Surprised this hasn't been brought up yet:
<a href="http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/kpix/20020416/lo/2992_1.html" target="_blank">http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/kpix/20020416/lo/2992_1.html</a>
The way I understand it, the reason the Court struck down the law is that, under this law, you could technically prosecute someone for showing Lolita or Traffic, since both feature scenes of legal-age actors portraying underage characters having sex. Hell, you could even get in trouble for staging Romeo and Juliet and portraying the characters as the teenagers Shakespeare meant them to be (and Zefferelli's and Luhrman's versions could conceivably be labelled as pornography).
Anyway, saw a press conference by Ashcroft regarding the decision and he did not look happy.
<a href="http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/kpix/20020416/lo/2992_1.html" target="_blank">http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/kpix/20020416/lo/2992_1.html</a>
Quote:
| The U.S. Supreme Court has struck down a child pornography law that was protested by a diverse group that included digital artists along with online sex sites. Justices ruled Tuesday that so-called "virtual" child porn is protected by the first amendment. The law banned any image of a child involved in a sex act -- whether it was a real child, a computer-generated image, or even a film clip where an adult actor stood in for a child. But the Supreme Court said that it was too broad, and limited freedom of speech. "The justification for prohibiting child pornography has to do with the abuse that the actors suffer. Then there is no reason to punish the creation of images that don't involve any actual children," said Professor Brad Joondeph of the Santa Clara University Law School. "You are bordering on merely punishing ideas ... The digitized image is nothing more than the images in the creator's head." But a digital image could prompt crimes against real children, according to Santa Clara Assistant District Attorney Chuck Gillingham. "There's a substantial portion of the population that uses the Internet, and uses the trade, for sexual gratification toward children," he said. In fact, 90% of the child sex crime cases Gillingham prosecutes in Santa Clara County involve child pornography. He says Tuesday's ruling may put the burden on prosecutors to prove images used for evidence are those of real children. However, Gilligham does not see the ruling as a total victory for child pornographers. He says he can still charge them with violating state obscenity laws. |
Anyway, saw a press conference by Ashcroft regarding the decision and he did not look happy.





