John Wirenius ([info]jwirenius) wrote,
@ 2006-03-21 09:00:00
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Supreme Abdication

As has already been reported, by (among others) my friend [info]alanesq, the Supreme Court affirmed the District Court opinion in Nitke v. Gonzales.  It did so in a four word order, stating merely "the judgment is affirmed."   http://www.supremecourtus.gov/orders/courtorders/032006pzor.pdf

This is, of course, deeply disappointing, and also, for the present challenge, the end of the line as far as I can see.  The AP story, frankly, gets it right in quoying a snippet from our brief before the Supreme Court:  The failure to address the District Court's impossibly high evidentiary standard of proof to establish that a content-based regulation of speech on the Internet statute violates the First Amendment means that "many more Internet users will likely face the constitutionally unsupportable choice faced by Ms. Nitke: either to censor her published images or risk prosecution."  http://www.salon.com/wire/ap/archive.html?wire=D8GFCJU01.html

The District Court opinion's affirmance means that, for the present, it carries the endorsement of the Supreme Court--at least as to its result, if not as to the reasoning.  So now is not a bad time to ask, where does this leave the law?

1.   Did Any Positive Change Come out of the Case?

In my opinion, yes.  At the time that the case was filed, in December, 2001, the leading case on internet obscenity was United States v. Thomas, 74 F.3d 7-1 (6th Cir. 1996), which the Supreme Court denied review of.  In Thomas, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals fully endorsed the proposition that in an obscenity prosecution, the Government was free, as a matter of law, to select any community in the United States, and have that community apply its local standard to all speech on the Internet.  

The District Court in Nitke rejected that decision, and found that the CDA created a constitutional problem by adopting such a standard.   In its rejection of Thomas, the three judge panel moved the law forward.

The court also found that the serious value prong of Miller v. California, 413 U.S. 15 (1973), the so-called "SLAPS" test (because it deems speech protected when it has Serious Literary Artistic Political or Scientific social value) does not in fact perform its job.  That job is to provide a national "floor" of protection for speech that is objectively (not locally) worthy of protection is not censored based on offending local prejudices.  Our expert witness Jeffrey Douglas testified, and the three judge panel found, that local prejudice taints the finding of serious value--that an offended jury is more likely to find work lacking in serious value based on its visceral offense, rather than applying any coherent artistic criteria.  A judicial recognition that this dysfunctional test, which has balkanized the nation into hundreds of different "First Amendment" zones with wildly varying levels of protection for speech, does not provide the protection it claims to, may lay the foundation for the test's ultimate demise.  Miller doesn't work.  We proved it; the District Court found it; the Supreme Court affirmed the finding.  The fact that the political will to act on this recognition does not exist today, doesn't mean it never will.

2.  So What's The Down Side?

Well, we lost.  

The three judge panel found that Barbara and NCSF members, especially TES, had in fact been led to self-censor their protected speech.   What the judges then did does defy logic--they required us to prove that a "substantial" amount of speech was impacted, but required us to do so by weighing all potentially obscene speech on the Internet against all clearly obscene speech on the Internet.  The fact that nobody had this data in their possession was not deemed relevant; as was the fact that the collection of such data is probably possible only in theory, as "all" websites number in the millions, applicable communities number in the high hundreds, and most of those communities' standards are unknowable--all of which we presented unrebutted expert testimony establishing.  [The standards are unknowable, by the way because (1) most communities have never had obscenity prosecutions or otherwise expressed themselves in terms of the offense they do or don't take to sexually explicit speech; and (2) empirical surveys involving attitudes toward sex are notoriously inaccurate as they get broader in their scope].

In short, the District Court set a standard of proof in a First Amendment challenge that cannot be met by any challenger, let alone a small advocacy group and an individual artist.  The funds required to even try to quantify this great unknowable are incalculable; the likelihood of any resultant projection having a basis in reality are also unknowable.  

If the District Court opinion in Nitke becomes the standard approach to determining constitutional challenges of speech regulation on the Internet, such challenges will be doomed to futility in just about every possible case.

3.  What's Next?

That depends on the communities that are most at risk from this law.  I'll be conferring with NCSF and with others impacted by the laws.  The decision does not foreclose another challenge as a matter of law; one might be mounted in the future, if a way around the District Court's evidentiary ruling can be found.


The Government is trying to obtain from Google a subset of the data it demanded from us in the COPA challenge brought by the ACLU.  The results of its efforts may lead to some developments that could be used by free speech advocates.  As new steps are planned and taken, I will post them.

*****

To close my notes on this case, let me thank all who participated at all of the various levels of the challenge.  Barbara Nitke, the good folks at NCSF--especially [info]susanwright, [info]leighafleming, and Vivienne--my co-counsel, Tom Rozinski, and in the Supreme Court, Catherine Isobe; Michael Fois and Alan, for helping prepare witnesses; all of our expert witnesses--especially Ben Laurie, Seth Finkelstein and Jeffrey Douglas, and the artists and authors who came forward to demand their right to speak and publish freely.  I am deeply honored to have stood for your rights, and to have worked with you.  



(Post a new comment)


[info]alanesq
2006-03-21 03:37 pm UTC (link)
Clearly there is a lot to digest over the next coming days, weeks and months over this decision.

Although, my immediate reaction regarding the government's efforts to obtain this information from google, is that it might actually provide the necessary information required to surpass the "total amount of speech" evidentiary standard set by the "Nitke" court. Now that would be ironic; if the government's provided us with the tool to successfully challenge "Miller".

(Reply to this)


[info]fireglideflht
2006-03-21 04:22 pm UTC (link)
All I can do is thank you all for your efforts and salute you on a case well tried, hard fought, and passionately and zealously represented. My hat is off to you all. Thank you.

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[info]thornyc
2006-03-21 05:00 pm UTC (link)

Thank you for fighting the good fight.

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[info]nova_sonya
2006-03-21 05:24 pm UTC (link)
As a member of the leather community I sincerely thank you for your time and effort on this case.

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[info]confessionalbox
2006-03-21 08:30 pm UTC (link)
Saw this as a link from [info]grail76.

It will be interesting to see how this case in conjunction with the Extreme Associates case may influence future rulings.

I am Doctoral Student in Political Science currently collecting data on Federal obscenity prosecutions to be used in my eventual dissertation. I will be doing an empirical and geospatial analysis of Federal prosecutions post Miller (depending on how much data I can collect it may have to be Meese Commission forward)

It sounds like you are very well versed in this legal debate. If you know of any good resources or articles that you think would be useful in a serious academic study of the matter I would appreciate your input!

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[info]childe_of_fate
2006-03-21 11:29 pm UTC (link)
I'm a firm believer that billboards, because they are in the public domain (any child that isn't blind can see them), should all be "G" rated. I also support the idea of a filter page- a page that you have to go through that gives warning of any potentially obscene material before you are actually faced with it. It would be nice if the .xxx domain was really used, but since it is not, it would be nice not to click on a page to experience a WAMM in your face of something you don't necessarily want to be exposed to- especially if you are a 12 year old child. *shrug* Self regulation would be the best situation so that those who want to experience the material can, and those who don't, don't stumble upon it, I don't think any more than that should be asked. *shrug*

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[info]klarfax
2006-03-22 01:53 am UTC (link)
Interesting...I'm disappointed that the SC just affirmed without an opinion, though I'm afraid of what the current court is going to do to free speech.

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Manufactured Criminals
(Anonymous)
2006-03-23 03:58 am UTC (link)
Paraphasing an exchange already had with Barbara:

All right then. Outlaws it is. God knows the entire effort was on behalf of preserving the status of heretofore solid, law-abiding citizens, but apparently that's not very highly valued these days.

"... girls and boys today would rather steal than play..." Misha Spolianski, Life's a Swindle, 1928 (I believe).

However, I feel the swing of the pendulum must be near the far end of its arch, and a cultural shift is on the horizon. The forces of Armageddonist darkness and willful stupidity have abdicated the duties legitimately attendant on their offices (and not just with respect to the court, but consider Abramoff, Libby, Falwell and the whole cabal of theocrats and cheaper-by-the-dozen legislators, all of whom couldn't have been happier to have the Dubai fracas distract attention from their cupidity), so I sense we may look forward to their imminent undoing. What is happening is unjust, and it must be observed that injustice’s tenure never lasts (and has grown episodically shorter), while the arch of liberty grows wider, as history will attest.

For artists it's time to prepare for the inevitable and historically recurrent step into the breach, to set the creative juices on overdrive. Challenge the caprices of those who insist that the rights you enjoy for the moment are yours by their generous dispensation alone, and you will rally the conscience of your fellow citizen to you. Those who stand with you will be among the best of us, and the most fearless. None of us will suffer alone, but we must now choose the suffering of oppression or the suffering of resistance. The opposition may be well armed, but they are bland, simple and inert, as this latest sniffing contemptuousness of court "affirms".

Where the impetus to progress has wandered lost these past many years, let the call be this moment, issued by our nihilistic opponents, to focus and create, to overwhelm with a positive vision for humanity without limit; aesthetic, political, social and economic. Let emerge from artists what gestates unbidden within them. Let politics reincorporate and re-evince public service. Let the United States unite under common commitment to peaceful self-determination of fully enfranchised individuals. Let all who are productive produce and trade fairly for their labor. Convention and stasis have entered their death spiral through their own disinterest in their stolen prerogatives; do now what you personally have been waiting on, or been afraid to do. Defy now. Do not wait for the safe or perfect moment; there is no such moment. Chairman Mao may have been a homicidal tyrant, but he did utter at least one prescient sentiment: "There is chaos under heaven and the situation is excellent."

That said, my heartfelt thanks go to Barbara, of course, and to you John, and to all who have given this part of their lives to being among the first conscientious patriots ("strict Constitutional constructionists") to stand against the self-righteous ideologues and homegrown jihadists who have appropriated recent history as their own. Your courage and your grace in defeat is an example. Bravi, one and all.

Mac

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[info]darklady_produc
2006-03-25 07:19 pm UTC (link)
You fought a good fight, regardless of how blind and deaf the court has chosen to be on this matter.

I'd still like to have you on my YNOTRadio.com show on April 13. Susan and Barbara are onboard, but Barbara would really like you to be on the show -- as would I. Please get back to me on this so I can book the show and start preparing for it.

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