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adios
06-29-2004, 10:51 AM
Another ruling consistent with previous rulings. What the leftists don't say is that the cable and satellite broadcast mediums aren't restricted by "decency" rules and probably never will be. The courts have ruled on this previously. Also they don't tell that shock jocks can use the courts to try and discourage people from complaining about the content of daytime radio and TV. Checkout the Mancow case where Mancow, a Chicago shock jock, is suing someone who complained about the content of his show. Mancow has a lot more financial resources available to him than the guy he's suing.

High Court Upholds Block of Web Porn Law (http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=514&e=2&u=/ap/20040629/ap_on_go_su_co/scotus_online_porn)

High Court Upholds Block of Web Porn Law

5 minutes ago Add Top Stories - AP to My Yahoo!


By ANNE GEARAN, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that a law meant to punish pornographers who peddle dirty pictures to Web-surfing kids is probably an unconstitutional muzzle on free speech.



The high court divided 5-to-4 over a law passed in 1998, signed by then-President Clinton (news - web sites) and now backed by the Bush administration. The majority said a lower court was correct to block the law from taking effect because it likely violates the First Amendment.


The court did not end the long fight over the law, however. The majority sent the case back to a lower court for a trial that could give the government a chance to prove the law does not go too far.


The majority, led by Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, said there may have been important technological advances in the five years since a federal judge blocked the law.


Holding a new trial will allow discussion of what technology, if any, might allow adults to see and buy material that is legal for them while keeping that material out of the hands of children.


Justices John Paul Stevens (news - web sites), David H. Souter, Clarence Thomas (news - web sites) and Ruth Bader Ginsburg (news - web sites) agreed with Kennedy.


The American Civil Liberties Union (news - web sites) and other critics of the antipornography law said that it would restrict far too much material that adults may legally see and buy, the court said.


The law, which never took effect, would have authorized fines up to $50,000 for the crime of placing material that is "harmful to minors" within the easy reach of children on the Internet (news - web sites).


The law also would have required adults to use access codes and or other ways of registering before they could see objectionable material online.


For now, the law, known as the Child Online Protection Act, would sweep with too broad a brush, Kennedy wrote.


"There is a potential for extraordinary harm and a serious chill upon protected speech" if the law took effect, he wrote.


Kennedy said that filtering software "is not a perfect solution to the problem of children gaining access to harmful-to-minors materials."


He said that so far, the government has failed to prove that other technologies would work better.


The ruling in Ashcroft v. American Civil Liberties Union was the last of nearly 80 cases decided in a busy court term. The year's marquee cases involving presidential power to dealing with suspected terrorist were announced Monday, and mostly represented a loss for the Bush administration.


Tuesday's pornography ruling is more nuanced, but still a blow to the government. It marks the third time the high court has considered the case, and it may not be the last.


Congress had tried repeatedly to find a way to protect Web-surfing children from smut without running afoul of the First Amendment.


The justices unanimously struck down the first version of a child-protection law passed in 1996, just as the Internet was becoming a commonplace means of communication, research and entertainment.





Congress responded by passing COPA, saying the new law met the Supreme Court's free-speech standards.

The American Civil Liberties Union challenged COPA immediately, arguing that the replacement law was every bit as unconstitutional as the original. The law has been tied up in the courts ever since.

In dissent, Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and justices Sandra Day O'Connor (news - web sites), Antonin Scalia (news - web sites) and Stephen Breyer (news - web sites) said the law is constitutional and should be upheld.

Restrictions about who would be covered by the law and how it would be enforced "answer many of the concerns raised by those who attack its constitutionality," Breyer wrote.

The ACLU challenged the law on behalf of online bookstores, artists and others, including operators of Web sites that offer explicit how-to sex advice or health information. The ACLU argued that its clients could face jail time or fines for distributing information that, while racy or graphic, is perfectly legal for adult eyes and ears.

Material that is indecent but not obscene is protected by the First Amendment. Adults may see or purchase it, but children may not.

That is a tricky rule to enforce in the murky and anonymous reaches of the Internet. Most Web sites, chat rooms and other Internet venues are available to adults and minors alike, and commercial transactions do not take place face to face.

The Internet also presents a difficulty in translating old rules about what children could see and what they could not.

In writing the 1998 law, Congress said "contemporary community standards" should guide what is harmful to children. Civil liberties defenders said that the standard would lead to the most prudish place in America having veto power over the most liberal, because Internet material is available to them both.

The ACLU also said the community standards idea would force legitimate web site operators to self-censor, for fear of running afoul of someone's idea of what is inappropriate for children.

The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals (news - web sites) agreed, and ruled that the standards issue alone made the law unconstitutional. The Bush administration appealed to the Supreme Court, which delivered a partial victory for the government two years ago.

The court said at that time that, by itself, the community standards issue did not make the law unconstitutional. The justices then sent the case back for a fuller examination of the other free speech objections raised by the ACLU.

The Philadelphia-based federal appeals court then struck down the law a second time, on much broader First Amendment grounds, and the administration again appealed to the Supreme Court.

The case is Ashcroft v. ACLU, 03-218

andyfox
06-29-2004, 11:50 AM
[WARNING: Cheap Shot Advisory]

Interesting that Thomas dissented from the right-wingers here. Perhaps he has a vested interest in porn remaining readily available . . .

J.R.
06-29-2004, 01:30 PM
What does the lack of cable and satellite television decency standards or some shock jocks ability to sue a critic (what's that case name, it sounds like Mancow brought a defamation action) have to do with a trial court's application of the consitutional principle that content based restrictions on speech are presumed invalid and will be enjoined until and unless the government meets its burden of establishing the constitutionality of restriction (i.e. that the Govenrment can withstand strict scrutiny by establishing the restriction is narrowly drawn to further a compelling state interest in the least restrictive form possible)?



RANT

BTW, A trial court's injunction is reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard, and that's why Breyer's dissent is so absurd- there hasn't yet been a full determination of whether the proposed alternative means to limit access to pornography are less restictive and equally effective. That's why Scalia and Thomas took the positions they did (although they ended up on opposite sides of the debate)- even they couldn't buy into Breyer's judicial activism- he wants to declare COPA constitutional and the least restrictive means available before the trial court has gathered anything more than cursory factual testimony concerning the possible alternatives to COPA.

Breyer ignores the fact that the appeal is only from the grant of the preliminary injunction barring criminal enforcement of the act until further hearings are held. And that doesn't even get into the idea that it may not be constiutional to punish speech with criminal penalities instead of some form of censure as mentioned in Ginsburg's concurrence.

Although Thomas and Scalia differ with respect to the scrutiny under which COPA needs to be reviewed, they recognize that the case is procedurally not ripe for a determination on the merits becuase the trial court hasn't really gathered facts. (Scalia gets around this defect by arguing strict scrutiny does not apply to commercial pronography because it is a lesser class of speech). Instead, Breyer shamelessly relies on the Congressional findings of fact in the legislative history to esatblish COPA is the least restrictive alternative and then states "No respondent has offered to produce evidence at trial to the contrary", ignoring that fact that such evidence was before the trial court in the preliminary hearing and the burden is on the government to justify its content based restriction on free speech. As noted by the majroity "there are substantial factual disputes remaining in the case". Breyer had no business trying to resolve these disputes prematurely on his own.

Wake up CALL
06-29-2004, 03:59 PM
[ QUOTE ]
[WARNING: Cheap Shot Advisory]

Interesting that Thomas dissented from the right-wingers here. Perhaps he has a vested interest in porn remaining readily available . . .

[/ QUOTE ]

The US Supreme Court is above being influenced by politics, it merely interprets constitutional issues in an unbiased manner. An exceptional example would be when the Florida Supreme Court attempted to instate new interpretations of voting methods and the counting of ballots in order to favor the Democratic Presidential candidate, Al Gore. The US Supreme Court stepped in and enforced unbiased legal/constitutional guidelines in order to correctly elect the selected candidate for President. There are many other examples but this one should be clear to all.