The judge just issued a one-sentence order saying that all our motions were denied, and she'll probably follow that up with an opinion in the near future," Kinsley said. "We still have some jury issues under discussion, but unless something unforeseen occurs, trial will start on Oct. 16." http://avn.com/index_cache.php?Primary_Navigation=Articles&Action=View_Article&Content_ID=293148 Conservatives Renew Call for Marriott to Remove Adult Entertainment from Hotels NEW YORK, NY - Morality in Media is the latest group of social conservatives to call on Marriott International Inc. to stop offering adult entertainment in their hotel rooms. Robert Peters, president of Morality in Media, reportedly found dozens of titles that promised "hard-core action" during a stay at a Marriott hotel. "I personally have a boycott against Marriott and any of the bigger chains that carry this pornography," Peters told Family News in Focus. "When I have a choice, I choose not to stay at a hotel that distributes pornography." In a letter to the CEO of Marriott that was released to Citizinlink.com, a website operated by Focus on Family, Peters wrote, "It is my earnest hope...you will do the right thing for your family, church and nation." The candidacy of Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney, who runs on a "family values" platform, has reignited attempts by social conservatives to rid hotels of adult entertainment. Romney, a former board member of the hotel chain, has been charged with hypocrisy by a number of organizations in recent weeks for not stopping Marriott from carrying adult entertainment while on the chain's board. Citizens for Community Values, the Alliance Defense Fund, and Focus on Family are other organizations calling for Marriott to stop offering adult entertainment. http://www.citizenlink.org/content/A000005198.cfm Screaming O Develops Fundraising Program for FSC CANOGA PARK, CA - Adult toy manufacturer, The Screaming O, announced last week that it will donate in $20 and $30 dollar increments from the sale of its new in-store counter and free-standing P.O.P. display units to the Free Speech Coalition (FSC). The fundraiser also benefits the Ohio Citizens for Community Standards (CCS), in support of the hotly debated SB-16 initiative. The company will make each donation in the name of the retailer purchasing the products. "We support the rights of adults to be adults" said Keith Caggiano, co-owner of The Screaming O/Bushman Products. "We believe this program will inspire other companies to follow suit in protecting adult rights in America." The Screaming O will include an FSC donation certificate in every fully-stocked P.O.P display. Retailers just need to complete the form and fax it to FSC. This serves as a confirmation that the donation will be made in each participating retailer's name. The certificate also offers the opportunity for the retailer to match and/or add to the company's donation in an effort to unite the national adult novelty retailers. "We want to do more than just donate," said Justin Ross, Caggiano's partner. "We are making the donation in the retailers' name so they can feel like they are part of the cause and even motivate people that may not have gotten around to participating." Ross continues that Bushman Products will also support the Lion's Den fund raising efforts with The Screaming O product for promotions and giveaways. "We thank the folks at Screaming O for their innovative and generous donation program and commend them for their leadership," said Diane Duke, Free Speech Coalition Executive Director. "When businesses like Screaming O look outside their own business models to help the industry, we all benefit." Those interested in participating in The Screaming O Retailer Donation Program can contact your adult novelty product distributor or e-mail mail@thescreamingo.com. Knoxville Pays $1.5M to Settle Adult Store Suit KNOXVILLE, TN - City officials have agreed to pay $1.5 million to settle a longstanding lawsuit filed by a video rental store that closed in 2001, ending a legal fight over an adult business ordinance that the Tennessee Supreme Court deemed "unconstitutionally vague" in 2005. The unconstitutional ordinance, which was written in 1979, outlawed stores with "significant" and "substantial" portions of sexually explicit inventory from locating within 1,000 feet of neighborhoods, recreational facilities and businesses selling alcohol. Fantasy Video, which stocked approximately 3,500 sexually explicit rental videos in a back room in addition to mainstream videos offered in the front of the store, was issued dozens of citations by the Knoxville Police Department under the old ordinance. An attempt by the store to comply with the ordinance by reducing its adult inventory was disregarded as a sham by a county chancellor, who granted the city an injunction against the store's owners. Fantasy Video eventually lost its lease and shut its doors in 2001. The state Court of Appeals reversed the injunction in 2004 and sent it back to Chancery Court for a determination of any damages due. The state Supreme Court affirmed the ruling the next year, and the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the city's final appeal in December 2005. The unconstitutional ordinance was replaced by a new one in 2005 that uses a 35 percent benchmark regarding the amount of merchandise, its monetary value, the interior floor space used for its display or the revenues gained by its sale. The city has also passed a second new ordinance related to adult businesses, one that imposes licensing requirements for employees of adult-oriented businesses in the city. The store's attorneys were reportedly prepared to ask for about $3.5 million in damages and fees. The city's new ordinance requiring employee licenses has led to three separate lawsuits filed on behalf of seven adult businesses and two individual performers. http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2007/aug/04/15msettlesstorecity-suit/ How Ideas Become Laws By Matt Gray I was six years old when I was introduced to the process of making laws. A young boy in the next grade was most unfortunately run over by a garbage truck that was in the process of backing up, but didn't see the youth. That tragedy hit the news and soon legislation was introduced (and passed), to require backup alarms to be equipped on all garbage trucks. Whether the proposed laws come in response to harming a child, a copycat Los Angeles bank robbery mirroring the movie "Heat" (Michael Mann, Warner Home Videos, 1995), some swindler, or other newsworthy event, the common underlying thread of motivation is responding to a need through reactive legislation. But there are plenty of ideas which don't involve tragic events, often ending up becoming new laws. How and why is worth exploring, since, regardless of whether it involves local, state, or federal government, the process is more or less the same. With some variation from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, local governments typically create laws known as ordinances. State agencies create regulations. Legislatures create laws. And, the people create initiatives for the ballot. The most basic summary of the lawmaking process is that someone has an idea, and then takes action to plug that idea into whatever established process there is, which in turn either leads to making a new rule, or changes an existing one. It is often useful to look at the existing law you want to change, and then to look at other jurisdictions to see how they handle the same problem or deficiency. For example, as a business professional you work hard to comply with all laws and even take extra precautions to make sure only the right people come to work for you. However, despite all of this goodwill and hard work, there are still some unscrupulous individuals who use fake documentation as a means of tricking their way into your business. Whether for money or fame, their motivations vary. But in the end, their selfish and reckless behavior may cost you personally and professionally — even though you did absolutely everything you could to in good faith prevent such an event. Sometimes the crook just gets lucky. So it becomes clear to you that existing law just doesn't do enough to protect you from these individuals, and these individuals from themselves. Your next step would be to write a summary of the problem and a proposed solution, as well as other supporting information such as anticipated support or opposition groups. Then you would begin to shop that proposal around to your elected officials to see if they will consider introducing that idea as part of their legislative package. If it seems overly simplified, then you are right. But it does provide an overview of the process. Additional obstacles come in the form of legislative restrictions for elected officials — where they are limited on the number of pieces of legislation they can introduce. Of course, this means you are now in competition with tens of thousands of other special interests who believe their legislative proposal is every bit as deserving as yours. As a result, your plea must be both compelling, concise, and clear — and it doesn't hurt to have long ago established a relationship with the elected official to help you stand out from the crowd. This is why such events as the annual Free Speech Lobbying Days, and involvement in campaigns is so important. This is why it is so important for FSC to maintain a lobbying presence in California (where a large percentage of the adult entertainment industry operates) and at the Federal level. Often, it's less about what we do in the moment around a specific bill that leads to positive results. More often, it's about having relationships in place in order to be heard when specific, damaging legislation is introduced, as we rally support for our cause through those ongoing relationships. ============================================================== Matt Gray is a senior lobbyist for Capital Alliance, a Sacramento based lobbying and government strategies firm. He can be reached at 916-444-5551, or by e-mail: matt@thecapitalalliance.com Email Xpress@freespeechcoalition.com for more information. Because of 2257 litigation, it's critical that we have your company's information complete in our database. Are you SURE your company's information is complete? Email UpdateInfo@FreeSpeechCoalition.com to update your company's information now. NOTE: The data we're tracking, related to 2257, has changed. Please update NOW. AUGUST 27-30 - Annual Gentlemen's Club Owners Expo, Las Vegas, NV AUGUST 27-30 - STOREROTICA Convention and Tradeshow, Las Vegas, NV SEPT 21-23 - ADULTCON, Los Angeles Convention Center I don't know the key to success, but the key to failure is trying to please everybody. -- Bill Cosby The very essence of leadership is that you have to have vision. You can't blow an uncertain trumpet. -- Theodore M. Hesburgh If you wish to be removed from our distribution list, please reply and type "Unsubscribe" into the Subject area.
Delivering Weekly Censorship Updates to the Adult Entertainment Industry Vol. X, No. 33, August 24, 2007 - A Member Service of the Free Speech Coalition Stories without byline submitted by FSC contract writer, Scott Ross Contributing writers: Matt Gray and Dave Grimaldi Copyright 2007 Free Speech Coalition. Permission to reprint granted to FSC members; please give credit. Thank you for your support of FSC and our important mission. Together, we are making a difference. Miami Officials Vote to Close Flava Works House MIAMI, FL - In a 5-2 vote, Miami's Code Enforcement Board ruled last week that Flava Works is running an adult business illegally because it is based in an area that is zoned for residential use. The studio has been found guilty of two violations: operating an adult business in a residential area and operating a business in a residential area. Flava Works has been instructed to stop all operations of its internet site, CocoDorm.com. CocoDorm.com pays young men $1,200 plus room and board to live in the the Miami residence for a month and have sex with each other. A charge that Philip Bleicher, head of Flava Works, was running an illegal rooming house was dismissed. Bleicher's attorney, James Benjamin, argued that CocoDorm was not part of the adult business, citing Tampa's unsuccessful attempt to shutdown VoyeurDorm.com under similar circumstances. He pointed out that business transactions were not carried out at the home in question. Benjamin intends to file an appeal, saying to The Miami Herald, "But we're not sure where we're going to file the appeal yet. We're not going to put our tail between our legs and go away. The activity is protected by the First Amendment." Queerty.com reports that Bleicher is working on a lawsuit against the city of Miami. In a note over at the website in question, Cocodorm.com, Bleicher writes: "With the Code Enforcement Board's ruling, starting today the city will fine us up to $500 per day for each day we remain open. We are filing an emergency motion in federal court to block the city's ruling citing VoyeurDorm.com v. City of Tampa and sue the City of Miami." http://avn.com/index.cfm?objectID=70F9F7ED-9499-3CD3- D0B31DC2A15B0910&articleID=6BDFC976-C4A0-1474-6A826BFD0B70F372 Adult Retailer in Violation of Zoning Ordinances, Officials Say WILMINGTON, NC - A local adult novelty store that opened just last week may be forced to close within a month for zoning violations, according to a report in the Wilmington Star News. Guilty Pleasures originally submitted a zoning plan to be a warehouse-only establishment, which permitted only 50-square-feet of retail space. The company's business license application had indicated that business would be conducted mainly through online or catalog sales. When city code enforcement officials visited the store last week, they allegedly found the business had nearly 6,000 square feet of retail space. In addition, the code enforcement officials found that two signs advertising Guilty Pleasures were in violation of city ordinances. The signs have already been removed. The store must comply with its license requirements within 30 days, although it can appeal the matter. http://www.wilmingtonstar.com/article/20070821/NEWS/708210361/1004 Two NYC Lawsuits Claim Damages from Association with Adult Content Production NEW YORK - Two lawsuits filed in Manhattan this month appear to be founded upon the notion that merely being associated with the production of adult content is damaging to the reputation and professional future of anyone accused of such an association. Last week, it was announced that a physical therapist named Marty Jaramillo had filed suit in Manhattan Supreme Court against the upscale spa Essential Therapy, alleging that the spa's owner, Carlos Araque, had rented out his space for swingers parties and porn video shoots, damaging Jaramillo's reputation in the process. In another lawsuit filed in Manhattan Supreme Court, filmmaker Nesya Shapiro Blue is suing Amazon.com because the company's online movie database, IMDB.com, incorrectly identified her as the director of two adult films, "Fantasy in Blue" and "Dreams of Candace Heart." The lawsuits underscore how any association with the production of adult content carries a strong negative connotation for much of American society, despite the much discussed mainstreaming of adult entertainment in recent years. Although documents from the case have not been added to the online access system maintained by the New York court system, according to various New York-based media sources, Jaramillo is seeking $52,000 in direct damages and $500,000 in punitive damages from Essential Therapy and Araque. According to Jaramillo's lawsuit, he originally sublet a space from Araque because Araque "represented that he was a duly licensed massage therapist, that his reputation and that of Essential was stellar," and that being associated with the spa would be good for Jaramillo's physical therapy business. According to the lawsuit, Jaramillo soon learned that the spa was being rented out for "sex swing parties and adult pornographic photo/film shoots." Jaramillo moved out of his space at Essential in April, according to the Post. His attorney said that Jaramillo "never would have gone into the space in the first place had he been aware of any of the shenanigans going on." Araque and his attorney both denied the allegations, and Araque said that Jaramillo merely is trying to get out of paying penalties for breaking his lease. "He's saying we have illegal sex parties and all this stuff, which isn't true," Araque said. "We rented [the spa] out to one movie. It had nothing to do with pornography." In addition to the alleged swinger events, Araque was charged with a felony in connection to the incident, for giving massages without a proper license. Sarita Kedia, an attorney for Araque, called the allegations "absolutely false" and said that Araque "runs a perfectly legitimate spa." In the case naming Amazon.com as a defendant, Nesya Shapiro Blue claims that the inaccurate listing on IMDB.com has cost her thousands in business opportunities and has "severely tarnished" her reputation. As a result of that tarnishing, Blue is seeking $2.15 million in damages in her lawsuit. "Fantasy in Blue" and "Dreams of Candace Heart," both 1991 titles, were directed by another woman surnamed Blue - adult director Nancy Blue. Nesya Blue, on the other hand, once worked on a documentary entitled "Against Pornography," as well as the children's movie "Toby the Tug." http://xbiz.com/news/83313 Feds Pay $80,000 Over Anti-Bush T-Shirts CHARLESTON, W. Va - The federal government agreed last week to pay $80,000 to a Texas couple arrested for wearing T-shirts with anti-Bush slogans at a 2004 political event in Charleston. Jeff and Nicole Rank attended President George Bush's Fourth of July rally at the state Capitol, where Bush gave a speech. The couple wearing homemade T-shirts with a red circle with a bar through it over the word "Bush." On the back, hers read "Love America, Hate Bush" and his read "Regime Change Starts At Home." The Ranks were asked to remove their shirts or leave by event staff, but refused to comply. "We tried to explain to them that it was well within our right to stand there and wear these T-shirts, just as people around us had the right to wear pro-Bush and Cheney T-shirts," Jeff Rank told the Charleston Gazette. When it became clear that they were going to be ejected, they sat down and made the officers handcuff them, Rank said, because they wanted it clear that they were being involuntarily removed. They were arrested and charged with trespassing, though those charges were later dropped by the city of Charleston. City officials later apologized for the arrest. According to the Gazette, the Ranks were in West Virginia in 2004 because Nicole Rank was working there as an environmental liaison officer with the Federal Emergency Management Agency. In addition to the trespassing charges, Nicole Rank lost her job at FEMA. "I was told that my actions had compromised FEMA's mission in West Virginia and I was being relieved from duty," she told the Gazette. A White House spokesperson said the settlement was not an admission of wrongdoing. http://wvgazette.com/section/News/2007081628?pt=0 How Ideas Become Laws By Matt Gray I was six years old when I was introduced to the process of making laws. A young boy in the next grade was most unfortunately run over by a garbage truck that was in the process of backing up, but didn't see the youth. That tragedy hit the news and soon legislation was introduced (and passed), to require backup alarms to be equipped on all garbage trucks. Whether the proposed laws come in response to harming a child, a copycat Los Angeles bank robbery mirroring the movie "Heat" (Michael Mann, Warner Home Videos, 1995), some swindler, or other newsworthy event, the common underlying thread of motivation is responding to a need through reactive legislation. But there are plenty of ideas which don't involve tragic events, often ending up becoming new laws. How and why is worth exploring, since, regardless of whether it involves local, state, or federal government, the process is more or less the same. With some variation from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, local governments typically create laws known as ordinances. State agencies create regulations. Legislatures create laws. And, the people create initiatives for the ballot. The most basic summary of the lawmaking process is that someone has an idea, and then takes action to plug that idea into whatever established process there is, which in turn either leads to making a new rule, or changes an existing one. It is often useful to look at the existing law you want to change, and then to look at other jurisdictions to see how they handle the same problem or deficiency. For example, as a business professional you work hard to comply with all laws and even take extra precautions to make sure only the right people come to work for you. However, despite all of this goodwill and hard work, there are still some unscrupulous individuals who use fake documentation as a means of tricking their way into your business. Whether for money or fame, their motivations vary. But in the end, their selfish and reckless behavior may cost you personally and professionally - even though you did absolutely everything you could to in good faith prevent such an event. Sometimes the crook just gets lucky. So it becomes clear to you that existing law just doesn't do enough to protect you from these individuals, and these individuals from themselves. Your next step would be to write a summary of the problem and a proposed solution, as well as other supporting information such as anticipated support or opposition groups. Then you would begin to shop that proposal around to your elected officials to see if they will consider introducing that idea as part of their legislative package. If it seems overly simplified, then you are right. But it does provide an overview of the process. Additional obstacles come in the form of legislative restrictions for elected officials - where they are limited on the number of pieces of legislation they can introduce. Of course, this means you are now in competition with tens of thousands of other special interests who believe their legislative proposal is every bit as deserving as yours. As a result, your plea must be both compelling, concise, and clear - and it doesn't hurt to have long ago established a relationship with the elected official to help you stand out from the crowd. This is why such events as the annual Free Speech Lobbying Days, and involvement in campaigns is so important. This is why it is so important for FSC to maintain a lobbying presence in California (where a large percentage of the adult entertainment industry operates) and at the Federal level. Often, it's less about what we do in the moment around a specific bill that leads to positive results. More often, it's about having relationships in place in order to be heard when specific, damaging legislation is introduced, as we rally support for our cause through those ongoing relationships.
Delivering Weekly Censorship Updates to the Adult Entertainment Industry Vol. X, No. 20, May 25, 2007 - A Member Service of the Free Speech Coalition Free Speech X-press is researched and edited by Scott Ross. Copyright 2007 Free Speech Coalition. Permission to reprint granted to FSC members; please give credit. This X-press in brought to you by our exclusive sponsors Bellenjoy & ARS. Please support our sponsors by selecting the logos above. Anti-porn Campaigners Petitions Seeking Grand Jury Investigations in Kansas and Missouri KANSAS CITY, KS . - Last week leaders of local churches in six counties in both Kansas and Missouri turned in petitions requesting grand jury investigations of adult businesses in their communities for the "promotion of obscenity." A total of 32 businesses, including strip clubs, adult retailers, and video rental stores, were targeted. "It went very well," Phillip Cosby, executive director of the Kansas City chapter of the National Coalition for the Protection of Children & Families (NCPCF), the organization that spearheaded the petition drive, told XBIZ. "There was a meeting that culminated the delivery of a little over 20,000 signatures of registered voters in the six-county area. It was fairly dramatic to hit six counties in the same day. The prosecutors received the petitions well. We have had good conversations with them about the Missouri and Kansas obscenity statutes. We want the community standards question allowed and asked in the Kansas City area" The petitions will likely result in grand jury investigations for at least the businesses targeted in Kansas, where state law allows citizens to call for grand jury investigations. Missouri does not have a similar mechanism for the pubic to request a grand jury, but prosecutors who received the petitions in question in Missouri released a joint statement last Thursday saying they were alerting the businesses targeted to be aware of the state's obscenity law. "We would hope that the prosecutors on the Missouri side are moved to listen to those people in Missouri that did sign, asking that the obscenity statutes be enforced. But it is up to their discretion," Cosby told XBIZ. Cosby first rose to prominence in the national anti-porn movement due to his success in previously organizing similar petition drives that led to grand jury investigations in Kansas. http://xbiz.com/news_piece.php?id=23126 Attorney Fights Houston Anti-Adult Ordinance HOUSTON - Adult businesses in Houston face an impending crackdown under the city's decade-old adult business ordinance, which was recently given district court approval after a remand from the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. But AVN.com reports the battle of the controversial ordinance is not yet over. First Amendment attorney John Weston, who represents two of the largest adult cabarets in the city, continues to brand the ordinance unconstitutional, and has filed a motion with the Fifth Circuit for a stay of enforcement and/or an injunction against enforcement pending appeal that he believes he will be granted. "Nothing is over," Weston declared. "We think there are very, very major issues to be raised, including some matters that the district court just rendered decisions on that are the only ones in the history of the country that have ever been rendered in this fashion, and in the Fifth Circuit, the standard for getting a stay is basically, you just have to show that there are serious questions that you're raising, that the balance of hardships tips in favor of the party asking for relief, and that there's no serious hardship that would result to the other side in granting the motion." "The city withheld enforcement while the case was still at the district court level," Weston explained, "because in addition to filing a motion for injunction or stay pending appeal, we also filed a motion to alter or amend the judgment, which has the effect of staying the judgment, and the judge then ultimately denied both motions simultaneously, which had the effect of leaving us essentially naked and subject to enforcement. The city has taken the position, in a letter that it wrote to us, saying that it opposed our motion for injunction or stays pending appeal, and would, unless stayed by the court, enforce. And the city is at least taking that position in public statements, and I assume that the city will proceed against one or more businesses at this time." Whether the city actually does so will depend on how quickly the Fifth Circuit acts on Weston's motion, which is likely to be joined or adopted by a number of the other 193 individuals and businesses which originally sued the city over this ordinance back in 1997. Part of the intricacy of this fight is that Houston doesn't actually have zones or zoning laws, though the state has allowed the city to enact various ordinances which have effects very similar to the zoning ordinances found in other jurisdictions. However, one difficulty that the lack of zones - residential, commercial, and industrial, etc. - has created for both sides of this conflict is how to define the areas where the city says it will allow adult businesses to locate. The city "solved" that problem by creating what it called "residential circles," which are defined as any area of the city with a 1,000 foot radius within which 75% or more of the buildings are residences. Unfortunately, the city has never bothered to map out just where those "residential circles" are located. "The trial court relied on a novel theory that the existence of adequate 'alternative sites' can be proven solely by a city council's intent and reasonable belief, and that it is not necessary for a city to prove the existence of such sites in court," Weston's motion argues. No other court in the nation has embraced that proposition. There have now been countless legal challenges to adult zoning ordinances based on their failure to provide an adequate number of alternative relocation sites. "This is the sort of thing that's absolutely empirically verifiable," Weston stated. "It doesn't matter whether the city thought there were adequate alternative sites, even if the information on which they relied was reasonable. The point is whether in fact there are. And the ordinance is not constitutional unless it provides adequate sites. That's historic, as far back as Renton v. Playtime Theatres, [a seminal adult zoning case]." Weston's motion makes the point that no matter how the Fifth Circuit decides any of the issues he's raised, "this case is of such significance that it is inevitable that either the City or appellants will seek further review of any adverse ruling" because of the "unusually large number of significant constitutional issues." Therefore, he argues, the appeals court should maintain the status quo regarding adult businesses and restrain the city from enforcing its ordinance. "As we've pointed out, 'Look, the kinds of things that you talk about here that you think are the terrible things, if they were so bad, how come you weren't enforcing the ordinance against all the people that weren't protected by the [prior] injunction for the last 10 years? And more importantly, you've got all the laws you need. If you're saying you're concerned about prostitution, Texas has some very strong anti-prostitution laws.' Basically, any problem they claim that this ordinance will correct, they already have the power to deal with without it." The Fifth Circuit has no deadline by which it must consider Weston's motion, and as noted above, it took six years to issue its ruling on the original summary judgment. But the sooner it does act, the sooner Houston can enforce whatever legitimate rules are left to it ... and the sooner adult businesses can carry on without the cloud of impending disaster hanging over their heads. http://avn.com/index_cache.php?Primary_Navigation=Articles&Action=View_Article&Content_ID=289130 9th Circuit Ruling Could Affect Adult Websites PASADENA, CA. - A recent decision by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals opens the possibility that adult matchmaking websites are in danger of losing their "safe-harbor" protections provided by the Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), according to an AVN.com report. In a 2-1 ruling, the 9th Circuit ruled that Roommates.com did not qualify for similar safe-harbor protections provided by the Communications Decency Act (CDA) failed because the website set out to collect information in a manner that helped shape the content. The ruling can be interpreted to mean that safe-harbor protections do not apply to content published on a website by people other than the site's owner. Roommates.com created a computer program that filtered applicants for co-habitation reasons. Roommate seekers listed characteristics about themselves and what preferences they sought in a potential roommate. In the Roommates.com registration process, the website asked questions about a user's gender, sexual orientation, and number of children. The Fair Housing Councils of San Fernando Valley and San Diego sued Roommates.com, alleging that by asking for certain roommate information, the company violated the Fair Housing Act by assisting landlords in discriminating against certain prospective tenants. In its defense, Roommates.com countered the Fair Housing Councils' assertion by stating the lawsuit was ineffective as to Roommates.com, because the online company was protected by the CDA Safe Harbor provision. A lower court initially agreed with Roommates.com's defense and entered a judgment stating the online company could not be sued based on CDA section 230 Safe Harbor immunity. The Fair Housing Councils appealed the case to the three-judge 9th Circuit Panel. In a divided ruling, Judge Alex Kozinski wrote in his majority opinion that, "if it [a website] is responsible in whole or in part, for creating or developing the information, it becomes a content provider and not entitled to CDA immunity." So, is the 9th Circuit's present decision in the Roommates.com case a foreshadowing of future legal actions against online adult dating websites, ones in which it will be argued that the DMCA Safe Harbor does not apply? Perhaps. Adultfriendfinder.com, Alt.com, and even traditional dating sites like Harmony.com and Match.com always are looking for creative ways to differentiate people for matchmaking purposes. The questions they ask certainly appear to constitute the creation of content applying the judicial logic in Roommates.com decision. One notable attorney took issue with the Roommates.com ruling. "While I understand the court's reasoning regarding the 'closed ended' questions barring Roommates from Section 230 immunity, I have a real struggle with being on that slippery slope to begin with," said Seattle-based attorney Robert S. Apgood. "Why can't we be open to the use of selection criteria when choosing with whom we wish to live? Doesn't Roommates.com facilitate a more efficient vehicle for that selection?" The ability to choose a roommate is quite similar to choosing a mate. "The selection of a mate [is] tantamount to the selection of with whom one lives." Apgood added. "How very thin is the line between selecting a date and selecting a mate?" This isn't to say that the adult matchmaking sites are in imminent peril of losing their safe-harbor protections. In the 9th Circuit's holding, Kozinksi stated that removing safe-harbor protection is to be applied when content formation clearly can be used for a wrongful purpose. The judge states that safe-harbor provisions in the CDA do not provide immunity to those "who actively encourage, solicit, and profit from the tortious and unlawful communications of others." In other words, context matters. http://avn.com/index_cache.php?Primary_Navigation=Articles&Action=View_Article&Content_ID=289187 Sentencing Delayed for Fourth Time in Classroom Computer Porn Case NORWICH, Conn. - Sentencing has been delayed for a fourth time in the controversial case of Julie Amero, the former substitute teacher who faces up to 40 years prison after her conviction on charges that stem from pornographic pop up ads appearing on a classroom computer. The sentencing hearing for Amero, which was scheduled for last Friday, has been moved to June 6. She was originally scheduled for sentencing on March 2 after being convicted of four counts of risk of injury to a minor in January in a case that many believe never should have been brought to trial. No explanation for the new sentencing date was offered by either the prosecution or defense. Amero was substitute teaching a seventh-grade class in October of 2004 when pornographic material began to appear on the classroom's computer. Several of the children saw the adult images, which appeared for at least two hours. Amero claims that while she had accessed the Internet during the school day, she did not visit any adult sites. She believes that the adult images were the result of malicious software that was likely inadvertently installed prior to her use of the computer, a contention that has drawn the support of computer experts around the world. Key testimony from a defense expert that would have supported that the pop-up ad defense was barred by the presiding judge after Amero's defense lawyer failed to file the proper paperwork. Prominent Connecticut attorney William F. Dow III has recently taken over her defense. http://www.norwichbulletin.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070518/NEWS01/705180324/1002 Lobbying Process 101 - Continued In our previous two installments, we've watched a health-related initiative (mandating sugarless sodas only in America's public schools) begin its journey through Congress via a start-up coalition and an interested congressman. The bill is currently being considered by the Health Subcommittee of the U.S. House's Energy & Commerce Committee, which has held a hearing on the bill to flesh out its pros and cons. The time has come for a subcommittee vote. How do the Members decide? Since word of the bill first got out, Member offices have been deluged by requests for time. Food-related trade associations, soda companies, and press outlets have all called relevant staffers asking for intelligence and information about the bill and predictions on what will happen. Staffers have endured dozens of meetings with these "stakeholders", all the while briefing their bosses (the Members of Congress) on who wants what and who should be listened to. As mentioned in part two of this series, Members have a lot to consider in weighing how to vote, from their constituents' opinions to the impact on businesses in their respective districts to the spin the media could unleash on their decisions. Each Member has his or her own interests to protect and districts to represent, so none of these decisions are easy. One Member may have a disproportionate number of obese children in his or her district, so voting for the bill would be a great decision toward improving the health of that district's children. However, another subcommittee Member might have a large soda company headquartered in-district, so a "yes" vote on the bill would anger the company and the hundreds (if not thousands) of employees who vote to keep that Member in office. And, as you've probably guessed, contributions to the committee Members' campaigns could be affected, as food and beverage companies might express their displeasure with a "yes" vote by sending their money elsewhere. The time has come for Members to weigh all of the considerations and decide what to do. They have all that they need to make an informed decision, having spoken to all of the relevant stakeholders and been thoroughly briefed by staff. Members know who's for the bill and against it, and it now boils down to what's best for the district. Looming, however, are donor concerns, the whims of the subcommittee's chairperson (who always has an opinion on which way the vote should go) and, of course, the Member's own beliefs and ideals. Do they offer amendments to the bill (which any subcommittee Member can propose) to alter/improve/strip certain language in furtherance of their stakeholders and constituents? Do they vote for the amendments of other Members? It's gut-check time. Votes are cast and the bill narrowly makes it out of the Health subcommittee. This will make the voting at the full committee (Energy & Commerce) level even more contentious, as Members who are not on the Health subcommittee have been waiting for an opportunity to be heard and offer their amendments. The chairperson of the full committee now presides over the action, and maintains procedure and order throughout the full committee markup. The Health subcommittee had 33 Members offering their opinions, amendments, and views and now the musings of 24 additional individuals must be considered. Additionally, the full committee Members who are not on the Health subcommittee (but rather on other Energy & Commerce subcommittees) weren't able to ask questions at the subcommittee hearings on the bill, so they might ask the chairman to hold another hearing or set of hearings. It pandemonium to a degree, but nothing like what the bill will endure if it passes out of the full committee and heads to the House floor for "final passage" before the entire U.S. House of Representatives. Victory! The bill survives the committee craziness and now heads to the main event (or, more properly stated, the House floor). Now is the time for the remaining 378 Members of Congress to air their views on the bill, with the 57 Energy and Commerce Committee Members all still in the mix as well. However, there is a semblance of order to be sure, as a number of rules govern the consideration of bills on the floor of the full House. Rather than tick through all of them (there's a book-full), know that one of the most important and constrictive rules governs the offering of amendments to bills in front of the full House, and how they must be germane (or relevant) to the legislation being offered. The powerful House Committee on Rules (yes, yet another committee) governs what amendments can and can't be offered, and there is much wheeling and dealing in this regard. Thus, if a Member of Congress wanted to attach to our health bill an amendment granting favorable trade status to another country, it would probably be blocked and wouldn't be considered. Or would it? Again, the Rules Committee is a unique and complex animal where many deals are done. After vigorous floor debate on our bill, with Members from all over the country offering their five-minute views (as is usually the allotted time during floor debate), a vote of the full House - all 435 Members - is conducted to determine final passage. And…it…PASSES! Final tally is 252-183, and the Eat Smart Coalition, which generated the initial idea for the bill, can now celebrate. So that's it, right? The bill now becomes law? Sadly, it's not even close. The bill is now sent to Congress's other body, the U.S. Senate. It will wend a similar path through comparable committees and debate, and hopefully survive to reach the Senate floor. If passed, it must then go through additional scrutiny in a House/Senate conference, which is comprised of House Members and Senators who oversee the final details and particulars of the bill. THEN, the finished bill is presented to the President of the United States, who can either sign it into law or kill ("veto") it via the powers vested in him (or her!). The only way to override a veto is by another vote of the full House and Senate (comprised of 100 senators) for just that purpose, which must result in two-thirds of all Members voting to override the President's decision (so the vote must result in at least 288 House votes and 66 Senate votes). Should the President's veto survive, the bill dies but can be re-introduced only to undergo the same, massive trek that it's already been through to hopefully reach the President's desk and decision-making power again in the future. Fun! Who wants to register to become a lobbyist?! Single-file, please. No pushing. Email Xpress@freespeechcoalition.com for more information. Because of 2257 litigation, it's critical that we have your company's information complete in our database. Are you SURE your company's information is complete? Email UpdateInfo@FreeSpeechCoalition.com to update your company's information now. NOTE: The data we're tracking, related to 2257, has changed. Please update NOW. MAY 26 - Arizona Fetish Ball, Scottsdale, AZ JUNE 7-10 - Cybernet Expo, Tampa Bay, Florida JUNE 22-24 - Erotica L.A., Los Angeles Convention Center JULY 16-18 - ANE - Adult Novelty Expo, Universal City, CA AUGUST 27-30 - Annual Gentlemen's Club Owners Expo, Las Vegas, NV AUGUST 27-30 - STOREROTICA Convention and Tradeshow, Las Vegas, NV SEPT 21-23 - ADULTCON, Los Angeles Convention Center
Delivering Weekly Censorship Updates to the Adult Entertainment Industry Vol. X, No. 19, May 18, 2007 - A Member Service of the Free Speech Coalition Free Speech X-press is researched and edited by Scott Ross. Copyright 2007 Free Speech Coalition. Permission to reprint granted to FSC members; please give credit. This X-press in brought to you by our exclusive sponsors Bellenjoy & ARS. Please support our sponsors by selecting the logos above. Adult Retailer Delivers Supreme Court Petition WASHINGTON, D.C. - Adult retailer Sherri Williams ascended the steps of the United States Supreme Court building at 1 p.m. this past Monday to deliver to the court clerk a copy of her petition for certiorari, asking the high court to rule on whether the Alabama law prohibiting the sale of vibrators for the purpose of sexual stimulation is constitutional. "My attorney, Roger Wilcox, was up all night finishing the petition," Williams told AVN.com shortly before filing her petition, "and he'll have the official printed copies ready later this afternoon for filing. What I have here isn't the official petition; we're leaving that to the attorney, because I want everything to go just right with the filing." According to Williams, Reed Lee, a First Amendment attorney and board member of the Free Speech Coalition, had discussed with her the possibility of the Coalition writing an amicus brief on her behalf, and Lee and Wilcox will be finalizing that offer in the near future, she said. Williams also said she received a call from the D.C. park police to ask if she was planning to call for any sort of demonstration in support of her petition, but she assured them that it would just be her, some reporters and her film crew. "Wouldn't it be funny, though, if a bunch of women came out here and used their vibrators to have orgasms on the steps of the Supreme Court building?" she joked. Williams is contesting an Alabama law that prohibits the sale of vibrators. The relevant statute bans any "device designed or marketed as useful primarily for the stimulation of human genital organs." Williams has fought the Alabama statute since it became law in 1998. On Valentine's Day of this year, the 11the Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the ban as constitutional, saying "the state's interest in preserving and promoting public morality provides a rational basis for the challenged statute." http://avn.com/index_cache.php?Primary_Navigation=Articles&Action=View_Article&Content_ID=288985 Federal Court Denies Oregon Adult Video Store Appeal BEAVERTON, Ore. - The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has sided with the city of Beaverton in a long-running legal battle with the owners of Fantasy Adult Video over their attempt to keep their store open 24 hours a day. Oregon Entertainment Corporation has been fighting to secure a 24-hour operations permit for Fantasy Adult Video since 1999. The city has won several court victories against the adult retailer, despite arguments that the city's attempt to regulate the store's hours of operation is unconstitutional. According to the Beaverton Valley Times, the Ninth Circuit upheld this past Saturday a 2005 summary judgment that stated that Oregon Entertainment Corp. had failed to demonstrate that the city had violated their constitutional rights by deciding not to allow Fantasy Adult Video to stay open 24 hours a day. The Ninth Circuit also rejected a claim by the owners of Fantasy Adult Video that their Fourteenth Amendment due-process rights were ignored by the court when they were denied the opportunity to cross-examine witnesses in the case, blocking its use of the property without the proper legal process. The court ruled that Oregon Entertainment had no legal right to cross-examine witnesses in the hearings because the company "didn't have a vested property right in a conditional-use permit." Fantasy Adult Video is located in a so-called "Community Service zone", allowing it to operate between 7 a.m. and 10 p.m., but requiring a "conditional-use" permit to operate between 10 p.m. and 7 a.m. Attorneys for Oregon Entertainment have previously stated that the city of Beaverton did not have the discretion to deny the store of a 24-hour permit in 2003, claiming that the city's conditional-use permit denial amounted to "prior restraint," effectively violating the store's constitutional rights. The company's original application for a 24-hour permit in 1999 was rejected, amidst speculative concerns about rising crime and the lowering of property value in the area. The decision was then upheld by both the state Land Use Board of Appeals and the Oregon Court of Appeals. The store owners re-applied for a conditional-use permit in March 2003, presenting evidence to the Planning Commission that the city had not suffered adverse secondary effects during the four years the store had been open. http://www.beavertonvalleytimes.com/news/story.php?story_id=117903445187444000 Ordinance Adopted to Ban Porn in Ark. City Won't Pass Judicial Scrutiny, says Adult Industry Lawyer PALESTINE, Ark. - The City Council unanimously voted last week to adopt an ordinance that would ban the sale of pornography within city limits, which was drafted at the request of Mayor Becky Dunn. City Attorney Steve Routon drafted the ordinance, which gives the city the power to take any adult business considered a "nuisance" to court. Routon said he is unsure whether it is constitutional, "but you must start somewhere," he said. "Palestine's ordinance completely banning the sale of absolutely constitutionally protected speech can't pass judicial scrutiny," adult industry lawyer Robert Apgood told XBIZ. "The U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly articulated the steps a municipality must take if it wishes to regulate this type of speech. Obviously Palestine, Ark., is struggling to stay current with the law of the 20th century. Once they get that far, perhaps it won't take them decades to catch up with the rest of us." The ordinance also states that "no business shall hereafter be established or located in Palestine ... which sells pornographic materials, pictures or videos." After Routon's first reading of the ordinance to the council, Councilman Tony Burdett made a motion to suspend the rules and adopt the ordinance. The council then unanimously adopted it. http://xbiz.com/news_piece.php?id=22982 Adult Store Quits Decade-Long Fight with Fla. City DANIA BEACH, Fla - After surviving a contentious decade of conflict with city officials, owners of the Fetish Box are finally throwing in the towel. Sean Newman and Denise Earlman quietly posted a closing sale sign in their store's window front a few weeks ago, and this week confirmed their impending closure to the Miami Herald. Newman and Earlman, who are a couple, said they might open another store - but not in Dania Beach, whose population was 29,000 last year, according to county records. ''This town is just going nowhere,'' Newman told the Herald. The owners adapted to and complied with a series of revised zoning laws and other efforts by the city's government to force the store out of the downtown area, despite the fact that the Fetish Box was the only successful business in an otherwise blighted neighborhood. Newman and Earlman endured several attempts by officials to redevelop the area and label the store as blighted, and Newman said one law even forced them to gut their store's adult video section. http://www.miamiherald.com/467/story/106004.html Houston Plans Crack Down on Local Adult Businesses HOUSTON - The city ordered more than 100 adult businesses to shut down or face civil and criminal penalties in warning letters sent via certified mail last week, the Houston Chronicle reports "They need to close up," Capt. Steve Jett of the Houston police department's vice unit told the Chronicle. "We wanted to give them fair warning." In the letters, the city notified owners of adult bookstores, cabarets and other sexually-oriented businesses that they are operating in violation of an ordinance that prohibits such establishments from locating within 1,500 feet of churches, schools, parks and other designated areas of the city. Passed by the City Council in 1997, the ordinance has been challenged in federal and appellate courts for the past decade on constitutional grounds. "The sole purpose of this notice is to clarify the City of Houston's legal authority and intent to enforce ordinance provisions governing sexually oriented business enterprises beginning immediately," the letter reads. "This notice is not subject to reconsideration or administrative recourse." According to the Chronicle report, employees and owners who fail to comply with the order could face arrest on a Class A misdemeanor charge punishable by up to a year in jail and a $4,000 fine. The city also may force adult businesses to close by seeking civil injunctions. Employees and owners could face arrests on a Class A misdemeanor charge punishable by up to a year in jail and a $4,000 fine. The city also may seek civil injunctions forcing closures. Topless and fully nude clubs could avoid regulation altogether if their dancers wear bikinis or even skimpier coverings, allowing them to get around the "sexually oriented" classification, police and city officials acknowledged. At least nine adult businesses have filed new lawsuits challenging the ordinance in state courts over the last few weeks. One key argument challenges the ordinance's provision for "amortization," a process by which the city could let clubs operate for a period after the law takes effect so owners can recoup their investments before moving or closing. http://www.kvia.com/global/story.asp?s=6481818 Bad for Business, Bad for California By Matt Gray The adult business killer legislation, AB 1551, by Assemblyman Calderon, is still slated to push its way through the Legislature in Sacramento. But a brief reprieve was granted this week when the bill was pulled from being heard this coming Monday, and pushed back to a hearing sometime in mid-June. This legislation, which seeks to tax gross receipts on all products and services for all adult businesses - including inventory tax, and at the time of sale - will undergo amendments which are expected to at least include an actual tax rate. But as written, a typical adult product could be taxed six or eight times before it reaches the end consumer. There is safety in numbers. This brief reprieve offers the adult entertainment industry a precious opportunity to reach out to its 'friends' and amass an even larger opposition force. Think about every other business that you interact with: printers, couriers, accountants, beauty salons, clothiers, beverage distributors, hotels, and so on. How will they be impacted? If your profit margins are reduced by having to pay these added taxes, or if you lose business because competitors outside of California can sell the same product for much less, how will that affect businesses which you use? To stay afloat, will you have to cut back on using the services they provide? These other businesses have a vested interest in helping to protect your business, and it is asking very little for them to write a letter in opposition. In addition to writing their Assembly Member and Senator, they should also write to the Assembly Revenue and Taxation Committee and urge this bill to be defeated. You would think a tax upon businesses would kick business associations into action. But, by example, the California Chamber of Commerce has indicated they think this bill will not impact enough of their businesses to justify them taking action. Does that mean they will let some of their members swing in the wind? I wonder if that was discussed during the sign-up process. The hotel associations have been slow to act, as has the alcohol industry. While we're putting pressure on these groups on the front end, it would help for adult businesses to put pressure on them from a business-to-business perspective at the local level, so they're getting it from both ends at once. Lawmakers are looking to this legislation for an indication of what the industry will do when challenged. Will the industry roll over and give up? If adult entertainment in California fails, will other states follow? The line has been drawn in the sand, and we must win. We must step-up the opposition and flood the Capitol with input from the 50,000 workers within the adult entertainment industry, and their friends, who vehemently oppose AB 1551. Assemblyman Calderon thinks he is going to use this legislation to step on the backs of the adult entertainment industry and line his path to becoming the next California Attorney General. Calderon needs to know that these 50,000+ people take his legislative assault personally, and are not here for his political gain. It needs to become abundantly clear to all lawmakers that the adult entertainment industry is mobilized and will rain down upon those who antagonize it. All letters should be cc:d to Capital Alliance, 1029 K Street, Suite 25, Sacramento, CA 95814. Addresses for all lawmakers follow the format of: The Honorable [FIRST & LAST NAME], California State Legislature, State Capitol, Sacramento, CA 95814. So, letters to Assemblyman Calderon, for example, would be: The Honorable Chuck Calderon, California State Legislature, State Capitol, Sacramento, CA 95814. (No actual street address needed) Don't delay, write today, and get those other businesses to write as well. Remember to send your cc: to Capital Alliance. Discussion points and research can be found online at www.thecapitalalliance.com/reports ============================================================== Matt Gray is a senior lobbyist for Capital Alliance, a Sacramento based lobbying and government strategies firm. He can be reached at 916-444-5551, or by e-mail: matt@thecapitalalliance.com 15th Annual Gentlemen's Club Owners Expo & 1st Annual STOREROTICA Show "Two shows in one" is the concept behind holding the 15th Annual Gentlemen's Club Owners Expo, for the owners and operators in the multi-billion-dollar adult nightclub industry, at the same time and place as the 1st Annual STOREROTICA show, a convention and tradeshow for the owners and operators of adult retail stores and intimate apparel boutiques and the vendors who supply them. Both shows boast extensive legal and marketing panels and workshops and will be held August 27-29 at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas. Expo details at http://www.ExoticDancer.com, and STOREROTICA details at http://www.storerotica.com. Free Speech Coalition Releases Three-Year Strategic Plan Canoga Park, CA - On Wednesday, May 16, 2007, the Free Speech Coalition (FSC) released its three-year strategic plan. The plan focuses on the areas of Membership, Public Relations, Government, Organizational Development and Litigation. Prior to the creation of the Strategic Plan, FSC reviewed and revised the organization's mission statement. FSC's past mission statement: Organized in 1991, Free Speech Coalition is the trade association of the adult entertainment industry. As a 501© (6) not-for-profit corporation, FSC is funded by membership dues as well as by fundraising efforts. FSC's current mission statement is to: Lead, protect and support the growth and wellbeing of the adult entertainment community. "First we considered our foundation, FSC's mission" said Diane Duke, FSC Executive Director. "Then we went about the business of developing a plan to position FSC to further that mission not only for today, but also well into the future." FSC's Board and staff have developed work plans focused on the implementation of the components of the plan. FSC's Strategic Plan can be viewed in its entirety on its website at www.freespeechcoalition.com. What works about this plan is that it puts systems in place to strengthen the organization," says Jim Everett, FSC Board President, "while, at the same time, positioning FSC to be responsive to its members and proactive to the threat of outside forces." Email Xpress@freespeechcoalition.com for more information. Because of 2257 litigation, it's critical that we have your company's information complete in our database. Are you SURE your company's information is complete? Email UpdateInfo@FreeSpeechCoalition.com to update your company's information now. NOTE: The data we're tracking, related to 2257, has changed. Please update NOW. MAY 26 - Arizona Fetish Ball, Scottsdale, AZ JUNE 7-10 - Cybernet Expo, Tampa Bay, Florida JUNE 22-24 - Erotica L.A., Los Angeles Convention Center AUGUST 27-30 - Annual Gentlemen's Club Owners Expo, Las Vegas, NV AUGUST 27-30 - STOREROTICA Convention and Tradeshow, Las Vegas, NV SEPT 21-23 - ADULTCON, Los Angeles Convention Center Always bear in mind that your own resolution to succeed is more important than any one thing. -- Abraham Lincoln (1809 - 1865) The person who makes a success of living is the one who see his goal steadily and aims for it unswervingly. That is dedication. -- Cecil B. DeMille (1881 - 1959)
Delivering Weekly Censorship Updates to the Adult Entertainment Industry Vol. X, No. 18, May 11, 2007 - A Member Service of the Free Speech Coalition Free Speech X-press is researched and edited by Scott Ross. Copyright 2007 Free Speech Coalition. Permission to reprint granted to FSC members; please give credit. This X-press in brought to you by our exclusive sponsors Bellenjoy & ARS. Please support our sponsors by selecting the logos above. FBI Inspects 2257 Records of Two Adult Product Companies The FBI has inspected 2257 records from both Shane's World Studios and the now defunct Moonlight Entertainment within a week of each other, a notable resurgence in activity after four months without a single inspection. Moonlight Entertainment's former owner Marc Stone received a visit to his home on May 3. "[FBI agent] Chuck Joyner called me and said that they wanted to check records on four movies," Stone told AVN.com. "I told him we were out of business, and since the address [for the custodian of records] was my house, he said he needed to come down and check 2257. He and a few other agents showed up, and they looked up the records; they were courteous and professional, and it wasn't a big, huge deal." The agents spent about one hour examining the relevant papers. "There were two IDs they couldn't read right, but that was it; I'm just going to get them some better copies," Stone said. "The point is, make sure your 2257s are in order, because there are laws, and they're checking. If you don't have them right, they'll tell you what you need to fix; from what everybody else tells me, they're OK with it. I haven't heard of anybody having a real bad time with these visits." Shane's World Studios had their 2257 records inspected on May 7. "Approximately six agents came by this morning and were interested in ten titles," company owner Jennie Grant told AVN.com. "We promptly gave them all the records and they got to work. They were here for a few hours and then let us know our records were perfect." Grant said she was pleased with the outcome and thanked her staff. "I realized we are prepared for this and we have a great staff that pays attention to detail." The last prior 2257 inspection before Moonlight Entertainment's was K-Beech, which underwent an inspection last December. Only eleven adult production companies have been inspected to date. http://avn.com/index_cache.php?Primary_Navigation=Articles&Action=View_Article&Content_ID=288696 FEDERAL LEGISLATION - HOW A BILL BECOMES LAW, Part II By The Raben Group, WASHINGTON, D.C. In our previous installment two weeks ago, we discussed the steps involved in launching a targeted lobbying campaign on Capitol Hill and provided an initial blueprint for the necessary outreach and coalition-building. Our fictitious advocacy group, the Eat Smart Coalition ("ESC"), is dedicated to stemming childhood obesity and has begun its canvassing efforts in Washington. ESC has found a Member of Congress to champion its bill that would mandate a nationwide switch to sugarless sodas in America's public school cafeterias, and that fictitious Member has begun to drum-up additional support. Now the real fun begins, as the language in the bill is heavily scrutinized and opposition mounts. The bill looks seemingly innocent and beneficial, but there's always a group that will be adversely affected by some portion of a piece of legislation, and it will lobby just as hard - if not harder - to fight the bill and stop it in its tracks. By now, our bill's champion in Congress (let's call him Congressman Letts B. Fitt) has introduced his soda-banning bill and it has been assigned to a committee for examination and debate. Congress has many committees that cover a multitude of jurisdictional subject matters, from the judiciary to the environment to the military. The committees discuss the pros and cons of every bill that comes before them and hold open hearings with expert witnesses to get to the nuts and bolts of whatever is being proposed. Congressman Fitt's bill is primarily health-based, so it would most likely be assigned to the Energy & Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on Health (each committee has multiple subcommittees which are specialized and streamlined in order to scrutinize legislation on a smaller scale. For example, the Judiciary Committee contains subcommittees on Intellectual Property, Immigration, Crime, etc). In an effort to take a close look at the bill and make it as effective and fair as possible, the Health subcommittee (comprised of 18 Democrats and 15 Republicans, reflecting the larger numbers of the current ruling party), would organize a hearing on the bill in order to learn more about the effects of the legislation if enacted. The hearing would involve a panel of five or so experts, who would sit before the Members and answer any and all questions about the contents of the bill. This panel would most likely consist of a nutrition expert; perhaps a school principal who has seen first-hand the rapid weight-gain in students; a representative from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and, arguing against the bill, a senior executive from a large soda company. These witnesses would field concerns from committee members and answer each and every question to the best of their respective abilities during the hearing. Once the hearing has concluded, the congressmen and congresswomen on the committee would rewrite the bill to reflect any changes that should be implemented post-hearing and then either vote for or against the bill's passage. This is when the real horse-trading and wheeling and dealing begins. Lobbyists for the soda company obviously want the least-restrictive language possible in this bill so their profits aren't hit too hard if sodas are banned from high school cafeterias. These lobbyists, most of them former congressional staffers, proceed to call on their still-on-the-Hill friends in order to quietly add language to the bill in the company's favor or remove language that harms it. With 33 Members of the subcommittee all being bombarded by different interest groups with different views, decisions must be made and deals worked out. If a Member has both a large soda company and a huge elementary school population in his or her district, how does he or she balance the interests? The soda company might go out of business if the bill passes, and that means lost jobs. Yet the health of the students is affected by the sodas being served to them at schools, so isn't that just as important or more so? Who wins and who loses? Therein lies the challenge of balancing out the needs of divergent constituencies. The third and final installment appears next week… Flexing Your Political Muscle By Matt Gray, FSC contract lobbyist SACRAMENTO, CA Why should you care? -- Because they’re trying to put you out of business. Depending upon the issue, a mailed letter to an elected official from a resident (“constituent”) within their voting district is estimated to represent the same viewpoint as between 600 other constituents for a high profile issue, and more than 2000 constituents for a lesser-known issue. The adult entertainment industry employs more than 50,000 people in one form or another throughout California. That is a large voting block which under-utilizes its political capital (i.e. writing letters), insofar as constituent involvement in the process is concerned. Right now, the industry faces a tough piece of legislation, AB 1551, by Assemblyman Chuck Calderon. This bill seeks to impose multiple taxes upon adult materials. Consider for a moment what the political downside is for the politicians who will be asked to vote on this “anti-porn” legislation? Will it drive businesses out of the state? Yes, but every industry says that when facing more taxes, and the claim needs to be reinforced by constituent input. Will it reduce profit margins and place these California businesses at an unfair competitive disadvantage to non-California businesses who will not have to pay the same tax when selling to the same customers you seek to satisfy? Yes, but lawmakers aren’t seeing the bigger picture, and they think their constituents don’t care. Is it unconstitutional and likely to be challenged in court? Yes, but “that’s something for the court to decide, not the Legislature,” say lawmakers. Will it irritate their constituents? We hope so, and that is where you can help out most. If you’re a California resident, go to Mhttp://192.234.213.69/smapsearch/framepage.asp (sometimes you need to click “Find” more than once to get results), and enter your home address. Find out who your Senator and Assembly Member are, and write a brief letter (today) in your own words, to let them know how awful this legislation is and that, as your elected representative, you respectfully request their immediate action to stop this legislation. Take one or more of the following statements and put them into you own words. Don’t send e-mails (they’re largely ignored), but you can fax your letter if that makes it easier. Position Statements: 1. AB 1551 will significantly reduce already low profit margins and will have to be passed on the consumer. The adult entertainment industry relies upon discretionary consumer income to sustain itself, and cutting into customers’ budgets will cause a reduction in the amount of product being purchased. Fewer products being purchased means fewer workers are needed, and the ripple effect would be felt in those businesses which supply adult entertainment venues as well. Ultimately, AB 1551 will result in lost jobs in your district. Or 2. The adult entertainment industry is already at a competitive disadvantage to businesses outside of California which either pay no sales tax when selling to Californians, or are pirating our products and selling over the internet to our customers. AB 1551 would actually help the competition and make it harder for California businesses by further undercutting profit margins and ultimately reducing tax revenues to the state. Or 3. AB 1551 is premised upon false and irresponsible claims about the adult entertainment industry. The bill aggressively claims the industry causes adverse “secondary effects” upon surrounding communities when in fact nothing could be further from the truth. Multiple independent, peer reviewed and published research projects from both within California and throughout the country prove without a doubt that there is no evidence to support the claims made within AB 1551. To the contrary, positive secondary effects have been shown, due to vigilant self-imposed security measures, self-regulation, and good neighbor policies and practices. AB 1551, on its face, is misleading and untrue. “Form letters” are largely disregarded, so remember to put the above into your own words. When a lawmaker reads it, it shouldn’t look identical to the one your neighbor just sent. Letters should be brief and to the point, but feel free to give that personal touch and tell the lawmaker you are the breadwinner for your home, you support X number of children, and you vote! It could be considered a crime to demand the lawmaker vote one way or another under threat of you voting against them (or taking any other action). So, obviously avoid that. Remember to include your home address, and sign the letter. Send it to: The Honorable [insert their name here] California State Legislature State Capitol Sacramento, CA 95814 A few letters are good, but even 100 letters would leave a lasting impact that there is a big issue for their constituents, and that they had better pay attention. Ask your friends and neighbors to send a letter (today). One stamp and 5-minutes of your time will help to save your industry. Do not delay. Although this is a California legislative issue, if passed, California’s leadership will undoubtedly be replicated elsewhere in the country. If you’re a non-resident of California, encourage your colleagues in California to write to their own senators or assembly persons. To review the research and reports for yourself, go to: http://www.thecapitalalliance.com/reports/ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Matt Gray is a senior lobbyist for Capital Alliance, a lobbying and government strategies firm in Sacramento. E-mail matt@thecapitalalliance.com or Tel. 916-444-5551 Lawyers for Red Rose Seek Dismissal of Obscenity Charges PITTSBURGH, PA - Attorneys for Karen Fletcher, aka Red Rose, have filed a pretrial motion petitioning the court to dismiss the obscenity indictment against Fletcher for disseminating six allegedly obscene fictional stories on her Web site describing the torture and sexual abuse of children. Fletcher counsel, Lawrence G. Walters, argues that obscenity laws are unconstitutional as applied to purely textual works. "This case is a little unique," Walters told XBIZ. "We don't believe the content at issue here meets the threshold for obscene material, so we're asking the court to look at this before trial. We must protect Fletcher's 1st Amendment rights of free speech; her works have obvious literary value." In the motion obtained by XBIZ, Lawrence argues that text is fundamentally different than pictures, because people process text differently. The defense is prepared to offer testimony from expert witnesses to this effect. At issue in this case are six allegedly obscene works that were available on Red-Rose-Stories.com only for paid members, of which Fletcher claims there were only 29. "Since the site in question is a membership site, no one could 'accidentally' stumble upon these stories; anyone could have stopped reading them before they were offended and there were warnings on the page," Walters said. "Red Rose's readers sought out this kind of material." While textual works have been ruled to be obscene by the courts, they all come before the Miller vs. California ruling in 1973, which sets the definition of obscenity against community standards. Lawrence said the U.S. Supreme Court has not issued a definitive ruling on whether or not the written word can be judged obscene. "…Over the past 34 years, the Government has never sought to prosecute speech composed exclusively from the written word," Lawrence said in the motion. "The absence of any post-1973 prosecutions under the federal obscenity statutes involving non-pictorial works reflects a sea change in the manner in which American society…views obscenity in a non-visual context. "Such glaring lack of text-only obscenity cases further reflects a demonstrative evolution in community standards throughout the country, with respect to literary works, and recognition of the inherent serious value contained in such works." Lawrence said that the government will file a written response to the motion and the court will then set a date for oral arguments. http://xbiz.com/news_piece.php?id=22866 El Paso Passes Stricter Adult Business Laws EL PASO, TX - The City Council unanimously adopted legislation earlier this week that place restrictions on sexually oriented businesses. The new ordinance establishes a six-foot rule for local strip clubs and requires adult retailers to designate an employee to be responsible for activities that take place within the store. The six-foot rule states that nude or semi-nude dancers must maintain a distance of six feet from customers, which effectively bars lap dancing. Adult video stores will be required to designate an employee to be responsible for monitoring all theater activity. Adult Video Warehouse (AVW) manager Lee Wilson told El Paso's ABC-7, "If people can't go someplace in private, they're going to go somewhere else ... If they're not here in a controlled environment, they're going to be on the street or a back alley, parking lot ... Who knows where?" San Antonio-based attorney Jim Deegear, who represents strip club Tequila Sunrise, had previously stated that that the city should expect a legal battle if the six-foot-rule should pass. Mayor John Cook, who championed the ordinance, isn't intimidated by the legal threats. "This is America, anybody can sue anybody...but suing and winning are two different things." http://www.kvia.com/global/story.asp?s=6481818 Mass. Town Defeats Adult Zoning Amendment WESTPORT, MA - Town Meeting voters defeated a zoning amendment this past Monday that would have created an adult entertainment zone. The Planning Board held a hearing on the proposed Adult Entertainment Overlay District, which would overlay a business district, on an amendment drafted by the town's law firm. Town Counsel David Jenkins told voters at Monday's meeting that the courts have determined that adult businesses retain a First Amendment right to locate and operate in a town, although they can draft ordinances such as the proposed zoning amendment to limit their location. The need for the zoning regulation arises from an attempt by Deutch Donn Corp. of Fairhaven to build a strip club in the area. The Zoning Board denied the company's application for a special permit under the town's current ordinance, which was adopted in 1998 and amended in 2006. The company has filed a civil suit in Fall River Superior Court seeking a declaratory judgment in order to overturn the 1998 and 2006 ordinances. According to the Standard-Times, four city residents spoke against the zoning amendment, warning that the character and economic development potential of the town would be diminished if the proposed adult entertainment district passed. No one spoke in favor of the proposed zoning amendment. "We have a great heritage in Westport for standing up and defending that which is right, and this is one of those times," said Michael Andras Jr., speaking at Monday's meeting. He argued that studies have shown that strip clubs deteriorate a community by introducing crimes not already there, like prostitution, and increasing existing crimes, like car theft, assault and battery, drug abuse, and destruction of property. "The location of this strip club would attract primarily people from out of town," Andras contended. "Studies have shown that only 2 percent of the people who go there are from town." The studies Andras alludes to were not named. Attorney Brian Corey Jr., who represents Deutch Donn, said on Monday that he expected the amendment would lose, and that he will press the suit now in court. http://www.southcoasttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070501/NEWS/70501016/-1/SUB Adult Retailer Settles With City for $220,000 SIOUX CITY, IA - Dr. John's Lingerie Boutique has settled their First Amendment lawsuit against the city for $220,000 according to an Associated Press report. The city council approved the settlement on May 1, bring an end to the dispute which goes back to 2003, when John Haltom, the owner of Dr. John's, filed suit against the city claiming that the city's ordinances were too restrictive and in violation of his First Amendment rights. Haltom claimed the city amended its ordinances to keep him from opening his store. He was granted an injunction to keep his store open while the case was pending. A federal judge later declared the ordinance unconstitutional. Councilman Dave Ferris said it was in the best interest of city taxpayers to settle the case, which he says could have dragged on for years. http://www.woi-tv.com/Global/story.asp?S=6454400&nav=1LFX Court Refuses to Halt Sales of Lucas' La Dolce Vita NEW YORK, NY - Michael Lucas has prevailed in the first stage of a lawsuit brought against his Michael Lucas' La Dolce Vita, a gay XXX movie, by International Media Films, which claims copyright ownership of the 1960 Federico Fellini film La Dolce Vita. The lawsuit, claiming trademark infringement, tarnishment, and copyright infringement, was filed in February 2007, only weeks before Michael Lucas' La Dolce Vita swept the GAYVN Awards winning 14 trophies. A request by IMF for a preliminary injunction halting sales and distribution of Michael Lucas' La Dolce Vita was filed on March 15. IMF claimed that Lucas' movie caused irreparable harm to its product. In a hearing held on Friday, April 27, Judge John G. Koeltl denied IMF's request, citing the five-month lag time between IMF's learning about the Lucas movie (October 2006) and it's requesting the preliminary injunction. Judge Koeltl said, in part, "The Court concludes that the plaintiff's delay seeking preliminary injunctive relief rebuts any presumption of irreparable harm to which the plaintiff is otherwise entitled." Judge Koeltl's decision does not end the original lawsuit, which is now scheduled for the fall. Lucas characterized the dispute as homophobic and anti-porn in a May 4 email blast announcing this first victory in the ongoing legal battle." How could anyone possibly confuse the two films with each other? And how could my movie tarnish the reputation of an old, black-and-white movie from the '60s that has a name most Americans can't even pronounce correctly? "The judge denied the injunction, so, yes, we will continue distributing, selling, and promoting the film." http://avn.com/index_cache.php?Primary_Navigation=Articles&Action=View_Article&Content_ID=288694 Email Xpress@freespeechcoalition.com for more information. Because of 2257 litigation, it's critical that we have your company's information complete in our database. Are you SURE your company's information is complete? Email UpdateInfo@FreeSpeechCoalition.com to update your company's information now. NOTE: The data we're tracking, related to 2257, has changed. Please update NOW. MAY 11-13 - Sex and So Much More Show, Phoenix MAY 26 - Arizona Fetish Ball, Scottsdale, AZ JUNE 7-10 - Cybernet Expo, Tampa Bay, Florida JUNE 22-24 - Erotica L.A., Los Angeles Convention Center AUGUST 27-30 - Annual Gentlemen's Club Owners Expo, Las Vegas, NV AUGUST 27-30 - STOREROTICA Convention and Tradeshow, Las Vegas, NV SEPT 21-23 - ADULTCON, Los Angeles Convention Center The worst thing in this world, next to anarchy, is government. -- Henry Ward Beecher A man begins cutting his wisdom teeth the first time he bites off more than he can chew. -- Herb Caen
Delivering Weekly Censorship Updates to the Adult Entertainment Industry Vol. X, No. 17, May 4, 2007 - A Member Service of the Free Speech Coalition Free Speech X-press is researched and edited by Scott Ross. Copyright 2007 Free Speech Coalition. Permission to reprint granted to FSC members; please give credit. This X-press in brought to you by our exclusive sponsors Bellenjoy & ARS. Please support our sponsors by selecting the logos above. 2257: Judge Miller's Status Conference DENVER, CO - Based on an April 25 status conference in the case Free Speech Coalition v. Gonzales, the Free Speech Coalition expects U.S. District Court Judge Walker D. Miller to dissolve portions of the preliminary injunction (in place since December 2005) that ordered the Government not to inspect secondary producers. FSC hastened to add that this does not mean inspections of secondary producers are likely in the foreseeable future. According to the team of attorneys representing the FSC, "We have no reason to anticipate imminent inspections of secondary producers. The reasoning underlying Judge Miller's preliminary injunction remains valid: That is, prior to July 27, 2006, there was no statutory authority for record-keeping by secondary producers. We are awaiting regulations which will announce the Department of Justice's position on what secondary producers' responsibilities are under the July 27, 2006, amendments [to the regulations associated with 18 USC - 2257]." Added FSC Chairman and First Amendment attorney Jeffrey J. Douglas, "We are all confident that no court would allow a retroactive obligation to be placed upon secondary producers for which there was no lawful authority when they acquired the images. Furthermore, until the new regulations are finalized, how can any secondary producer know what their obligations are? For instance, they cannot comply with the regulations applicable to primary producers. Actual inspection of the original ID is impossible for a secondary producer." The status conference was requested by FSC attorneys in cooperation with government litigators after a March 30 ruling that dismissed some causes of action and allowed others to proceed in light of the Adam Walsh Act amendments to 18 USC §2257. The Walsh Act amendments became effective July 27, 2006, but regulations for enforcing the act have not been finalized. Should there be any indication the government plans to claim such authority, the Free Speech Coalition promises to seek another court order immediately. The FSC will provide regular updates on the status of 2257 as the case unfolds through its weekly XPress newsletter, e-mail alerts, and postings on its website. Answers to Frequently Asked Questions appear below in this issue of the X-Press and will be posted to the FSC website. FSC members are encouraged to contact FSC directly at 1-866-FSC-9373 if the answers to their questions do not appear in the FAQs. http://avn.com/index_cache.php?Primary_Navigation=Articles&Action=View_Article&Content_ID=287900 Frequently Asked Questions 1. As a secondary producer, what records should I have in place to be in compliance as a result of this decision and from what point in time do I need them? Secondary producers were required by Congress to have records (photocopy of passport, DMV-issued ID, military ID or "Green Card" as well as personal information form) for materials acquired after July 27, 2007. The regulations detailing how compliance is to occur were supposed to be issued in January of 2007. They are now scheduled for release in June. Nothing legally has changed in regards to the basis by which FSC got its injunction; that is, Congress had not authorized any record-keeping by secondary producers prior to July 27, 2007. Therefore secondary producers need not acquire or maintain any records for materials acquired prior to July 27, 2007, at the earliest. It is more realistic to say that records will not be required until the effective date of the new regulations. If the Government is so stupid as to try to enforce record-keeping by secondary producers for materials acquired before Congress authorized such record-keeping, FSC will seek and expects to get an immediate order halting such action. 2. When do you anticipate is the soonest the new regulations concerning 2257 will be released? The Government recently stated that the proposed regulations will be released in June of 2007. 3. What happens once the new regulations are released? With a 60 day public comment period, assuming that the proposed regulations are released June 1, 2007, the Government has unlimited time to reflect on the public comments before issuing the final regulations. Assuming a conservative 60 day period after public comments to issue the final regulations (60 days would be lightning speed), the 2257A regulations, by statute, would go into effect 90 days thereafter. It is reasonable to assume that the same will apply to the 2257 regulations. Therefore the soonest they could go into effect would be seven months from June 1, 2007. So it looks like 2008 is when we shall see final regulations become effective. 4. Is FSC going to file for another injunction? What are FSC's next steps? FSC will seek a court order preventing the new regulations from going into effect, assuming that the government does not completely relent from the burdensome compliance regime it has heretofore insisted upon. Additionally, because of the newly enacted "Hollywood" exemptions to 2257 and 2257A, there is a much stronger argument for declaring the entire 2257/2257A record-keeping and labeling scheme unconstitutional. This is a realistic hope. 5. If secondary producers are no longer covered, from a legal standpoint, why should I continue being a member of FSC? Should the government attempt to enforce the record-keeping provisions against secondary producers for materials acquired before the effective date of the new regulations, your existing/ongoing membership will protect you when the new injunction issues. And assuming that FSC gets injunctive relief from the law itself and/or new regulations, you will definitely need to be a member then. But membership in FSC conveys many benefits, of which protection from government misconduct is only one of them. The fact that you are making this inquiry of us demonstrates the vital role we play in informing our membership of the pressing issues. Through your support of FSC, the adult industry has a lobbyist in Washington, D.C., has a respected voice in the wide-ranging public debate about the place of sexual communication in our culture, as well as commercial/financial benefits (see our website). 6. If FSC proceeds with a new lawsuit/injunction at what point will I need to be a member to be covered under the new lawsuit/injunction? We cannot say at this time. We always try to have any legal relief cover as many people and businesses as possible. The significance of specific effective dates of membership depends on the judge and any agreements reached with the government in any given lawsuit. For instance the join date of May 23, 2005, in the Denver litigation was simply an arbitrary date imposed by the Justice Department. As to the next time, we must wait and see. If you maintain your membership, you need not be concerned about the effective join date in the future. N.Y. Court Changes Definition of 'Depict' to Include Text ALBANY, N.Y. - Last week the New York State Court of Appeals decided that sexually charged words alone are enough to convict a Manhattan lawyer under the state's anti-pedophile law, rejecting an argument that the word "depict," when used in regards to sending material depicting obscenity to minors, is limited to images. The 5-2 decision overturned a lower state appeals court ruling that had thrown out the 2005 conviction of Jeffrey Kozlow on five counts of attempted dissemination of indecent material to minors. Kozlow, who had e-mailed messages of a sexual nature to an undercover officer posing as a 14-year-old boy, was sentenced to five year's probation on that conviction. In his appeal, he argued that the 1996 state law used against him required the charges against him be thrown out because the statute said the material sent had to "depict" sexual conduct. The law was intended to crack down on pedophiles using computers to lure minors into sexual encounters. The court determined that someone can be charged with disseminating material harmful to minors over the Internet even when the material contains only text. This went against a 2004 ruling by a lower N.Y. court, in which charges were dismissed after the emails in question were found to be without images and therefore, by then-definition, did not depict offensive acts. Writing for the court's majority, Judge Eugene Pigott Jr. said, "The Legislature [in 2004] was surely aware that a sexually explicit text may be used as a means of seduction just as effectively as a sexual image. They could not have thought that this process was limited to the transmission of pornographic images. Indeed, the logic of communication dictates just the opposite - that images alone would not enable the sender to entice a minor to a meeting." http://www.newsday.com/news/local/wire/newyork/ny-bc-ny--court-pedophiles0426apr26,0,983222.story?coll=ny-region-apnewyork Fred Salaff Trial Scheduled; Verdict Expected Soon JOYITO, Panama - American adult film producer Fred Salaff, who's been awaiting his case to be heard for more than two years, can expect a verdict within the week. Salaff has been under house arrest, barred from seeking employment since his arrest more than two years ago. His trial dates having been repeatedly postponed until now. Salaff was arrested after police raided his Devils Film shoot and charged him with pressuring prostitutes to perform and failing to file paperwork necessary to legally film an adult movie in the area, as well as neglecting to prevent minors from viewing the on-set activity. Several children reportedly climbed a wall to peek into Salaff's set during the shoot. According to an XBIZ report, Salaff announced last week on his Web site that he had finally met with a judge that morning, during which he agreed to a "fast track" trial, waiving his right to a preliminary trial to "go for the real thing." During the trial, both the defense and prosecution presented their arguments after the judge read the charges to the court, and Salaff said court observers have told him that "there should be no doubt as to the verdict." Observers told him this judge is known for making quick judgments for guilty verdicts, but for this case has asked for "a short time" to make her final decision, rather than convicting him that same day. Salaff said he sees this as a good sign. The law states the judge has at most 24 hours to decide, but Salaff said it could end up taking a week or longer. http://xbiz.com/news_piece.php?id=22777 Ohio Curfew Bill Leads to New Political Websites DAYTON, OH - Ohio's adult industry curfew law has led to the creation of two new sites for citizens to voice their concerns to their elected representatives, StopTheHouse.com and StopTheSenate.com. Ohio's Senate bill 16, The Community Values Act, would set strict midnight curfews for adult bookstores and other businesses. The bill passed the Ohio State senate by a 24-8 vote April 18, but if it is not passed in the state House by May 2, it will have to be re-submitted. "The main motivation to get this site started was what's going on here in Ohio with Senate bill 16," Matthew Riley, webmaster for StopTheHouse and StopTheSenate, told XBIZ. Riley is also IT manager for the Dayton-based In Your Face Agency, which operates adult cabarets and websites. "We own several adult businesses, and this obviously hits home. We thought this would be a great tool, which we had sitting in our back pocket, practically ready to go." The StopTheHouse website was announced by a 60,000 mass e-mailing Thursday night. "We sent to every e-mail address we had access to," Riley said. "We've already sent 450,000 emails to the state House, because every time somebody hits 'Send' it goes to all 100 members." The bill was presented through Ohio's initiated-statute petition process. Citizens for Community Values, a conservative, Cincinnati-based group, led the petition drive. At present, the sites only offer links for Ohioans to protest the curfew law to Ohio state legislators, but plans call for the site to connect citizens to legislators in all 50 states. In addition, a third Web site, StopTheWhiteHouse.com will be introduced along with other advocacy sites in the future. For more information, visit StopTheHouse.com and StopTheSenate.com http://xbiz.com/news_piece.php?id=22739 California Legislature Straps Taxpayers with Billions in Debt While Stating Opposition for Tax Hikes, Yet Targets Adult Entertainment With Proposed Tax By Matt GrayThe legislative landscape is marked with deals and deadlines, rule waivers and workarounds. There is very little which cannot be accomplished if lawmakers decide they want to do it. April 27th was one such deadline for policy committees to have heard and moved any legislation which was designated as a "fiscal" bill. A fiscal bill generally means it would exceed more than a certain cost to taxpayers if made into a law, and therefore must be heard by one of the fiscal committees. Late nights and skipped lunches was the standard modus operandi for many a lawmaker, staff, and lobbyist as they struggled to pass (or kill) legislation dealing with anything from healthcare reform to California's impending prison crisis. A great example of deal making and workarounds can be found in one of the most far reaching and costly measures to pass through the California Legislature in the last decade, Assembly Bill 900. AB 900, by Assemblyman Solorio (D-Santa Ana), was a transportation bill that was completely gutted and amended into a prison bill on April 25th. Before it was even in its official published format the measure was set and heard by both the Assembly and Senate on the morning of April 26th. By not having the bill "in print," not allowing it to remain in print for 30 days, and now hearing the bill (ever) in either a policy or fiscal committee, the Legislature would appear to have violated a number of constitutional and legislative rules. But every rule has a loophole built in, and all the lawmakers have to do is vote to waive the rules and move on. So one might appropriately ask, what is the point of having the rules? On our behalf our elected officials, within less than 24 hours, proceeded to gut and amend a non-germane bill, skip all committee hearings and opportunity for public consideration, and ram legislation through that indebts California to more than $6.1 billion in revenue bonds to build the largest prison system in the world. Add to this the fact that "revenue bonds" are supposed to possess some revenue generating mechanism to pay for the cost of the bonds, and prisons are clearly without any revenue generation, and our elected officials circumvented the voter approval process because voters already made it clear that they disapproved of the Governor's special election infrastructure bond initiatives. Lawmakers overwhelmingly passed a $6.1 billion prison construction plan on the backs of California taxpayers. Meanwhile, Assemblyman Chuck Calderon is still promoting AB 1551 to tax the adult entertainment industry because, he claims, California is short on tax revenues. AB 1551, as a non-fiscal bill, has still not been set for its first hearing in the Assembly Committee on Revenue and Taxation but is expected to be heard on either May 14th or 21st. Apparently logic and reason need not apply when crafting (and passing), legislation. ============================================================== Matt Gray is a senior lobbyist for Capital Alliance, a Sacramento based lobbying and government strategies firm. He can be reached at 916-444-5551, or by e-mail: matt@thecapitalalliance.com Email Xpress@freespeechcoalition.com for more information. Because of 2257 litigation, it's critical that we have your company's information complete in our database. Are you SURE your company's information is complete? Email UpdateInfo@FreeSpeechCoalition.com to update your company's information now. NOTE: The data we're tracking, related to 2257, has changed. Please update NOW. MAY 11-13 - Sex and So Much More Show, Phoenix MAY 26 - Arizona Fetish Ball, Scottsdale, AZ JUNE 7-10 - Cybernet Expo, Tampa Bay, Florida JUNE 22-24 - Erotica L.A., Los Angeles Convention Center AUGUST 27-30 - Annual Gentlemen's Club Owners Expo, Las Vegas, NV AUGUST 27-30 - STOREROTICA Convention and Tradeshow, Las Vegas, NV SEPT 21-23 - ADULTCON, Los Angeles Convention Center Peace is not only better than war, but infinitely more arduous. -- George Bernard Shaw The happiest man is he who learns from nature the lesson of worship. -- Ralph Waldo Emerson
Delivering Weekly Censorship Updates to the Adult Entertainment Industry Vol. X, No. 16, April 27, 2007 - A Member Service of the Free Speech Coalition Free Speech X-press is researched and edited by Scott Ross. Copyright 2007 Free Speech Coalition. Permission to reprint granted to FSC members; please give credit. This X-press in brought to you by our exclusive sponsors Bellenjoy & ARS. Please support our sponsors by selecting the logos above. FreedomStreams ’07 Raises Nearly $20K for Free Speech Coalition CANOGA PARK, CA - The Free Speech Coalition is pleased to express its deep gratitude to HotMovies.com for last month’s one-day fundraising event, FreedomStreams ’07, which raised close to $20,000 for the FSC’s Legal Defense Fund on April 15. FSC would also like to express its profound appreciation to the studios that participated in FreedomStreams ’07. This year’s event garnered the participation of 69 donors representing 323 studios, including West Coast Productions, Legend Video, VCX, Hush Hush Entertainment, JapanX and SMASH Pictures. All came together under the leadership of National A-1 Internet (dba HotMovies.com), which matched all donations dollar for dollar. A complete list of participants is available at www.freespeechcoalition.com. “This is the second year National A-1 has led the way to raise funds through a FreedomStreams event. It took months of preparation and hard work by the staff of HotMovies to enlist the support of their online studios for this special event. We are truly indebted to HotMovies.com,” said Scott L. Lowther, Director of Membership Services for the Free Speech Coalition. “The concept was brilliantly simple and the end result was a collaborative partnership that is responsible for the largest member-driven fundraising event in FSC’s history to date,” said Lowther. “We couldn’t be more pleased with this result.” In the past year, the adult entertainment industry has seen a marked increase in government aggression at both the state and federal levels. “The best way to turn that tide is as the unified voice of a unified industry through the Free Speech Coalition. So, again, thank you to everyone,” Lowther said. “It’s more important than ever that we continue to work together to meet our challenges head on.” Statewide Delegates Visit Sacramento for 'Free Speech Lobbying Day' SACRAMENTO, CA - Statewide delegates from the adult entertainment industry met with lawmakers in the state capitol for their 10th annual "Celebrate Free Speech Lobbying Day" event. The advocacy event is sponsored by the Free Speech Coalition (FSC), a 3,500 member trade association for the adult entertainment industry, seeking to make citizen lobbyists for a day, including such adult entertainment members as starlet and former gubernatorial hopeful Mary Carey. Among the legislation being discussed is Assembly Bill 1551, by Assemblyman Chuck Calderon (D-Whittier), seen throughout the adult industry as yet another barrier to doing business in California. "Like the motion picture industry, we have to compete against overseas competition which pirates our products and sells them over the Internet," said Diane Duke, Executive Director for the FSC. "More than 50,000 people are employed by the industry in California. Do we really want to compromise those jobs?" FSC California lobbyist Matt Gray said that the added cost of doing business in California is not the only problem with the proposed legislation. "According to FSC attorneys, this bill is fraught with constitutional problems, and unfairly singles out the industry, while falsely promoting myths about adult entertainment." The day's events culminated with the Free Speech Legislation Reception, in which lawmakers and their staff will mingle with advocates of free speech. http://avn.com/index_cache.php?Primary_Navigation=Articles&Action=View_Article&Content_ID=287607 Calif. Porn Tax Proposed; Rate Not Yet Set SACRAMENTO, CA - A California Assembly bill introduced by Assemblyman Charles Calderon, D-Whittier, is seeking to tax the sale, storage, use, or other consumption of adult materials. The exact percentage of the proposed tax has yet to be determined. Assembly Bill 1551 would levy a new "sin tax" on adult products and on adult bookstores' gross receipts from the retail sale of adult materials in an effort to combat supposed secondary effects. The bill alleges that the presence of brick-and-mortar adult retailers have negative effects on the community. Funds from the proposed tax, should it pass, are earmarked for local law enforcement to combat criminal activity commonly referred to as "secondary effects," frequently used by opponents of adult entertainment to further opposition in zoning, legislation and/or taxation. Recent studies researching these so-called "secondary effects" as a consequence to adult entertainment businesses have largely debunked the findings of earlier studies which did not receive proper peer review and/or utilize accepted scientific methodology in conducting the early studies. Despite recent findings in properly-conducted studies, this law proposes to use tax revenues from this bill to increase police patrols in the vicinity of adult stores, programs to address decreased property values resulting in losses in property tax, educational costs, and programs that address related health issues including disease transmission and mental health treatment. "We still have not determined the percentage of the tax," Calderon's Chief-of-Staff Tom White told XBIZ. "The bill would be amended with that number. First, the state Board of Equalization would determine the fiscal impact of the tax. Once a number is put into play, the board determines what it thinks the revenue estimates are." White said that he expects the Policy Committee to hold a public hearing on the bill in the next three to four weeks, at which point it would go through various state committees before the full assembly votes. After that, the bill would go to the state Senate, assuming there are no changes. If the bill is amended in the Senate, it would go back to the Assembly. "According to FSC attorneys, this bill is fraught with constitutional problems," said Matt Gray, FSC's California lobbyist, "and unfairly singles out the industry, while falsely promoting myths about adult entertainment." http://xbiz.com/news_piece.php?id=22653 Gonzales Confirms Bogden was Fired Over Lack of Obscenity Cases WASHINGTON, DC - In testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee last week, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales confirmed that the United States Attorney for the District of Nevada, Daniel Bogden, was fired for failing to take an obscenity case suggested by Brent Ward, head of the Justice Department's Obscenity Prosecution Task Force. Under questioning from Sen. Sam Brownback, the administration's main congressional proponent for destruction of the adult industry, Gonzales answered a query about the reasons for Bogden's firing that there were concerns about "the energy in [Bogden's] department in this fast-growing district" and about the lack of any obscenity prosecutions. No other reasons were given for Bogden's firing, and Brownback repeated the "obscenity" justification in his summary at the end of his allotted time for questions. AVN Senior Editor Mark Kernes argues in an AVN.com column that as the entire purpose of the Judiciary Committee's investigation is to find out whether eight U.S. Attorneys (USAs) from various districts around the country were fired for "political reasons," it would seem that Gonzales' statement has just made their case for them, since few policies have been more politically charged in the Bush administration than advancing the religious right's obsession with stamping out all forms of sexually explicit expression. Brownback also asked about the rationale behind the dismissal of Paul Charlton, the U.S. Attorney (USA) for the District of Arizona, and Gonzales alleged two reasons: Charlton's "poor judgment in pushing forward in a death penalty case," and concerns about "his policy of interviewing targets" of federal investigations a reason that Gonzales admits he came up with "after the fact" of Charlton's firing; no mention of obscenity at all. Kernes notes that Gonzales' statement hardly comports with Brent Ward's email to Kyle Sampson of Sept. 20, 2006, titled "Obscenity cases," wherein Ward wrote, "We have two U.S. Attorneys who are unwilling to take good cases we have presented to them. They are Paul Charlton in Phoenix (this is urgent) and Dan Bogden in Las Vegas. In light of the AG's [Attorney General's] comments at the NAC to 'kick butt and take names', what do you suggest I do? Do you think at this point that these names should go through channels to reach the AG, or is it enough for me to give the names to you? If you want to act on what I give you, I will be glad to provide a little more context for each of the two situations." The column questions the likelihood that Ward's written request to Sampson, whom Gonzales testified was the sole person at Justice who put the U.S. Attorneys' names on the list to be fired, that it was "urgent" that Charlton be fired over "obscenity cases," was not a factor in his firing despite Gonzales' testimony that Charlton's failure to "take good cases we [Ward's Obscenity Prosecution Task Force] have presented to them" played no part in his firing? http://avn.com/index_cache.php?Primary_Navigation=Articles&Action=View_Article&Content_ID=287541 Titan Media Wins Key Round Against Veoh.com SAN FRANCISCO, CA - XBIZ reports that last week Titan Media's parent Io Group won a victory in their legal battle against a peercasting website, when a federal judge ordered Veoh.com to disclose information on the company's policies and procedures. The order was made after Titan counsel Gill Sperlein convinced U.S. Judge Howard R. Lloyd of the likelihood of copyright infringement over Veoh's video distribution network relating to numerous Titan Media titles. In the suit, filed in U.S. District Court in San Jose, Calif., last year, Titan seeks claims of contributory and vicarious copy infringement, alleging Veoh allowed Internet surfers access to the videos, which were later taken down. Titan claims that the videos - "Boner - Man's Best Friend," "Detour," "Don't Ask Don't Tell," "Island Guardian," "River Patrol," and "Sea Men - Fallen Angel IV," as well as others - were shared over Veoh. XBIZ was unable to reach Veoh executives for comment at press time. But in previous court motions, Veoh has claimed that it was immune from liability under the "safe harbor" provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, or DMCA. Veoh's YouTube-like network distributes video clip content in its original format but transcodes to a lower-bandwidth and lower-quality version. The San Diego-based company recently received extensive media attention after ex-Disney Chairman Michael Eisner joined the board. In April 2006, he was one of the investors, along with Time-Warner, in the $12.5 million second round of financing for Veoh. With the latest order, Veoh must turn over to Titan crucial information on the company's policies and procedures, including data relating to its Internet traffic and its ability to monetize that traffic. Veoh also must supply documents on policies over online adult material and ways the company prevents child pornography from being published on their website, as well as papers identifying its networking architecture and how it tracks porn and other content. http://xbiz.com/news_piece.php?id=22503&searchstring=titan Lobbying Process 101 - An Example As Congress strives to pass meaningful legislation in the first half of 2007, we thought we'd shed a little light on a strange but somewhat noble practice that gets quite a bit of attention here in DC. Can you guess what it is? If you instantly thought of the time-tested and often-scrutinized practice of federal lobbying, then you get the prize. Lobbying Capitol Hill (i.e. U.S. congressman and senators) is an incredibly tricky and complex endeavor, which can run the gamut from coalition building to corporate support to massive letter-writing and call-in campaigns. It all depends on your issue, as different topics/concerns resonate with different elected officials. Take for example an initiative to provide healthier food in grade school cafeterias - sounds like a no-brainer, right? While seemingly easy, wending your way through the support-building maze in Congress is anything but. With our healthy food in schools example, the initial idea could be borne from a concerned citizen or, more likely, a non-profit association that is dedicated to stemming childhood obesity. That group would quickly ally with organic food manufacturers and other healthy food producers and form a coalition of sorts - let's call this one the "Eat Smart Coalition", or "ESC". ESC would organize quickly, holding numerous conference calls and meetings to identify its message, goals, and friends in Congress. ESC would probably approach congressmen and senators who have large obesity rates in the respective districts or, as is often the case, have healthy food companies headquartered within their constituency. Once ESC finds an adoptive member (or "champion") in Congress to shepherd its cause, it works with that lawmaker to draft a bill that addresses the problem and offers a legal fix. For the purposes of our example, the bill could possibly mandate a nationwide switch to sugarless sodas only in America's public school cafeterias. To spread the word within Congress, ESC would then author a letter from that its champion representative to every other Member of Congress in order to raise awareness and drum-up support. Such a letter is referred to as a "Dear Colleague", and it's a powerful piece of ammunition. Once the Dear Colleague is circulated, ESC would subsequently embark on Hill-wide meetings to promote its goals and gather support, meeting with the staffs of individual offices and committees as well as other industry groups that share the same tenets/initiatives as ESC. For instance, child advocacy groups would be brought in to educate congressional staffs via presentations, briefings, and one-page documents detailing ESC's goals. As ESC's bill gathers steam, the coalition begins to gear-up for the actual nuts and bolts part of enacting a law: the language in the bill itself. What goes in? What stays out? Who would ever oppose such a meaningful piece of legislation? To find out, tune-in next week… Submitted by the Raben Group, Washington, D.C. Special thanks this week to: Wicked Pictures for sponsoring our Celebrating Free Speech Lobby Days Legislative Reception and to Topco Sales for providing an exceptionally comfortable room for our April FSC board meeting. Email Xpress@freespeechcoalition.com for more information. Because of 2257 litigation, it's critical that we have your company's information complete in our database. Are you SURE your company's information is complete? Email UpdateInfo@FreeSpeechCoalition.com to update your company's information now. NOTE: The data we're tracking, related to 2257, has changed. Please update NOW. MAY 11-13 - Sex and So Much More Show, Phoenix JUNE 7-10 - Cybernet Expo, Tampa Bay, Florida JUNE 22-24 - Erotica L.A., Los Angeles Convention Center AUGUST 27-30 - Annual Gentlemen's Club Owners Expo, Las Vegas, NV AUGUST 27-30 - STOREROTICA Convention and Tradeshow, Las Vegas, NV SEPT 21-23 - ADULTCON, Los Angeles Convention Center We must not allow the clock and the calendar to blind us to the fact that each moment of life is a miracle and mystery. -- H. G. Wells It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it. -- Aristotle
Delivering Weekly Censorship Updates to the Adult Entertainment Industry Vol. X, No. 15, April 20, 2007 - A Member Service of the Free Speech Coalition Free Speech X-press is researched and edited by Scott Ross. Copyright 2007 Free Speech Coalition. Permission to reprint granted to FSC members; please give credit. This X-press in brought to you by our exclusive sponsors Bellenjoy & ARS. Please support our sponsors by selecting the logos above. FSC Files Motion to Clarify Recent 2257 Order CANOGA PARK, CA - The Free Speech Coalition filed a motion with a federal court last week seeking clarification and modification of a recent judicial order concerning the organization’s legal battle against 2257 regulations. The motion seeks to clarify an interim decision on the 2257 litigation issued by Colorado Federal District Court Judge Walker Miller at the end of March that covered several aspects of the case, including the proper types of ID necessary for foreign performers and how the record-keeping laws apply to “secondary producers.” "Judge Miller has not amended or vacated the preliminary injunction entered in December of 2005," explained Reed Lee, Free Speech Coalition (FSC) Board member and President of the First Amendment Lawyers Association. "As to ‘secondary producers’ and all other matters addressed, it remains in full force and effect unless and until he does so or until he enters a final order in the case. That is not likely to happen soon,” Reed said. “In the meantime, if the government moves to vacate a portion of that injunction, FSC is prepared to move that it be expanded. We should have a better idea about the timing and direction of the 2257 litigation after the April 25 status hearing." Additionally, in response to a joint request by FSC and the Government, Judge Miller has agreed to hold a status conference to consider scheduling further proceedings in the case. Further litigation will take account of the changes that Congress made to the statutory record-keeping scheme last July. The status conference is scheduled to take place on April 25. "FSC will continue to provide regular updates on the status of 2257 as the case unfolds through our weekly XPRESS newsletter, e-mail alerts, and posting on our websites," said Diane Duke, FSC Executive Director. "We are committed to providing accurate, up-to-date information to our members and the industry." http://avn.com/index_cache.php?Primary_Navigation=Articles&Action=View_Article&Content_ID=287340 Google Protests Utah Keyword Law Unconstitutional SALT LAKE CITY, UT - Google officials have complained that a new Utah state law that curbs keyword-triggered advertising is unconstitutional on First Amendment grounds, and warned that the law would likely be challenged in court. "This law hurts consumers, violates free speech, and is inconsistent with both established U.S. trademark law and our capitalist system," Google spokesman Adam Kovacevich said in an e-mail to The Salt Lake Tribune. The law, named the Trademark Protection Act (TPA), initially was doubted to pass, because of the possibility of litigation. But it showed up late in the Utah Legislature’s session and passed with almost no opposition. Unless a special session surfaces or a court injunction is placed, the law will take effect June 30th. The TPA was created by Unspam Technologies CEO Matthew Prince, the creator of Utah’s controversial state child-protection registry, which requires adult companies to submit their email lists to be "scrubbed" of e-mail addresses to which minors could have access. The Free Speech Coalition currently is challenging the registry in court. Google did not confirm it would be the one to bring the law to court, but company officials did promise to work with other Internet companies to show Utah officials why the law hurts consumers, violates free speech and is inconsistent with both established U.S. trademark law and the U.S. capitalist system. Though Google fell short of promising to offer a legal challenge to the law themselves, if litigation does occur, it shouldn’t surprise Utah legislators as they were warned by their own lawyers that the law the Trademark Protection Act had a "high probability of being found unconstitutional," according to the Tribune. The law would work like this: companies that register trademarks in Utah will be protected from competitors looking to buy the right to get a sponsored link to show up right above the search results, from a keyword you put in the search box. By way of example, the Tribune notes that, if you type Overstock.com into Google's search engine, you will get sponsored links to SmartBargains.com, Buy.com and Webspawner.com. The new law would allow Overstock to sue the search engine and the competitor if such ads do show up in Utah-based Internet searches. “Competition, which generally helps lower prices and benefits consumers, is fueled in part by companies being able to use advertising to draw contrasts with their competitors," Kovacevich said. But Rep. David Clark, R-Santa Clara, Utah, the House sponsor of the law, argues that the law "places Utah in the front of the pack of U.S. states in trademark protection…I'm sorry they feel it's still the Wild West on the Internet," he said of Google and bloggers who have been blasting the law. http://origin.sltrib.com/technology/ci_5648312 Judge Calls for Hearing on Virginian Adult Retailer NORTH STAFFORD, VA - Stafford County Circuit Judge J. Martin Bass has ordered a full hearing in a lawsuit seeking to close a local adult bookstore. A neighboring business, Rappahannock Goodwill Industries, sued the owners of Pheromoans and its landlord in November. While county laws do not contain zoning restrictions over where adult stores can and cannot be located, the shopping center’s developer listed 30 types of banned businesses — including sex shops — in a legally binding agreement, according to the Free Lance-Star, a local newspaper. Pheromoans attorney Rachel Goldstein said her client was not aware of the banned business covenant before it signed the lease and that the case should be dismissed. Goldstein maintains that the list of banned businesses was not disclosed during Pheromoans’ lease negotiations. Goldstein asked Judge Bass to reconsider a ruling handed down by the Virginia Supreme Court in the 1950s that said tenants are responsible for knowing lease restrictions before signing. She wants the burden to be reversed. “Landlords are certainly in a better position to make them aware of covenants on the land,” Goldstein told the Free Lance-Star. A date for the judge’s hearing was not set. In a separate case, the two owners of Pheromoans, Lesley Mason and Meagan Pacheco, were indicted on three misdemeanor obscenity charges in November. Stafford County has not pursued an obscenity case since the 1980s, and a trial is expected to commence in June. http://www.fredericksburg.com/News/FLS/2007/042007/04102007/274248 Indiana court rules in favor of student who published MySpace.com page INDIANAPOLIS, IN - An angry, obscenity-laden Internet rant by a local middle school student aimed at her principle has been ruled as constitutionally protected by the Indiana Court of Appeals. The student, only known as A.B., was sentenced to nine months probation for obscenity charges stemming vulgar comments she posted on the popular social networking Web site MySpace, but according to a recent report, the court has now ruled that the free speech rights of the girl were violated with that punishment. In February 2006, Greencastle Middle School Principal Shawn Gobert discovered comments that he did not write that were attributed to him on MySpace, a popular social networking Web site. The vulgar comments were postings from A.B. on the MySpace page of another unidentified student that were critical of the school’s policy prohibiting body piercings. “It is clear that school authorities are state actors for purposes of freedom of expression and, as such, are subject to the commands of the First Amendment,” Judge Patricia Riley wrote in the 10-page opinion. “A.B. openly criticizes Gobert’s imposed school policy on decorative body piercings and forcefully indicates her displeasure with it.” “While we have little regard for A.B.’s use of vulgar epithets, we conclude that her overall message constitutes political speech.” The state filed a delinquency petition in March alleging that A.B.’s acts would have been harassment, identity theft and identity deception if committed by an adult, according to the Associated Press. The juvenile court dropped most of the charges, but in June found A.B. to be a delinquent child and placed her on nine months of probation after ruling the comments were obscene. But A.B. appealed, contending that her comments were political speech protected by federal and state laws because they concerned school policy. In reversing the student’s conviction, the Court of Appeals found that the comments were protected under the free expression provision of the Indiana Constitution, ruling that the juvenile court unconstitutionally suppressed her right of free expression. “We find that there is insufficient evidence to support that A.B.’s adjucation of harassment based on her posted message...is consistent with her right to free speech,” according to the decision. “Therefore, we hold that A.B.’s conviction for harassment contravened her right to speak, as guaranteed by the Indiana Constitution.” http://www.splc.org/newsflash.asp?id=1501&year= Attacking Adult Entertainment By Matt Gray SACRAMENTO, CA - The adult entertainment industry is again under attack as California State Assemblyman Chuck Calderon (D-Whittier), authored legislation this week to propose a tax upon the industry and publicly declare that adult entertainment harbors criminal activities and causes adverse effects on local property values. Assembly Bill 1551, as amended, creates the “Adult Entertainment Venue Tax” which seeks to tax the sale, storage, use, or other consumption of adult materials – including live performances – as well as businesses, to fund programs which address criminal activity. The legislation relies heavily upon unfounded secondary effects claims that the industry contributes to decreased property values, illegal sales of controlled substances, prostitution, and crimes against women and children. AB 1551 seems fraught with constitutional problems, and irresponsibly promotes a number of myths which are refuted by case law and nearly two dozen independent secondary effects studies. In fact, the evidence shows property values around adult businesses are not adversely impacted. In fact, you are safer having an adult nightclub in your neighborhood than you are with a convenience store or gas station. Beyond that, taxing non-violent material depicting consensual sexual activity, or material which merely depicts nudity, is irrational and overbroad. As written, FSC contends that the measure is unconstitutional. But that may not be enough. Lawmakers seem content to ‘let the courts figure it out’ and have been known to support the creation of unconstitutional laws. This type of ill-informed and irresponsible legislation is precisely why Free Speech Coalition sponsors a “Celebrate Free Speech Lobbying Days” event each year. Lawmakers, in general, simply do not understand the industry, have no first-hand knowledge of what is myth and what is truth, and are left to their own imaginations as to what really goes on. If you care about freedom of expression, and if you care about continuing to do business in California, I very strongly encourage you to make some time to come up to Sacramento on April 22-23, to join with the Free Speech Coalition in protecting your industry through direct lobbying. Reserve your seat at the Celebrate Free Speech Lobbying Days event and make your presence known at the Capitol building in Sacramento – show them you care enough to show up and be heard. To reserve your spot, email support@freespeechcoalition.com with your full contact information. AB 1551 has not yet been set for its first policy committee hearing, but it is expected to be heard in the Assembly Committee on Arts, Entertainments, Sports, Tourism, and Internet Media on May 1st. Concerned industry professionals can also write letters of opposition to AB 1551 and send them to: The Hon. Chuck Calderon, Member of the State Assembly, State Capitol, Sacramento, CA 95814. Telephone: 916-319-2058, Fax: 916-319-2158 ============================================================== Matt Gray is a senior lobbyist for Capital Alliance, a Sacramento based lobbying and government strategies firm. He can be reached at 916-444-5551, or by e-mail: matt@thecapitalalliance.com Cybernet Expo Celebrates its 10th Anniversary Cybernet Expo is an annual international tradeshow designed exclusively for online business professionals. The focus of Cybernet Expo is the lucrative adult Internet industry, making this an ideal event for webmasters, online marketers, talent, technology professionals and anyone else with an interest in participating in this rewarding field. Opportunities at Cybernet Expo include daily informative seminars featuring speakers chosen from the industry's most knowledgeable people including the Free Speech Coalition, presentations from the most successful companies in the adult Internet segment, plus business-friendly parties and special events where you can network with the industry's decision makers and build lasting relationships. This year's Cybernet Expo will take place at the Hilton Westshore in beautiful Tampa Bay, Florida, June 7-10, 2007. Advance Registration for show attendees is now open, at a discount rate of $159 and our special hotel room reservation rate is only $139 (plus tax) per night while they last. Please visit http://www.cybernetexpo.com and join us in our 10th successful year! Email Xpress@freespeechcoalition.com for more information. Because of 2257 litigation, it's critical that we have your company's information complete in our database. Are you SURE your company's information is complete? Email UpdateInfo@FreeSpeechCoalition.com to update your company's information now. NOTE: The data we're tracking, related to 2257, has changed. Please update NOW. APR 16-18 - International Lingerie Show, Las Vegas APR 21-22 - ACE of California - Ace Hight Poker Party, Los Angeles, CA APR 23 - California Lobby Day, Sacramento, CA MAY 11-13 - Sex and So Much More Show, Phoenix JUNE 7-10 - Cybernet Expo, Tampa Bay, Florida JUNE 22-24 - Erotica L.A., Los Angeles Convention Center AUGUST 27-30 - Annual Gentlemen's Club Owners Expo, Las Vegas, NV AUGUST 27-30 - STOREROTICA Convention and Tradeshow, Las Vegas, NV SEPT 21-23 - ADULTCON, Los Angeles Convention Center When I'm god, I'm very good, but...when I'm bad, I'm better. -- Mae West Highly developed spirits often encounter resistance from mediocre minds. -- Albert Einstein
Delivering Weekly Censorship Updates to the Adult Entertainment Industry Vol. X, No. 14, April 13, 2007 - A Member Service of the Free Speech Coalition Free Speech X-press is researched and edited by Scott Ross. Copyright 2007 Free Speech Coalition. Permission to reprint granted to FSC members; please give credit. Please support our sponsors by selecting the logos above. FREE SPEECH TAKES NEXT STEP IN THE 2257 CASE CANOGA PARK, CA - On Friday, April 13, 2007, the Free Speech Coalition filed a motion with Colorado Federal District Court Judge Walker Miller seeking clarification and modification of his recent order. “This filing is in response to Judge Miller’s interim decision issued March 30, 2007,” explained Reed Lee, FSC Board member and President of the First Amendment Lawyers Association. Additionally, in response to a joint request by FSC and the Government, Judge Miller has agreed to hold a status conference to consider scheduling further proceedings in the case. Further litigation will take account of the changes which Congress made to the statutory record keeping scheme last July. The status conference is scheduled to take place Wednesday, April 25, 2007. “Judge Miller has not amended or vacated the preliminary injunction entered in December, 2005. As to secondary producers and all other matters addressed, it remains in full force and effect unless and until he does so or until he enters a final order in the case. That is not likely to happen soon. In the meantime, if the government moves to vacate a portion of that injunction, FSC is prepared to move that it be expanded.” Lee said. “We should have a better idea about the timing and direction of the 2257 litigation after the April 25 status hearing.” “FSC will continue to provide regular updates on the status of 2257 as the case unfolds through our weekly XPRESS newsletter, e-mail alerts, and posting on our websites,” said Diane Duke, FSC Executive Director. “We are committed to providing accurate, up-to-date information to our members and the industry.” Members of Congress departed Washington for a recess period that began on March 30th and will return to the Capitol on Monday, April 16th. Since the lights in the House and Senate chambers are dark and all legislation is on hold until the men and women of the 110th Congress return, we take this down-time opportunity to profile a few of the key committees and players presiding over the subject matter jurisdiction of our issues. Perhaps the most relevant committees to the Free Speech Coalition's pursuits are the House and Senate Judiciary committees and Commerce-related committees. We'll look at the House Energy & Commerce Committee today and will examine the other three in future issues. The full House Energy & Commerce Committee is comprised of six subcommittees, with the Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet ("T & I") being the most pertinent to the Coalition (the others include subcommittees on the environment, on consumer protection, etc). T & I's jurisdiction includes "Interstate and foreign telecommunications including, but not limited to all telecommunication and information transmission by broadcast, radio, wire, microwave, satellite, or other mode; and, Homeland security-related aspects of the foregoing, including cybersecurity." Thus, the subcommittee oversees all internet activity and regulation in addition to all media laws. Chaired by Rep. Ed Markey (D-Massachusetts), the subcommittee has recently held hearings on the future of digital radio, the prospect of "net neutrality" as it relates to web site regulation, and America's transition to digital television in 2009. A few short years ago, decency over the airwaves was examined as part of the aftermath of Janet Jackson's wardrobe malfunction. As is often the case with congressional committees and their investigations/hearings, the phrase "no news is good news" is quite relevant to an industry that falls under a subcommittee's purview. At present, such is the case with the adult industry and the T & I subcommittee. All is quiet on the DC front. -- The Raben Group Using RTA Label Important Following Adult Industry COPA & .xxx Victories OCEAN CITY, MD - A few weeks ago, the adult entertainment industry and free speech advocates hailed victory as a federal judge struck down the Child Online Protection Act (COPA), which would have placed the burden of keeping minors from accessing adult materials on the shoulders of commercial website operators. COPA would have required adult sites to verify users' ages, but the judge pointed to less restrictive methods like filters as a better option for parents who want to control their children's Internet use. A second victory came just a few days later when ICANN rejected the proposal for a .xxx top level domain, which was heavily marketed as a child protection initiative. The Free Speech Coalition effectively communicated the adult entertainment industry's lack of support of the TLD due to fears that a .xxx TLD would quickly become mandatory for U.S.-based sites. With both mandatory age verification and a separate adult TLD off the table for now, more attention will now inevitably be focused on filtering as the principal strategy for protecting children from viewing adult material online. In fact, there are already bills pending in Congress which would make website labeling mandatory for adult sites. Even if none of the current labeling bills pass, the government will keep tossing new rules against the wall until one finally sticks. Nobody knows how a government-devised labeling system would work - or how it might affect your business. To help head that off, the Association of Sites Advocating Child Protection (ASACP) launched the RTA ("Restricted To Adults") label a few months ago. RTA is free, voluntary, and simple to use. RTA is endorsed by FSC and by many adult companies. Using RTA on your site is an opportunity to help demonstrate that the industry is capable of self-regulation. To make that case, we need the numbers to back it up. We need to be able to show that a lot of adult sites are already using RTA - so label your site today! For more information about RTA and how to use it, please visit www.RTALabel.org. Adult Webmasters' Lawyers File Motion to Define Community Standards PENSACOLA, FL - Lawyers for adult webmaster Clinton McCowen, aka Ray Guhn, are challenging the application of local community standards to the Internet on constitutional grounds, according to an XBIZ report. McCowen's lawyer, Lawrence G. Walters, filed a motion last week petitioning the court to determine the nature and geographic scope of the community whose standards will be applied in McCowen's obscenity case. Walters argues that the relevant community must be the national community, rather than any state or local community, given the Internet's global scope and an inability to discriminate what locations can access adult content. A similar argument has been advanced in the Extreme Associates federal obscenity case, which also involves content accessed via the Internet. McCowen's June 23 arrest on charges of racketeering, engaging in prostitution, and the manufacture and sale of obscene material culminated a months-long investigation into the operations of McCowen's company, Global Technologies Inc., doing business as Ray Guhn Productions. "Applying conservative community standards to adult content that is available globally via the Internet creates an unworkable burden on Internet operators," Walters told XBIZ. "Essentially, if you use a small community's standards and apply them to the Internet, it would effectively allow a small segment of the country to decide for all citizens what material is OK. To mount a defense, we need to know what standards are being applied in this case." According to Walters, the U.S. Supreme Court has struggled with the concept of using community standards on the Internet and has still not issued a definitive ruling on the subject. In the famous Miller vs. California case, the court ruled that the most sensitive jurisdictions should not be allowed to suppress the nature of materials available in communities where they are accepted or tolerated, establishing the "community standards" concept that currently serves as the litmus test for obscenity. The next step in McCowen's case is for the judge to hold a hearing on the motion, which Walters expects to happen before the end of the month. The case is Florida vs. Clinton R. McCowen No. 2006-CF-003151-C. http://xbiz.com/news_piece.php?id=22227 Sacramento Upholds Library Porn Policy SACRAMENTO, CA - The Sacramento Public Library Authority Board (SPLA) voted 5-4 recently to continue allowing customers to access online pornography, the Sacramento Bee reports. In response to community concerns, the SPLA Board has decided to offer greater privacy, such as recessed screens, rather than completely blocking access to adult content on library computers. "If we make pornographic material available, we are inviting pedophiles into our libraries," said Sacramento County Supervisor Susan Peters, a SPLA board member who was opposed to allow customers to access online porn. Another SPLA board member, County Supervisor Roger Dickinson, said, "There is no definition of pornography" and creating one opens the door to legal challenges. Sacramento County libraries currently employ filters to block adult content, disabling the software for adult patrons upon request. The library system's Internet policy says that it "upholds and affirms the right of each individual to have access to constitutionally protected materials" and leaves it to "parents and legal guardians" to monitor their children's use of library computers. In the last 13 months, Sacramento County libraries have only received four complaints about images on computer screens deemed offensive by other patrons. http://www.sacbee.com/101/story/142825.html John T. Bone Arrested in Thailand PATTAYA, Thailand - Adult video director John T. Bone, whose real name is John Bowen, and two of his business associates were arrested earlier this month for producing pornography, which is strictly illegal in Thailand. Pattaya authorities stated that the three men would be charged with various crimes related to making and selling pornography and brought to trial. Bowen and his partners could face deportation, fines and possible jail time if convicted. Producing pornography in Thailand carries a criminal penalty of up to three years in prison. According to the Pattaya News, an English-language Thai newspaper, police obtained a warrant for Bone's arrest on April 5 as part of an investigation into locally-based adult websites. During the raid on the apartment Bowen used as a studio, police seized cameras, lights, costumes, sex toys, computers, business records and hundreds of sexually-explicit DVDs and photos. Bowen admitted under questioning that he rented the apartment five months ago to produce hardcore content featuring Thai women and transsexuals. Also arrested in the raid were Bowen's close friend Kyle Mark Micgram (a.k.a. Vin Cross) and his talent recruiter Paul Sangsuwan (a.k.a. transsexual porn director Chuk Wow.) Micgram's credits include Hustler's Asian Fever, while Sangsuwan recently directed Ladyboys in Latex and other titles for Platinum Blue Productions. Bowen has directed over 300 adult videos for Zane Entertainment, Metro, New Sensations, VCA and other U.S. adult studios. He gained his biggest media notoriety in the '90s for his high-profile World's Biggest Gang Bang videos starring Annabel Chong and Jasmin St. Clair. http://avn.com/index.php?Primary_Navigation=Articles&Action=View_Article&Content_ID=287104 Christian Right Pressures DOJ to Prosecute Internet Porn WASHINGTON, D.C. - Christian right activists are pushing the U.S. Justice Department to step up its prosecution of pornography in response to the recent failure of the .XXX domain proposal. Right wing news source OneNewsNow.com reports that Alliance Defense Fund attorney Pat Trueman is calling for the DOJ to broaden the scope of its anti-porn prosecutions to include all "illegal" internet porn. "Congress never intended that only the most extreme, hard-core pornography be prosecuted," said Trueman, a former chief of the DOJ's Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section. "There's a wide range of material that's out there, and the hardest of the hard stuff doesn't appeal to anyone except maybe one percent of those seeking pornography." Trueman claims that the Justice Department is not living up to its potential in targeting pornographers, arguing that federal prosecutors have the power to "remove 99 percent of the material from the Internet." http://www.onenewsnow.com/2007/04/justice_dept_encouraged_to_pro.php Email Xpress@freespeechcoalition.com for more information. Because of 2257 litigation, it's critical that we have your company's information complete in our database. Are you SURE your company's information is complete? Email UpdateInfo@FreeSpeechCoalition.com to update your company's information now. NOTE: The data we're tracking, related to 2257, has changed. Please update NOW. APR 16-18 - International Lingerie Show, Las Vegas APR 21-22 - ACE of California - Ace Hight Poker Party, Los Angeles, CA APR 23 - California Lobby Day, Sacramento, CA MAY 11-13 - Sex and So Much More Show, Phoenix JUNE 22-24 - Erotica L.A., Los Angeles Convention Center AUGUST 27-30 - Annual Gentlemen's Club Owners Expo, Las Vegas, NV AUGUST 27-30 - STOREROTICA Convention and Tradeshow, Las Vegas, NV SEPT 21-23 - ADULTCON, Los Angeles Convention Center America was founded by puritans and, like it or not, the anti-pleasure dogma of those buckled-shoed killjoys still pervades our collective unconscious like an IMAX shot of Dennis Franz's naked, hairy, cop ass. - Dennis Miller, actor It is still quite lawful for a Catholic woman to avoid pregnancy by resorting to mathematics, though she is still forbidden to resort to physics or chemistry. -- H.L. Mencken
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