The House Judiciary Committee sprang into
action this month by approving a bill designed to address the Supreme Court’s
recent decision striking down the virtual child pornography law, Ashcroft v.
Free Speech Coalition. The Committee approved a bill that would
outlaw computer images that were indistinguishable from actual photographs or
movies. The bill would also ban any images of
prepubescent children engaged in sexual activity, whether virtual or not.
The bill shifts the burden of proof to the defendant to show that the images in
question were entirely computer-generated and not an actual depiction of actual
events. Some lawmakers disagreed with the newest
attempt to regulate virtual child pornography: “I think this bill is the newest
in a series of attempts to do what the Supreme Court has said we repeatedly
cannot do,” said New York Democrat Jerry Nadler.
A similar bill was recently introduced in the Senate by Sen. Jean Carnahan, D –
MO. The bill recently passed the House and now
moves on to the Senate for approval.
The House Judiciary Committee also took up
the controversial issue of online gambling this month. The bill, introduced by
Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-VA), is entitled the “Combating Illegal Gambling Reform
and Modernization Act.” After various
stalled attempts by Congress to outlaw Internet gambling by United States
citizens using offshore casino Websites, it now appears that Congress is ready
to act on the issue through Rep. Goodlatte’s bill. The House Judiciary
Committee approved several amendments to the bill, which would expand the
prohibitions to include bingo, games of chance and selling lottery tickets
online. The amendments even went so far as to eliminate exceptions for
charitable organizations. The bill now goes to the full House for further
action. Given the fact that many of the previous supporters of the Bill, like
the American Gaming Association, pulled out after once this latest version was
proposed, the Bill has little chance of actually becoming law. However, adult
Webmasters who utilize online casino affiliate programs should closely follow
this legislation since it may empower the government to prohibit certain
promotions such as banner ads for offshore casinos.
Score another one for the good guys! Based on
First Amendment grounds, a United States District Court panel of three judges
in Philadelphia struck down the Children’s Internet Protection Act (“CIPA”).
This law represents the third attempt by Congress to control online erotica,
all of which have suffered defeats in the courts. CIPA would have prevented
public libraries from receiving federal funds for technology unless the
libraries installed filtering devices to prevent access to adult materials.
Filtering technology has been roundly criticized as ineffective by Free Speech
advocates. The judicial panel found that significant portions of the CIPA law were
“facially invalid under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. On June 20, 2002, the Government appealed to
the United States Supreme Court for review of the decision. How many defeats
will it take before the government gives up on its attempts to censor the
Internet?
In a throwback to the McCarthy Era, the FBI
will now be allowed to investigate and conduct surveillance on innocent
civilians, including their online activities. The Bureau has canned the
so-called “Levy guidelines,” which were drafted in the 60s and generally
prevented the FBI from spying on political and religious groups in the absence
of reasonable suspicion of criminal activity. Using the War on Terrorism as a
justification, however, Attorney General John Ashcroft announced that FBI
Agents will now be encouraged to visit public places and conduct online
surveillance of individuals and groups without any evidence of criminal
activity as a “preventative measure.”
Internet privacy advocates have become alarmed by the new broad
surveillance powers seized by the FBI, and are concerned that cyberspying will
explode to new levels. Of great concern is the so-called “Magic
Lantern,” believed to be the FBI’s latest and most guarded program designed to
let agents track Web browsing activity, including email and password access,
without detection.
“It allows them to bug a computer in ways that in the past they were not able
to do,” said David Sobel, an analyst for the Electronic Privacy Information
Center. For the record, the FBI refuses to confirm
or deny whether Magic Lantern exists. However, according to Sobel: “It’s not
someone’s paranoid fantasy, there is the existence of such a thing.”
Escort Websites have been the target of some recent prosecutions
in Florida. Officials with the
Metropolitan Bureau of Investigation arrested Charles S. Kelly, of Tampa, and
Steve E. Lipson, of Boca Raton on various counts of racketeering, deriving
support from prostitution, and promotion prostitution. Law enforcement officials set up a fake
Website to be included within the Defendants’ promotional portal. As soon as the fake site was included, it
received thousands of hits, according to the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s
Office. “The wave of the future is really to do
prostitution this way,” said Assistant Statewide Prosecutor Christopher Brown.
The site had over fifty thousand users, and advertised dates with porn stars
for as much as $17,000 a night.
The owner of another Central Florida-based website, www.bestadultclub.com, was also
arrested on racketeering and prostitution charges earlier this month. The website advertised a long-standing
gentlemen’s club in Cocoa, Florida.
Based in part on information contained on the site, law enforcement
officials arrested the owner along with numerous employees, and froze all the
club’s assets. The owner has retained the author’s firm to assist in defending
the charges and to investigate potential civil rights abuses committed during
the investigation and arrest. Given the recent proliferation of escort sites,
Webmasters should closely consult with their counsel regarding the legality and
method of operation of any such Website.
Jerry Falwell just can’t seem to catch a
break in the legal system. After the highly publicized loss to Larry Flynt and Hustler
magazine in the United
States Supreme Court, you would think that Falwell would have given up on the
courts. However, Falwell decided to file a claim against a Website that pokes
fun at him and uses his name without consent. Falwell filed the complaint with
the World Intellectual Property Organization, (“WIPO”), seeking a transfer of
the subject Website, www.JerryFalwell.com,
based on alleged trademark and other intellectual property violations.
The three-member panel of WIPO ruled
that protections should be limited to personal names that have been
commercially exploited. No such commercial exploitation of Falwell’s name
occurred, and the panel rejected Falwell’s claim that he has a common law
trademark on his name. For his part, Falwell plans to appeal to federal court.
On the lighter side, it seems that adult
Websites are the home page of choice for public officials in Chile. Government officials have admitted that a
civil servant’s addiction to online erotica has caused all of the government’s
computers to crash. The computer failure lasted for two days and
essentially ground government operations to a halt. The Chilean government has now installed
filtering software and the responsible government official was sacked.
Finally, it appears that another photographer
has been arrested for taking pictures of young girls. Kenneth O’Brien, from
Oklahoma City, a graphic designer for fourteen years, allegedly took illicit
photographs of a fourteen-year-old girl. Instead of child pornography, O’Brien has
been accused of distributing obscene material. And so it begins…