Dreams of a lego spaceman...

This is the official page of author Duane Gundrum. It is also the portal for the comic strip The Adventures of Stickman and the Unemployed Legospaceman.

Tuesday, September 16, 2003

Ashcroft and company

September 15, 2003 Monday

SECTION: FRONT PAGE; Pg. 1

LENGTH: 1188 words

HEADLINE: Crackdown on Pornography Is Being Launched by Bush

BYLINE: By LUIZA CHWIALKOWSKA Staff Reporter of the Sun

DATELINE: WASHINGTON

BODY:
The Bush administration is launching a "historical" crackdown on makers and distributors of material deemed to be obscene, after nearly a decade without prosecutions under federal obscenity laws, senior officials say.

At least 49 makers and distributors of pornography are under investigation, and indictments are expected over the next few months.

The Justice Department is "going back" to enforcing federal obscenity laws that were largely ignored under the Clinton administration, the deputy assistant attorney general for the criminal division, John Malcolm, told The New York Sun in an interview.

"The lack of federal enforcement over the previous eight years sent a message to those who produce and distribute this material that they would get a free pass and enabled this to proliferate," Mr. Malcolm said. "Absolutely we are doing more," Mr. Malcolm said. "More charges will be brought in the future." Over the past year, there have been 19 federal obscenity-related convictions, and indictments have been brought in eight more, he said.

The FBI, U.S. Customs, and Postal Service agents involved in the effort appear particularly interested in bestiality, sexual violence, and unusual uses of human waste.

In the first major federal prosecution in years, the owners of Extreme Associates, a California-based company accused of distributing videos portraying rape and murder, pleaded not guilty in Pennsylvania to 10 counts relating to the production and distribution by mail of obscene materials. Rob Zicari and Janet Romano could face 50 years in prison and a fine of up to $2.5 million if a Pittsburgh jury finds the material obscene.

In another case, four defendants pleaded guilty in U.S. district court in Beckley, W.Va., August 25 to one count each of conspiracy to mail and distribute obscene material over the Internet. They sold videos and DVDs that mingled sex and excretion.

Officials say their interest in sexually explicit material is wide-ranging.

"There is no particular behavior that is off the table," Mr. Malcolm said.

In a letter to conservative groups, a senior Justice Department official attempted to assure the impatient groups that, contrary to accusations, the anti-obscenity efforts are "far from failing."

"After an enervating eight-year stretch of non-enforcement during the previous administration, the Department once again considered obscenity enforcement to be an important priority and is once against vigorously enforcing federal obscenity laws," the head of the child exploitation and obscenity section, Andrew Oosterbaan, wrote in an August 7 letter obtained by the Sun.

Producers of material considered more "mainstream" are not immune.

"One current case involves the owners of approximately 100 adult stores located in a number of states that pander 'mainstream' videos," Mr. Oosterbaan's letter states. "Another target is one of the largest producers of sexual ly explicit videos in the world."

The renewed effort comes at a time when the administration is already squaring off against free speech advocates in litigation over campaign finance laws, but not soon enough for anti-pornography groups who have criticized Attorney General Ashcroft for ignoring pornography.

The letter states that the department is making "tremendous and historical progress" in combating "the scourge of obscenity."

The Justice Department is planning its second Obscenity Training Seminar next month to teach U.S. attorneys across the country how to go after offenders. A High Tech Investigative Unit staffed with "computer forensic experts" is being staffed to investigate offensive content on the Internet.

"There have been technological advances that have allowed this material to explode into every household," Mr. Malcolm said. "We think this is wrong and worthy of federal resources to combat it."

But anti-pornography groups want not only more indictments - they want the effort to be high-profile. Last week, leaders of more than 100 groups wrote to President Bush asking him to issue a presidential proclamation on Pornography Awareness Week, October 26 to November 1.

"As the Governor of Texas, he issued proclamations, but since he has become president this is an issue he hasn't really addressed once," said the president of Morality in Media, Robert W. Peters, who organized the letter.

"We're well aware that President Bush has many concerns, but the bottom line is that the president's bully pulpit is a very powerful one," he said.

Mr. Peters said the administration has assured him more indictments are coming. "That's what they've told us, off the record and on the record, that there are several prosecutions under way that will expectedly result in prosecutions," he said

The appointment of Mr. Ashcroft, a lay minister and social conservative, raised high hopes among the groups, but they were dashed over the past two years as obscenity was pushed off the table by terrorism.

"The pace of change has not pleased anybody on our side of the issues," Mr. Peters said.

A Santa Monica, Calif., criminal-defense attorney, Jeffrey Douglas, who is representing a Web site under prosecution under federal obscenity law, says obscenity prosecutions are politically motivated.

"There is no better way to excite fundamentalist groups than by attacking pornography. It presents a great opportunity with a great payoff for the administration," said Mr. Douglas, chairman of the board of the Free Speech Coalition, the pornography industry's trade association, and former president of First Amendment Lawyers Association.

But he said he doubts that convictions will be easy to get.

"Prosecuting anything involving the Internet is extremely challenging," he said. Prosecutors must prove that the material in question offends contemporary community standards. Courts have been unclear on how to define the community standard that applies in cyberspace. Part of that standard depends on what else is available in the community, said Mr. Douglas.

"What distinguishes the Internet is that everything is available on the Internet," Mr. Douglas said.

"Without question this is the most complicated, technical and abstract crime. You find out you've committed a crime only after a jury tells you so," said a First-Amendment lawyer in Silver Spring, Md. Jonathan Katz.

The jury has to find that the material appeals to an unhealthy or morbid interest in sex, based on contemporary community standards, based on not what an individual juror believes - but what he or she believes the community standard to be.

But Mr. Malcolm said the law demands that a distributor must comply with the community standard in any community across the country where they sell or market their material.

Citing spam and misleading Web site names, he said, "This is being thrust onto people in the sanctity of their private homes."

But Mr. Katz retorts that the material would not enter some communities, if not for undercover postal inspectors ordering it, as in the case of Extreme Associates. "They wrote to the company, got the materials, and expressed shock!" he said.


It's all piecemeal. In other words, hit little groups that other people might not like, and everyone will think you're doing a great job. Then go after the next group, rinse and repeat.

The current target right now, although NO ONE even knows this because of the lack of attention this gets (which was reported just today) is the sex industry. BIG TIME. I'm not talking about a few vice cops arresting prostitutes here and there; I'm talking about straight out attacks on first amendment publications and videos that promote lifestyles that a religious right does not agree with. Some time ago, they went after the pedophiles; we all hailed that as great. Now, as of today, they are going after makers of videos that promote goldenshowers and brown showers, both activities that are, to a lot of people, disgusting, but by no stretch of the imagination anything that should be considered illegal if two consenting adults want to do something as strange as that.

The report by Ashcroft and crowd was that this was just the beginning, that they are not going to sit back and watch our ideals be eroded further as they did during the Clinton Administration. They are trying to figure out how to target companies that rest solely on the internet. That's their next plan of attack.

No one even knows about this because no major news agency is covering the story. People are too lazy to go look for this information themselves (which will probably prompt the "well, post the link if it's such a big story" responses, indicating that the laziness will continue even here).

Our liberties are being eroded left and right, and no one even knows, and once they do know, no one cares.

When this country ends up with 24/7 television programming of Touched With An Angel on all television stations, I'm going to laugh at each and every one of you (probably from my prison cell for watching something illegal before that happened).
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