Computers, Privacy & the Constitution

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Virtual Child Pornography and The Constitution


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Virtual Child Pornography and The Constitution


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Virtual Child Pornography and The Constitution

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 Real child pornography has been recognized by the courts as the repulsive tool of child molestation it is. Although Congress has attempted to equate VCP with real child pornography, the Supreme Court has thwarted Congress’ attempts. Although debatable whether or not VCP is as damaging as real child pornography, VCP is by its very nature obscene. Because VCP passes the Miller test, it ought not to be afforded First Amendment Protection.

-- DavidMehl - 15 Apr 2010

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I don't understand what the point of this argument is. Miller requires fact-finding, presumably by a jury, before speech can be punished as obscene: that's the point, precisely to avoid a test that treats obscenity as purely a matter of law, in which case the US Supreme Court is going to have to be the final determiner of obscenity in every case, as the Court found it was in the era of "Redrupping." Yet here you are trying to turn Miller into the very thing it was designed not to be: a standard of obscenity that can be decided for an entire category of works as a matter of law.

Your particular way of doing that is also legally faulty. You assume a category of "VCP," which is "created and traded with pedophiles' interests in mind." On this basis, you determine the work can have no value, and will be patently offensive, because these really turn out to be proxies for dislike of the motive of someone who is motivated by sexual attraction to people you consider to be children. But the problem with which you are supposedly trying to deal occurs in the space of First Amendment analysis, where the motive behind speech is an invalid basis for regulation. It is all right to advocate, or render beautiful, any crime. And the cases of importance are the ones at the edge, because of overbreadth. So the real question is presented, for example, by an animated _Romeo and Juliet_ in which the characters are depicted at the age Shakespeare specifies (which makes Juliet a child by our contemporary definition) and in which, as it happens, they are depicted in a non-obscene but sexual love scene, much as in Franco Zefferelli's film. Do you mean to argue that can be held obscene as a matter of law? You need better reasons than the ones advanced here.

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DavidMehlFirstPaper 14 - 26 Apr 2010 - Main.DavidMehl
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Virtual Child Pornography And The Constitution

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Virtual Child Pornography and The Constitution

 

Historical Background

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In Miller v. California, the Supreme Court held that obscene speech does not receive First Amendment protection because obscenity serves no crucial role in the exposition of ideas and has little social value. The Court developed a balancing test that asks: (a) whether “the average person, applying contemporary community standards” would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest; (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value. Material that ‘passes’ the Miller test is deemed to be obscene and not afforded First Amendment protection. In 1982, in New York v. Ferber, the Court held that child pornography involving actual children is a category of speech not protected by the Constitution and that such depictions may be prohibited even if they are not obscene. The Court in Osborne v. Ohio criminalized the mere possession of child pornography.
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In Miller v. California, the Supreme Court held that obscene speech does not receive First Amendment protection because obscenity serves no crucial role in the exposition of ideas and has little social value. The Court developed a balancing test that asks: (a) whether community standards would find that the work appeals to the prurient interest; (b) whether the work depicts, in an offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by state law; and (c) whether the work lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value. Material that ‘passes’ the Miller test is deemed obscene and not afforded First Amendment protection. In New York v. Ferber, the Court held that child pornography involving actual children is a category of speech not protected, and may be prohibited even if not obscene. The Court in Osborne v. Ohio held that the possession of child pornography is not afforded First Amendment Protection.
 
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In 1996, Congress passed the Child Pornography Prevention Act that criminalized the creation of VCP. Under the CPPA, images that appeared to depict children but do not, including images of youthful-looking adults or images that are computer-generated, were illegal. The CPPA also included a “pandering” provision that stated that any image that has been promoted in a manner that “conveys the impression” that a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct is depicted, is illegal.
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In 1996, Congress passed the Child Pornography Prevention Act criminalizing the creation of virtual child pornography ("VPA"). Under the CPPA, images that appeared to depict children but do not, including images of youthful-looking adults or images that are computer-generated, were illegal. The CPPA included a “pandering” provision stating that any image being promoted in a manner that “conveys the impression” that a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct is depicted, is illegal.
 
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The Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional on numerous grounds in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition. Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). Built on the same platform as the CPPA, it contains some important distinctions that avoid the Constitutional pitfalls of the CPPA. The Supreme Court found the PROTECT Act and its pandering provision to be Constitutional because First Amendment protection only extends to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are categorically excluded from First Amendment protection. Justice Scalia stated that VCP which is marketed as VCP will not be proscribed by the PROTECT Act. The Act proscribes only pandering where the intention is to cause another to believe that the material is contraband. As a result, one who creates VCP – even if it is indistinguishable from real child pornography - and markets it as VCP, is afforded First Amendment rights.
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The Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional. Congress then promulgated the PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). Built on the same platform as the CPPA, it contains important distinctions that avoid the Constitutional pitfalls of the CPPA. The Court found the PROTECT Act to be Constitutional because First Amendment protection extends only to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are excluded from First Amendment protection. Scalia stated that VCP marketed as VCP is not proscribed by the PROTECT Act because the Act proscribes only pandering where the intention is to cause belief that the material is contraband. Thus, one who creates VCP – even if it is indistinguishable from real child pornography - and markets it as VCP, is afforded First Amendment protection.
 

Should It Be Legal to Market VCP As VCP?

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Society is repulsed by child pornography. Children are usually the most innocent and defenseless of people; child pornography harms and debases these innocents. The most damage to children occurs in the production of real child pornography. VCP does not damage children in its production because children were quite possibly never involved in its production. Perhaps VCP is beneficial to children by allowing potential producers of real child pornography to instead turn to its legal cousin so as to avoid prosecution? Thus, VCP may decrease cases of sexual abuse by allowing pedophiles to sublimate their desires into a victimless alternative that is not intrinsically related to the sexual abuse of children. Can the Government restrict this harmless speech? As long as the VCP is not obscene, production is not proscribed under Ferber, nor is possession proscribed under Osborne. However, perhaps VCP ought to be obscene and thus not afforded First Amendment rights under the Miller test?
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VCP does not damage children in its production because children were probably never involved in its production. Perhaps VCP is beneficial to children by allowing potential producers of real child pornography to instead turn to its legal cousin to avoid prosecution? Thus, VCP may decrease cases of sexual abuse by allowing pedophiles to sublimate their desires into a victimless alternative not intrinsically related to the sexual abuse of children. Can the Government restrict this harmless speech? Seemingly, as long as the VCP is not obscene, production is not proscribed under Ferber, nor is possession proscribed under Osborne. However, perhaps VCP is obscene and therefore not afforded First Amendment rights under Miller?
 
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1. Does the work, applying community standards, appeal to the purient interest?

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1. Does the work, applying community standards, appeal to the prurient interest?

 
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The first question we are faced with in applying this standard to VCP is: which community's standards do we apply? If one produces VCP and posts it online, is the internet community the community we must look to? The Circuit Court in ACLU v. Reno held that the Miller test is not viable in the context of a global internet. The Supreme Court disagreed and held that refusal to permit national standards to apply online would make regulation of illegal expression online impossible.
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The first question in applying this standard to VCP is: which community's standards applies? If one produces VCP and posts it online, is the internet community the community we must look to? Some courts held the Miller test not viable in the context of a global internet. The Supreme Court disagreed and held that refusal to permit national standards to apply online makes regulation of illegal expression online impossible.
 
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Does VCP appeal to the prurient interest? Although some real images of children may seem innocuous to many people, often these images are found stimulating by pedophiles. Would those images be labeled child pornography by the ‘community’? If they are, then virtually all depictions of children – whom to pedophiles are highly eroticized sexual objects – are likely to be classified as child pornography. Obviously this line of reasoning is faulty, and although the pedophile might have nefarious uses for the innocent picture, it is nevertheless an innocent picture. Conversely, VCP is produced specifically for pedophiles and people who are stimulated by these images. As a result, these images appeal to the prurient interests by community standards.
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Does VCP appeal to the prurient interest? Although some real images of children seem innocuous, often these images are found stimulating by pedophiles. Are those images child pornography? If they are, virtually all depictions of children – whom to pedophiles are highly eroticized sexual objects – are likely to be classified as child pornography. Obviously this cannot be true, and although the pedophile might have nefarious uses for the innocent picture, it is nevertheless an innocent picture. Conversely, VCP is specifically produced for pedophiles and people who are stimulated by these images. As a result, these images appeal to the prurient interests by community standards.
 
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2. Does the work depict in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law?

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2. Does the work depict in an offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by state law?

 
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Arguably, there is no criminal more reviled by society than the child molester/pedophile. Any material that aids or incites the pedophile would undoubtedly be repugnant and offensive. According to the Mayo Clinic, studies and case reports indicate that 30% to 80% of individuals who viewed child pornography and 76% of individuals who were arrested for internet child pornography had molested a child. As a result, any depiction of child pornography, even if it involved no children in its production such as VCP, would arguably be found to be offensive.
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Arguably, any material that aids or incites the pedophile would undoubtedly be repugnant and offensive. According to the Mayo Clinic, 30%-80% of individuals who viewed child pornography and 76% of individuals who were arrested for internet child pornography, had molested a child. Thus, any depiction of child pornography, even if it involved no children in its production, would arguably be found to be offensive.
 
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Often the pedophile uses child pornography as a way of tricking his victim into believing that sexual relations between adults and children are normal. VCP that is indistinguishable from real child pornography is probably just as dangerous as the real thing. The pedophile would be able to utilize the virtual depiction the same way he would utilize the real one. Even if the VCP were distinguishable from real child pornography, what is to say that the child victim is able to distinguish between the virtual depiction and the real one? VCP would be offensive simply because it is a tool utilized by the pedophile.
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The pedophile often uses child pornography as a way of tricking his victim into believing that sexual relations between adults and children are normal. VCP indistinguishable from real child pornography is as dangerous as the real thing. The pedophile can utilize the virtual depiction just as he would the real one. Even if the VCP were distinguishable from real child pornography, can the child victim recognize that difference? Thus, VCP is offensive simply because it is a tool utilized by the pedophile.
 
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3. Does the work lack serious value?

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3. Does the work have value?

 
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The Court in Miller stated that “we do not adopt as a constitutional standard the ‘utterly without redeeming social value’ test.” As far as the Court was concerned, possessing some kind of value was not enough to save a work from being classified as obscene. It is unlikely that computer-generated VCP could ever have any serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value given that it is created and traded with pedophiles' interests in mind. In regard to real child pornography, the Court in Ferber stated: “We consider it unlikely that visual depictions of children performing sexual acts or lewdly exhibiting their genitals would often constitute an important and necessary part of a literary performance or scientific or educational work.” Logically, the same would hold true for VCP. Even if such images did contain some value, it is unlikely that that value would be enough to afford them First Amendment protection.
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As far as the Miller Court was concerned, possessing some kind of value was not enough to save a work from being obscene. It is unlikely that VCP could have any serious value given that it is created and traded with pedophiles' interests in mind. In regard to real child pornography, the Ferber court stated: “We consider it unlikely that visual depictions of children performing sexual acts or lewdly exhibiting their genitals would often constitute an important and necessary part of a literary performance or scientific or educational work.” Logically, the same would hold true for VCP.
 

Conclusion

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Real child pornography has been recognized by the courts as the repulsive tool of child molestation that it is. Somehow, VCP has flown under the radar. Although Congress has attempted to equate VCP with real child pornography, the Supreme Court has thwarted Congress’ attempts on two occasions. Although debatable whether or not VCP is as damaging as real child pornography, I believe that VCP is by its very nature obscene. Because VCP seemingly passes the Miller test, it ought to be prosecuted as obscenity.
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Real child pornography has been recognized by the courts as the repulsive tool of child molestation it is. Although Congress has attempted to equate VCP with real child pornography, the Supreme Court has thwarted Congress’ attempts. Although debatable whether or not VCP is as damaging as real child pornography, VCP is by its very nature obscene. Because VCP passes the Miller test, it ought not to be afforded First Amendment Protection.
 -- DavidMehl - 15 Apr 2010
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Interesting essay. In the same context, you may also consider USA's accession to the International Convention on Cybercrime, which also includes specific provisions on virtual child pornography. The Convention entered into force in the USA on January 1, 2007

-- NikolaosVolanis - 21 Apr 2010

Thanks Nikolaos. However, even after the USA's ratification of the Convention, I don't believe that the criminalization of “realistic images representing a minor engaged in sexually explicit conduct” mentioned in the Convention would be possible in the USA thanks to the narrowly worded PROTECT Act that only criminalizes VCP that is indistiguishable from the real thing. Thoughts?

-- DavidMehl - 22 Apr 2010

David,

I have just a few comments. I marked a few places in the essay in red text where it seems like there might be a typo. To change the color just delete the %RED% text and the %ENDCOLOR% text by the words in question. Also, the essay currently clocks in (on my screen anyway) as 1228 words. I think Professor Moglen is pretty strict about the 1,000 word limit described here.

Substantively, I'm a little confused by the discussion of Miller. The essay describes that "perhaps VCP ought to be obscene and thus illegal under the Miller test[.]" Miller doesn't make anything illegal, right? - statutes do that. Miller just addresses when the First Amendment shields, for better or worse, some content from such statutes. So a quick rewording here would help the essay's persuasiveness I think. Similarly, the statement that the Court "criminalized the mere possession of child pornography" isn't what the Court did, it's what the statute did, right? I think it adds more force to your argument to keep details like these clear.

Also, you might look at Pope v. Illinois about the issue of defining what a "reasonable person" would think and what the relevant community standard is.

Finally, though I don't know that you need to mention it here, I think the hardest question with child pornography is not content made for pedophiles (whether VCP or real) which I think most people would agree is highly problematic. It's drafting statutes that don't capture things made for non-pornographic purposes, like art, movies, cartoons, family pictures, graphic novels, materials imported from abroad (with perhaps different standards than in the U.S.), and so on. There's some discussion of the Court's concerns in this regard in the intro section of Harvard's Violence Against Women on the Internet page here.

I hope these comments are helpful. Thanks for your essay on this difficult topic.

Brian,

Thanks for your helpful comments. I am still in the process of editing and whittling the article down to 1,000 words. I will incorporate the changes you suggested.

In regard to the Pope decision, my reading of Pope was that the Court held that in cases where there exists a 'community' but we're unsure as to WHICH MEMBER'S standard to apply (or even which community's standard to apply), we look to the 'reasonable person'. The issue being discussed in Ashcroft was whether the Act was overbroad because it is impossible to apply 'community' standards to the internet.

Your observation about the difficulty involved with drafting statutes regarding pornography not made for pedophiles was what the drafters were thinking when they drafted 18 USC 2252A(a)(3)(B). By permitting virtual depictions of non-graphic sexually explicit conduct and allowing promotion of non-obscene works, Congress remedied the overbreadth problem that existed in the CPPA, and ensured that award-winning films like American Beauty were not targeted by the statute. The problem is fitting all of this into 1,000 words.......

-- DavidMehl - 22 Apr 2010

 
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DavidMehlFirstPaper 13 - 22 Apr 2010 - Main.DavidMehl
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 In 1996, Congress passed the Child Pornography Prevention Act that criminalized the creation of VCP. Under the CPPA, images that appeared to depict children but do not, including images of youthful-looking adults or images that are computer-generated, were illegal. The CPPA also included a “pandering” provision that stated that any image that has been promoted in a manner that “conveys the impression” that a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct is depicted, is illegal.
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The Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional on numerous grounds in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition. Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). Built on the same platform as the CPPA, it contains some important distinctions that avoid the Constitutional pitfalls of the CPPA. The Supreme Court found the PROTECT Act and its pandering provision to be Constitutional because First Amendment protection only extends to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are categorically excluded from First Amendment protection. Justice Scalia states stated that VCP which is marketed as VCP will not be proscribed by the PROTECT Act. The Act proscribes only pandering where the intention is to cause another to believe that the material is contraband. As a result, one who creates VCP – even if it is indistinguishable from real child pornography - and markets it as VCP, is afforded First Amendment rights.
>
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The Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional on numerous grounds in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition. Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). Built on the same platform as the CPPA, it contains some important distinctions that avoid the Constitutional pitfalls of the CPPA. The Supreme Court found the PROTECT Act and its pandering provision to be Constitutional because First Amendment protection only extends to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are categorically excluded from First Amendment protection. Justice Scalia stated that VCP which is marketed as VCP will not be proscribed by the PROTECT Act. The Act proscribes only pandering where the intention is to cause another to believe that the material is contraband. As a result, one who creates VCP – even if it is indistinguishable from real child pornography - and markets it as VCP, is afforded First Amendment rights.
 

Should It Be Legal to Market VCP As VCP?

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Society is repulsed by child pornography. Children are usually the most innocent and defenseless of people; child pornography harms and debases these innocents. The most damage to children occurs in the production of real child pornography. VCP does not damage children in its production because children were quite possibly never involved in its production. Perhaps VCP is beneficial to children by allowing potential producers of real child pornography to instead turn to its legal cousin so as to avoid prosecution? Thus, VCP may decrease cases of sexual abuse by allowing pedophiles to sublimate their desires into a victimless alternative that is not intrinsically related to the sexual abuse of children. Can the Government restrict this harmless speech? As long as the VCP is not obscene, production is not proscribed under Ferber, nor is possession proscribed under Osborne. However, perhaps VCP ought to be obscene and thus illegal under the Miller test?
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Society is repulsed by child pornography. Children are usually the most innocent and defenseless of people; child pornography harms and debases these innocents. The most damage to children occurs in the production of real child pornography. VCP does not damage children in its production because children were quite possibly never involved in its production. Perhaps VCP is beneficial to children by allowing potential producers of real child pornography to instead turn to its legal cousin so as to avoid prosecution? Thus, VCP may decrease cases of sexual abuse by allowing pedophiles to sublimate their desires into a victimless alternative that is not intrinsically related to the sexual abuse of children. Can the Government restrict this harmless speech? As long as the VCP is not obscene, production is not proscribed under Ferber, nor is possession proscribed under Osborne. However, perhaps VCP ought to be obscene and thus not afforded First Amendment rights under the Miller test?
 

1. Does the work, applying community standards, appeal to the purient interest?

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2. Does the work depict in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law?

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Arguably, there is no criminal more reviled by society than the child molester/pedophile. Any material that aids or incites the pedophile would undoubtedly be repugnant and offensive. According to the Mayo Clinic, studies and case reports indicate that 30% to 80% of individuals who viewed child pornography and 76% of individuals who were arrested for internet child pornography had molested a child. As a result, any depiction of child pornography, even if it involved no children in its production such as VCP, would arguably be found to be offensive.
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Arguably, there is no criminal more reviled by society than the child molester/pedophile. Any material that aids or incites the pedophile would undoubtedly be repugnant and offensive. According to the Mayo Clinic, studies and case reports indicate that 30% to 80% of individuals who viewed child pornography and 76% of individuals who were arrested for internet child pornography had molested a child. As a result, any depiction of child pornography, even if it involved no children in its production such as VCP, would arguably be found to be offensive.
 Often the pedophile uses child pornography as a way of tricking his victim into believing that sexual relations between adults and children are normal. VCP that is indistinguishable from real child pornography is probably just as dangerous as the real thing. The pedophile would be able to utilize the virtual depiction the same way he would utilize the real one. Even if the VCP were distinguishable from real child pornography, what is to say that the child victim is able to distinguish between the virtual depiction and the real one? VCP would be offensive simply because it is a tool utilized by the pedophile.

DavidMehlFirstPaper 12 - 22 Apr 2010 - Main.DavidMehl
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 I hope these comments are helpful. Thanks for your essay on this difficult topic.
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Brian,

Thanks for your helpful comments. I am still in the process of editing and whittling the article down to 1,000 words. I will incorporate the changes you suggested.

In regard to the Pope decision, my reading of Pope was that the Court held that in cases where there exists a 'community' but we're unsure as to WHICH MEMBER'S standard to apply (or even which community's standard to apply), we look to the 'reasonable person'. The issue being discussed in Ashcroft was whether the Act was overbroad because it is impossible to apply 'community' standards to the internet.

Your observation about the difficulty involved with drafting statutes regarding pornography not made for pedophiles was what the drafters were thinking when they drafted 18 USC 2252A(a)(3)(B). By permitting virtual depictions of non-graphic sexually explicit conduct and allowing promotion of non-obscene works, Congress remedied the overbreadth problem that existed in the CPPA, and ensured that award-winning films like American Beauty were not targeted by the statute. The problem is fitting all of this into 1,000 words.......

-- DavidMehl - 22 Apr 2010

 
 
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DavidMehlFirstPaper 11 - 22 Apr 2010 - Main.BrianS
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 In 1996, Congress passed the Child Pornography Prevention Act that criminalized the creation of VCP. Under the CPPA, images that appeared to depict children but do not, including images of youthful-looking adults or images that are computer-generated, were illegal. The CPPA also included a “pandering” provision that stated that any image that has been promoted in a manner that “conveys the impression” that a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct is depicted, is illegal.
Changed:
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The Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional on numerous grounds in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition. Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). Built on the same platform as the CPPA, it contains some important distinctions that avoid the Constitutional pitfalls of the CPPA. The Supreme Court found the PROTECT Act and its pandering provision to be Constitutional because First Amendment protection only extends to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are categorically excluded from First Amendment protection. Justice Scalia states that VCP which is marketed as VCP will not be proscribed by the PROTECT Act. The Act proscribes only pandering where the intention is to cause another to believe that the material is contraband. As a result, one who creates VCP – even if it is indistinguishable from real child pornography - and markets it as VCP, is afforded First Amendment rights.
>
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The Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional on numerous grounds in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition. Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). Built on the same platform as the CPPA, it contains some important distinctions that avoid the Constitutional pitfalls of the CPPA. The Supreme Court found the PROTECT Act and its pandering provision to be Constitutional because First Amendment protection only extends to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are categorically excluded from First Amendment protection. Justice Scalia states stated that VCP which is marketed as VCP will not be proscribed by the PROTECT Act. The Act proscribes only pandering where the intention is to cause another to believe that the material is contraband. As a result, one who creates VCP – even if it is indistinguishable from real child pornography - and markets it as VCP, is afforded First Amendment rights.
 

Should It Be Legal to Market VCP As VCP?

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2. Does the work depict in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law?

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Arguably, there is no criminal more reviled by society than the child molester/pedophile. Any material that aids or incites the pedophile would undoubtedly be repugnant and offensive. According to the Mayo Clinic, studies and case reports indicate that 30% to 80% of individuals who viewed child pornography and 76% of individuals who were arrested for internet child pornography had molested a child. As a result, any depiction of child pornography, even it involved no children in its production such as VCP, would arguably be found to be offensive.
>
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Arguably, there is no criminal more reviled by society than the child molester/pedophile. Any material that aids or incites the pedophile would undoubtedly be repugnant and offensive. According to the Mayo Clinic, studies and case reports indicate that 30% to 80% of individuals who viewed child pornography and 76% of individuals who were arrested for internet child pornography had molested a child. As a result, any depiction of child pornography, even if it involved no children in its production such as VCP, would arguably be found to be offensive.
 Often the pedophile uses child pornography as a way of tricking his victim into believing that sexual relations between adults and children are normal. VCP that is indistinguishable from real child pornography is probably just as dangerous as the real thing. The pedophile would be able to utilize the virtual depiction the same way he would utilize the real one. Even if the VCP were distinguishable from real child pornography, what is to say that the child victim is able to distinguish between the virtual depiction and the real one? VCP would be offensive simply because it is a tool utilized by the pedophile.
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 Thanks Nikolaos. However, even after the USA's ratification of the Convention, I don't believe that the criminalization of “realistic images representing a minor engaged in sexually explicit conduct” mentioned in the Convention would be possible in the USA thanks to the narrowly worded PROTECT Act that only criminalizes VCP that is indistiguishable from the real thing. Thoughts?

-- DavidMehl - 22 Apr 2010

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>
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David,

I have just a few comments. I marked a few places in the essay in red text where it seems like there might be a typo. To change the color just delete the %RED% text and the %ENDCOLOR% text by the words in question. Also, the essay currently clocks in (on my screen anyway) as 1228 words. I think Professor Moglen is pretty strict about the 1,000 word limit described here.

Substantively, I'm a little confused by the discussion of Miller. The essay describes that "perhaps VCP ought to be obscene and thus illegal under the Miller test[.]" Miller doesn't make anything illegal, right? - statutes do that. Miller just addresses when the First Amendment shields, for better or worse, some content from such statutes. So a quick rewording here would help the essay's persuasiveness I think. Similarly, the statement that the Court "criminalized the mere possession of child pornography" isn't what the Court did, it's what the statute did, right? I think it adds more force to your argument to keep details like these clear.

Also, you might look at Pope v. Illinois about the issue of defining what a "reasonable person" would think and what the relevant community standard is.

Finally, though I don't know that you need to mention it here, I think the hardest question with child pornography is not content made for pedophiles (whether VCP or real) which I think most people would agree is highly problematic. It's drafting statutes that don't capture things made for non-pornographic purposes, like art, movies, cartoons, family pictures, graphic novels, materials imported from abroad (with perhaps different standards than in the U.S.), and so on. There's some discussion of the Court's concerns in this regard in the intro section of Harvard's Violence Against Women on the Internet page here.

I hope these comments are helpful. Thanks for your essay on this difficult topic.

 
 
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 Interesting essay. In the same context, you may also consider USA's accession to the International Convention on Cybercrime, which also includes specific provisions on virtual child pornography. The Convention entered into force in the USA on January 1, 2007

-- NikolaosVolanis - 21 Apr 2010

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Thanks Nikolaos. However, even after the USA's ratification of the Convention, I don't believe that the criminalization of “realistic images representing a minor engaged in sexually explicit conduct” mentioned in the Convention would be possible in the USA thanks to the narrowly worded PROTECT Act that only criminalizes VCP that is indistiguishable from the real thing. Thoughts?

-- DavidMehl - 22 Apr 2010

 
 
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 -- DavidMehl - 15 Apr 2010
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Interesting essay. In the same context, you may also consider USA's accession to the International Convention on Cybercrime, which also includes specific provisions on virtual child pornography. The Convention entered into force in the USA on January 1, 2007

-- NikolaosVolanis - 21 Apr 2010

 
 
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DavidMehlFirstPaper 8 - 20 Apr 2010 - Main.DavidMehl
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Historical Background

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In Miller v. California, the Supreme Court held that obscene speech does not receive First Amendment protection because obscenity serves no crucial role in the exposition of ideas and has little social value. The Court developed a balancing test that asks: (a) whether “the average person, applying contemporary community standards” would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest; (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value. Material that ‘passes’ the Miller test is thus deemed to be obscene and is not afforded First Amendment protection. In 1982, in New York v. Ferber, the Court held that child pornography involving actual children is a category of speech not protected by the Constitution and that such depictions may be prohibited even if they are not obscene. The Court in Osborne v. Ohio criminalized the mere possession of child pornography.
>
>
In Miller v. California, the Supreme Court held that obscene speech does not receive First Amendment protection because obscenity serves no crucial role in the exposition of ideas and has little social value. The Court developed a balancing test that asks: (a) whether “the average person, applying contemporary community standards” would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest; (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value. Material that ‘passes’ the Miller test is deemed to be obscene and not afforded First Amendment protection. In 1982, in New York v. Ferber, the Court held that child pornography involving actual children is a category of speech not protected by the Constitution and that such depictions may be prohibited even if they are not obscene. The Court in Osborne v. Ohio criminalized the mere possession of child pornography.
 In 1996, Congress passed the Child Pornography Prevention Act that criminalized the creation of VCP. Under the CPPA, images that appeared to depict children but do not, including images of youthful-looking adults or images that are computer-generated, were illegal. The CPPA also included a “pandering” provision that stated that any image that has been promoted in a manner that “conveys the impression” that a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct is depicted, is illegal.
Changed:
<
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The Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional on numerous grounds in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition. Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). Built on the same platform as the CPPA, it contains some important distinctions that avoid the Constitutional pitfalls of the CPPA. The Supreme Court found the PROTECT Act to be Constitutional. Justice Scalia reasoned as follows: A statute is facially invalid if it prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech. However, because the Court in Miller and Ferber had already proscribed the material involved in the speech – the child pornography - the pandering provision is Constitutional because it targets the “collateral speech”- the pandering which introduces this contraband material into the child pornography distribution network. First Amendment protection only extends to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are categorically excluded from First Amendment protection. Scalia points out that VCP which is marketed as VCP will not be proscribed by the PROTECT Act. The Act proscribes only pandering where the intention is to cause another to believe that the material is contraband. As a result, one who creates VCP – even if it is indistinguishable from real child pornography - and markets it as VCP is afforded First Amendment rights.
>
>
The Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional on numerous grounds in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition. Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). Built on the same platform as the CPPA, it contains some important distinctions that avoid the Constitutional pitfalls of the CPPA. The Supreme Court found the PROTECT Act and its pandering provision to be Constitutional because First Amendment protection only extends to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are categorically excluded from First Amendment protection. Justice Scalia states that VCP which is marketed as VCP will not be proscribed by the PROTECT Act. The Act proscribes only pandering where the intention is to cause another to believe that the material is contraband. As a result, one who creates VCP – even if it is indistinguishable from real child pornography - and markets it as VCP, is afforded First Amendment rights.
 

Should It Be Legal to Market VCP As VCP?

Changed:
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<
Society is repulsed by child pornography. Children are usually the most innocent and defenseless of people; child pornography harms and debases these innocents. The most damage to children occurs in the production of real child pornography. VCP does not damage children in its production because children were quite possibly never involved in its production. Perhaps VCP is beneficial to children by allowing potential producers of real child pornography to instead turn to its legal cousin so as to avoid prosecution? Thus, VCP may decrease cases of sexual abuse by allowing pedophiles to sublimate their desires into a victimless alternative that is not intrinsically related to the sexual abuse of children. Can the Government cannot restrict this harmless speech? As long as the VCP is not obscene, production is not proscribed under Ferber, nor is possession proscribed under Osborne. Let us examine whether VCP would at least be classified as obscene using the Miller test.
>
>
Society is repulsed by child pornography. Children are usually the most innocent and defenseless of people; child pornography harms and debases these innocents. The most damage to children occurs in the production of real child pornography. VCP does not damage children in its production because children were quite possibly never involved in its production. Perhaps VCP is beneficial to children by allowing potential producers of real child pornography to instead turn to its legal cousin so as to avoid prosecution? Thus, VCP may decrease cases of sexual abuse by allowing pedophiles to sublimate their desires into a victimless alternative that is not intrinsically related to the sexual abuse of children. Can the Government restrict this harmless speech? As long as the VCP is not obscene, production is not proscribed under Ferber, nor is possession proscribed under Osborne. However, perhaps VCP ought to be obscene and thus illegal under the Miller test?
 

1. Does the work, applying community standards, appeal to the purient interest?

Line: 39 to 39
 

3. Does the work lack serious value?

Changed:
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The Court in Miller stated that “we do not adopt as a constitutional standard the ‘utterly without redeeming social value’ test.” As far as the Court was concerned, possessing some kind of value was not enough to save a work from being classified as obscene. It is unlikely that computer-generated VCP could ever have any serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value given that it is created and traded with pedophiles' interests in mind. In regard to real child pornography, the Court in Ferber stated: “We consider it unlikely that visual depictions of children performing sexual acts or lewdly exhibiting their genitals would often constitute an important and necessary part of a literary performance or scientific or educational work.” It is logical to assume that the same would hold true for VCP. However, even if such images did contain some value, it is unlikely that that value would be enough to afford them First Amendment protection.
>
>
The Court in Miller stated that “we do not adopt as a constitutional standard the ‘utterly without redeeming social value’ test.” As far as the Court was concerned, possessing some kind of value was not enough to save a work from being classified as obscene. It is unlikely that computer-generated VCP could ever have any serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value given that it is created and traded with pedophiles' interests in mind. In regard to real child pornography, the Court in Ferber stated: “We consider it unlikely that visual depictions of children performing sexual acts or lewdly exhibiting their genitals would often constitute an important and necessary part of a literary performance or scientific or educational work.” Logically, the same would hold true for VCP. Even if such images did contain some value, it is unlikely that that value would be enough to afford them First Amendment protection.
 

Conclusion

Changed:
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Real child pornography has been recognized by the courts as the repulsive tool of child molestation that it is. Those violating child pornography laws are subject to stiff penalties. Somehow, VCP has flown under the radar. Although Congress has attempted to equate VCP with real child pornography, the Supreme Court has thwarted Congress’ attempts on two occasions. Although debatable whether or not VCP is as damaging as real child pornography, it would seem to me that VCP is by its very nature obscene. Because VCP seemingly passes the Miller test it ought to be prosecuted as obscenity.
>
>
Real child pornography has been recognized by the courts as the repulsive tool of child molestation that it is. Somehow, VCP has flown under the radar. Although Congress has attempted to equate VCP with real child pornography, the Supreme Court has thwarted Congress’ attempts on two occasions. Although debatable whether or not VCP is as damaging as real child pornography, I believe that VCP is by its very nature obscene. Because VCP seemingly passes the Miller test, it ought to be prosecuted as obscenity.
 -- DavidMehl - 15 Apr 2010

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Historical Background

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In Miller v. California, the Supreme Court held that lewd and obscene speech does not receive First Amendment protection because obscenity serves no crucial role in the exposition of ideas and has little social value. The Court developed a balancing test that asks: (a) whether “the average person, applying contemporary community standards” would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest; (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value. Material that ‘passes’ the Miller test is thus deemed to be obscene and is not afforded First Amendment protection. In 1982, in New York v. Ferber, the Court held that child pornography involving actual children is a category of speech not protected by the Constitution and that such depictions may be prohibited even if they are not obscene. The Court in Osborne v. Ohio criminalized the mere possession of child pornography.
>
>
In Miller v. California, the Supreme Court held that obscene speech does not receive First Amendment protection because obscenity serves no crucial role in the exposition of ideas and has little social value. The Court developed a balancing test that asks: (a) whether “the average person, applying contemporary community standards” would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest; (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value. Material that ‘passes’ the Miller test is thus deemed to be obscene and is not afforded First Amendment protection. In 1982, in New York v. Ferber, the Court held that child pornography involving actual children is a category of speech not protected by the Constitution and that such depictions may be prohibited even if they are not obscene. The Court in Osborne v. Ohio criminalized the mere possession of child pornography.
 
Changed:
<
<
In 1996, Congress passed the Child Pornography Prevention Act. The CPPA expanded the definition of child pornography by criminalizing the creation of VCP. Under the CPPA, images that appeared to depict children but do not, including images of youthful-looking adults or images that are computer-generated, were illegal. The CPPA also included a “pandering” provision that stated that any visual image that has been promoted in a manner that “conveys the impression” that a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct is depicted, is illegal.
>
>
In 1996, Congress passed the Child Pornography Prevention Act that criminalized the creation of VCP. Under the CPPA, images that appeared to depict children but do not, including images of youthful-looking adults or images that are computer-generated, were illegal. The CPPA also included a “pandering” provision that stated that any image that has been promoted in a manner that “conveys the impression” that a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct is depicted, is illegal.
 The Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional on numerous grounds in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition. Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). Built on the same platform as the CPPA, it contains some important distinctions that avoid the Constitutional pitfalls of the CPPA. The Supreme Court found the PROTECT Act to be Constitutional. Justice Scalia reasoned as follows: A statute is facially invalid if it prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech. However, because the Court in Miller and Ferber had already proscribed the material involved in the speech – the child pornography - the pandering provision is Constitutional because it targets the “collateral speech”- the pandering which introduces this contraband material into the child pornography distribution network. First Amendment protection only extends to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are categorically excluded from First Amendment protection. Scalia points out that VCP which is marketed as VCP will not be proscribed by the PROTECT Act. The Act proscribes only pandering where the intention is to cause another to believe that the material is contraband. As a result, one who creates VCP – even if it is indistinguishable from real child pornography - and markets it as VCP is afforded First Amendment rights.
Line: 18 to 18
 

Should It Be Legal to Market VCP As VCP?

Changed:
<
<
Instinctually, society is repulsed by child pornography. Children are usually the most innocent and defenseless of people; child pornography harms and debases these innocents. The most damage to children occurs in the production of real child pornography. VCP does not damage children in its production because children were quite possibly never involved in its production. Perhaps VCP is beneficial to children by allowing potential producers of real child pornography to instead turn to its legal cousin so as to avoid prosecution. Thus, VCP use may decrease cases of sexual abuse by allowing pedophiles to sublimate their desires. It is a victimless alternative that is not intrinsically related to the sexual abuse of children. Pehaps the Government cannot restrict this harmless speech. As long as the VCP is not obscene, production is not proscribed under Ferber, nor is possession proscribed under Osborne. Let us examine whether VCP would at least be classified as obscene using the Miller test.
>
>
Society is repulsed by child pornography. Children are usually the most innocent and defenseless of people; child pornography harms and debases these innocents. The most damage to children occurs in the production of real child pornography. VCP does not damage children in its production because children were quite possibly never involved in its production. Perhaps VCP is beneficial to children by allowing potential producers of real child pornography to instead turn to its legal cousin so as to avoid prosecution? Thus, VCP may decrease cases of sexual abuse by allowing pedophiles to sublimate their desires into a victimless alternative that is not intrinsically related to the sexual abuse of children. Can the Government cannot restrict this harmless speech? As long as the VCP is not obscene, production is not proscribed under Ferber, nor is possession proscribed under Osborne. Let us examine whether VCP would at least be classified as obscene using the Miller test.
 

1. Does the work, applying community standards, appeal to the purient interest?

Changed:
<
<
The first question we are faced with in applying this standard to VCP is: which community's standards do we apply? If one produces VCP and posts it online, is the internet community the community we must look to? Perhaps applying the Miller test is not viable in the context of a global internet? This was actually the holding of the Circuit Court in ACLU v. Reno. The Supreme Court, however, disagreed and held that refusal to permit national standards to apply online would make regulation of illegal expression online impossible.
>
>
The first question we are faced with in applying this standard to VCP is: which community's standards do we apply? If one produces VCP and posts it online, is the internet community the community we must look to? The Circuit Court inACLU v. Reno held that the Miller test is not viable in the context of a global internet. The Supreme Court disagreed and held that refusal to permit national standards to apply online would make regulation of illegal expression online impossible.
 
Changed:
<
<
Does VCP appeal to the prurient interest? Although some real images of children may seem innocuous to many people, often these images are found stimulating by pedophiles. Would those images be labeled child pornography by the ‘community’? If they are, then virtually all depictions of children – whom to pedophiles are highly eroticized sexual objects – are likely to be classified as child pornography. Obviously this line of reasoning is faulty, and although the pedophile might have nefarious uses for the innocent picture, it is nevertheless an innocent picture. Conversely, VCP is produced specifically for pedophiles and people who are stimulated by these images. As a result these images appeal to the prurient interests by community standards.
>
>
Does VCP appeal to the prurient interest? Although some real images of children may seem innocuous to many people, often these images are found stimulating by pedophiles. Would those images be labeled child pornography by the ‘community’? If they are, then virtually all depictions of children – whom to pedophiles are highly eroticized sexual objects – are likely to be classified as child pornography. Obviously this line of reasoning is faulty, and although the pedophile might have nefarious uses for the innocent picture, it is nevertheless an innocent picture. Conversely, VCP is produced specifically for pedophiles and people who are stimulated by these images. As a result, these images appeal to the prurient interests by community standards.
 
Changed:
<
<

2. Does the work depict or in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law?

>
>

2. Does the work depict in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law?

 Arguably, there is no criminal more reviled by society than the child molester/pedophile. Any material that aids or incites the pedophile would undoubtedly be repugnant and offensive. According to the Mayo Clinic, studies and case reports indicate that 30% to 80% of individuals who viewed child pornography and 76% of individuals who were arrested for internet child pornography had molested a child. As a result, any depiction of child pornography, even it involved no children in its production such as VCP, would arguably be found to be offensive.
Line: 37 to 37
 
Changed:
<
<

3. Does the work, lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value?

>
>

3. Does the work lack serious value?

 The Court in Miller stated that “we do not adopt as a constitutional standard the ‘utterly without redeeming social value’ test.” As far as the Court was concerned, possessing some kind of value was not enough to save a work from being classified as obscene. It is unlikely that computer-generated VCP could ever have any serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value given that it is created and traded with pedophiles' interests in mind. In regard to real child pornography, the Court in Ferber stated: “We consider it unlikely that visual depictions of children performing sexual acts or lewdly exhibiting their genitals would often constitute an important and necessary part of a literary performance or scientific or educational work.” It is logical to assume that the same would hold true for VCP. However, even if such images did contain some value, it is unlikely that that value would be enough to afford them First Amendment protection.

DavidMehlFirstPaper 6 - 20 Apr 2010 - Main.DavidMehl
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Virtual Child Pornography And The Constitution

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The digital age has brought with it a proliferation in the creation of child pornography. Today, child pornography is easily ‘created’ with a computer and some software. Virtual child pornography (“VCP”) can be produced in a number of ways. Forms of such pornography include: modified photographs of real children, non-minor teenagers made to look younger, fully computer-generated imagery or adults made to look like children.
 

Historical Background

In Miller v. California, the Supreme Court held that lewd and obscene speech does not receive First Amendment protection because obscenity serves no crucial role in the exposition of ideas and has little social value. The Court developed a balancing test that asks: (a) whether “the average person, applying contemporary community standards” would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest; (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value. Material that ‘passes’ the Miller test is thus deemed to be obscene and is not afforded First Amendment protection. In 1982, in New York v. Ferber, the Court held that child pornography involving actual children is a category of speech not protected by the Constitution and that such depictions may be prohibited even if they are not obscene. The Court in Osborne v. Ohio criminalized the mere possession of child pornography.

In 1996, Congress passed the Child Pornography Prevention Act. The CPPA expanded the definition of child pornography by criminalizing the creation of VCP. Under the CPPA, images that appeared to depict children but do not, including images of youthful-looking adults or images that are computer-generated, were illegal. The CPPA also included a “pandering” provision that stated that any visual image that has been promoted in a manner that “conveys the impression” that a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct is depicted, is illegal.

Changed:
<
<
The Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional on numerous grounds in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition. Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). Built on the same platform as the CPPA, it contains some important distinctions that avoid the Constitutional pitfalls of the CPPA. The Supreme Court found the PROTECT Act to be Constitutional. Justice Scalia reasoned as follows: A statute is facially invalid if it prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech. However, because the Court in Miller and Ferber had already proscribed the material involved in the speech – the child pornography - the pandering provision is Constitutional because it targets the “collateral speech”- the pandering which introduces this contraband material into the child pornography distribution network. First Amendment protection only extends to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are categorically excluded from First Amendment protection.

Scalia points out that VCP which is marketed as VCP will not be proscribed by the PROTECT Act. The Act proscribes only pandering where the intention is to cause another to believe that the material is contraband. Scalia claimed that Williams was not overruling Free Speech Coalition. Both decisions agreed that the CPPA’s prohibition on creation and distribution of VCP was a violation of First Amendment rights. As a result, one who creates VCP – even if it is indistinguishable from real child pornography - and markets it as VCP is afforded First Amendment rights.

>
>
The Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional on numerous grounds in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition. Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). Built on the same platform as the CPPA, it contains some important distinctions that avoid the Constitutional pitfalls of the CPPA. The Supreme Court found the PROTECT Act to be Constitutional. Justice Scalia reasoned as follows: A statute is facially invalid if it prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech. However, because the Court in Miller and Ferber had already proscribed the material involved in the speech – the child pornography - the pandering provision is Constitutional because it targets the “collateral speech”- the pandering which introduces this contraband material into the child pornography distribution network. First Amendment protection only extends to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are categorically excluded from First Amendment protection. Scalia points out that VCP which is marketed as VCP will not be proscribed by the PROTECT Act. The Act proscribes only pandering where the intention is to cause another to believe that the material is contraband. As a result, one who creates VCP – even if it is indistinguishable from real child pornography - and markets it as VCP is afforded First Amendment rights.
 

Should It Be Legal to Market VCP As VCP?

Changed:
<
<
Instinctually, the vast majority of society is repulsed by child pornography. Children are usually the most innocent and defenseless of people. Child pornography harms and debases these innocents. The most damage to children occurs in the production of real child pornography. VCP obviously does not damage children in its production because children were quite possibly never involved in its production. Perhaps VCP is even beneficial to children. Perhaps potential producers of real child pornography might instead turn to its legal cousin so as to avoid prosecution. Perhaps VCP use may decrease cases of sexual abuse by allowing pedophiles to sublimate their desires. It is a victimless alternative that is not intrinsically related to the sexual abuse of children. As a result, goes the argument, the Government cannot restrict this harmless speech. As long as the VCP is not obscene, production is not proscribed under Ferber, nor is possession proscribed under Osborne. Let us examine whether VCP would at least be classified as obscene using the Miller test.
>
>
Instinctually, society is repulsed by child pornography. Children are usually the most innocent and defenseless of people; child pornography harms and debases these innocents. The most damage to children occurs in the production of real child pornography. VCP does not damage children in its production because children were quite possibly never involved in its production. Perhaps VCP is beneficial to children by allowing potential producers of real child pornography to instead turn to its legal cousin so as to avoid prosecution. Thus, VCP use may decrease cases of sexual abuse by allowing pedophiles to sublimate their desires. It is a victimless alternative that is not intrinsically related to the sexual abuse of children. Pehaps the Government cannot restrict this harmless speech. As long as the VCP is not obscene, production is not proscribed under Ferber, nor is possession proscribed under Osborne. Let us examine whether VCP would at least be classified as obscene using the Miller test.
 

1. Does the work, applying community standards, appeal to the purient interest?

Changed:
<
<
The first question we are faced with in applying this standard to VCP is: who is the community whose standards we are applying? If one produces VCP and posts it on the internet, is the internet community the community we must look to? Perhaps applying the Miller test is not viable in the context of a global internet? This was actually the holding of the Circuit Court in ACLU v. Reno. The Supreme Court, however, disagreed with the Circuit Court’s ruling that the community standards test was overbroad. The Court held that refusal to permit national standards to apply online would make regulation of illegal expression online impossible.
>
>
The first question we are faced with in applying this standard to VCP is: which community's standards do we apply? If one produces VCP and posts it online, is the internet community the community we must look to? Perhaps applying the Miller test is not viable in the context of a global internet? This was actually the holding of the Circuit Court in ACLU v. Reno. The Supreme Court, however, disagreed and held that refusal to permit national standards to apply online would make regulation of illegal expression online impossible.
 
Changed:
<
<
Does VCP appeal to the prurient interest? Although some real images of children may seem innocuous to many people, often these images are found stimulating by pedophiles. Would those images be labeled child pornography by the ‘community’? If they are, then virtually all depictions of children – whom to pedophiles are highly eroticized sexual objects – are likely to be classified as child pornography. Obviously this line of reasoning is faulty, and although the pedophile might have nefarious uses for the innocent picture, it is nevertheless an innocent picture. Conversely, VCP is produced specifically for pedophiles and people who are stimulated by these images. As a result these images ought to be labeled as images that appeal to the prurient interests by community standards.
>
>
Does VCP appeal to the prurient interest? Although some real images of children may seem innocuous to many people, often these images are found stimulating by pedophiles. Would those images be labeled child pornography by the ‘community’? If they are, then virtually all depictions of children – whom to pedophiles are highly eroticized sexual objects – are likely to be classified as child pornography. Obviously this line of reasoning is faulty, and although the pedophile might have nefarious uses for the innocent picture, it is nevertheless an innocent picture. Conversely, VCP is produced specifically for pedophiles and people who are stimulated by these images. As a result these images appeal to the prurient interests by community standards.
 

2. Does the work depict or in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law?

Changed:
<
<
Arguably, there is no criminal more reviled by society than the child molester/pedophile. Any material that aids or incites the pedophile would undoubtedly be repugnant and offensive. According to the Mayo Clinic, studies and case reports indicate that 30% to 80% of individuals who viewed child pornography and 76% of individuals who were arrested for Internet child pornography had molested a child. As a result, any depiction of child pornography, even it involved no children in its production such as VCP, would arguably be found to be offensive.
>
>
Arguably, there is no criminal more reviled by society than the child molester/pedophile. Any material that aids or incites the pedophile would undoubtedly be repugnant and offensive. According to the Mayo Clinic, studies and case reports indicate that 30% to 80% of individuals who viewed child pornography and 76% of individuals who were arrested for internet child pornography had molested a child. As a result, any depiction of child pornography, even it involved no children in its production such as VCP, would arguably be found to be offensive.
 
Changed:
<
<
Often the pedophile uses child pornography as a way of tricking his victim into believing that sexual relations between adults and children are normal. VCP that is indistinguishable from real child pornography is probably just as dangerous as the real thing. The pedophile would be able to utilize the virtual depiction the same way he would utilize the real one. Even if the VCP were distinguishable from real child pornography, what is to say that the child victim of the pedophile is able to distinguish between the virtual depiction and the real one? VCP would be offensive simply because it is a tool utilized by the pedophile in his perverse sexual desires.
>
>
Often the pedophile uses child pornography as a way of tricking his victim into believing that sexual relations between adults and children are normal. VCP that is indistinguishable from real child pornography is probably just as dangerous as the real thing. The pedophile would be able to utilize the virtual depiction the same way he would utilize the real one. Even if the VCP were distinguishable from real child pornography, what is to say that the child victim is able to distinguish between the virtual depiction and the real one? VCP would be offensive simply because it is a tool utilized by the pedophile.
 
Line: 50 to 45
 

Conclusion

Changed:
<
<
Real child pornography has been recognized by the Courts as the repulsive tool of child molestation that it is. Those violating child pornography laws are subject to stiff penalties. Somehow, VCP has flown under the radar. Although Congress has attempted to equate VCP with real child pornography, the Supreme Court has thwarted Congress’ attempts on two occasions. Although debatable whether or not VCP is as damaging as real child pornography, it would seem to me that VCP is by its very nature obscene. Because VCP seemingly passes the Miller test it ought to be prosecuted as obscenity.
>
>
Real child pornography has been recognized by the courts as the repulsive tool of child molestation that it is. Those violating child pornography laws are subject to stiff penalties. Somehow, VCP has flown under the radar. Although Congress has attempted to equate VCP with real child pornography, the Supreme Court has thwarted Congress’ attempts on two occasions. Although debatable whether or not VCP is as damaging as real child pornography, it would seem to me that VCP is by its very nature obscene. Because VCP seemingly passes the Miller test it ought to be prosecuted as obscenity.
 -- DavidMehl - 15 Apr 2010

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Historical Background

Changed:
<
<
In Miller v. California, the Supreme Court held that lewd and obscene speech does not receive First Amendment protection because obscenity serves no crucial role in the exposition of ideas and has little social value. The Court developed a balancing test that asks: (a) whether “the average person, applying contemporary community standards” would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest; (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value. Material that ‘passes’ the Miller test is thus deemed to be obscene and is not afforded First Amendment protection.

In 1982, in New York v. Ferber, the Court held that child pornography involving actual children is a category of speech not protected by the Constitution and that such depictions may be prohibited even if they are not obscene. Although Ferber focused on production and distribution of child pornography, in 1990, the Court in Osborne v. Ohio upheld an Ohio statute criminalizing mere possession of child pornography.

>
>
In Miller v. California, the Supreme Court held that lewd and obscene speech does not receive First Amendment protection because obscenity serves no crucial role in the exposition of ideas and has little social value. The Court developed a balancing test that asks: (a) whether “the average person, applying contemporary community standards” would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest; (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value. Material that ‘passes’ the Miller test is thus deemed to be obscene and is not afforded First Amendment protection. In 1982, in New York v. Ferber, the Court held that child pornography involving actual children is a category of speech not protected by the Constitution and that such depictions may be prohibited even if they are not obscene. The Court in Osborne v. Ohio criminalized the mere possession of child pornography.
 In 1996, Congress passed the Child Pornography Prevention Act. The CPPA expanded the definition of child pornography by criminalizing the creation of VCP. Under the CPPA, images that appeared to depict children but do not, including images of youthful-looking adults or images that are computer-generated, were illegal. The CPPA also included a “pandering” provision that stated that any visual image that has been promoted in a manner that “conveys the impression” that a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct is depicted, is illegal.
Changed:
<
<
After the Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional on numerous grounds in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition, Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). It is built on the same platform as the CPPA with some important distinctions that avoid the Constitutional pitfalls of the CPPA. Even so, in United States v. Williams, the Eleventh Circuit held that the pandering provision of the PROTECT Act was overbroad and impermissibly vague because it criminalized the speech of someone who touts material as child pornography even when in fact it is either nonexistent or not pornographic. The Supreme Court reversed and found the PROTECT Act to be Constitutional. Justice Scalia reasoned as follows: A statute is facially invalid if it prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech. However, because the Court in Miller and Ferber had already proscribed the material involved in the speech – the child pornography - the pandering provision is Constitutional because it targets the “collateral speech”- the pandering which introduces this contraband material into the child pornography distribution network. First Amendment protection only extends to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are categorically excluded from First Amendment protection.
>
>
The Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional on numerous grounds in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition. Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). Built on the same platform as the CPPA, it contains some important distinctions that avoid the Constitutional pitfalls of the CPPA. The Supreme Court found the PROTECT Act to be Constitutional. Justice Scalia reasoned as follows: A statute is facially invalid if it prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech. However, because the Court in Miller and Ferber had already proscribed the material involved in the speech – the child pornography - the pandering provision is Constitutional because it targets the “collateral speech”- the pandering which introduces this contraband material into the child pornography distribution network. First Amendment protection only extends to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are categorically excluded from First Amendment protection.
 Scalia points out that VCP which is marketed as VCP will not be proscribed by the PROTECT Act. The Act proscribes only pandering where the intention is to cause another to believe that the material is contraband. Scalia claimed that Williams was not overruling Free Speech Coalition. Both decisions agreed that the CPPA’s prohibition on creation and distribution of VCP was a violation of First Amendment rights. As a result, one who creates VCP – even if it is indistinguishable from real child pornography - and markets it as VCP is afforded First Amendment rights.

DavidMehlFirstPaper 4 - 18 Apr 2010 - Main.DavidMehl
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 In 1982, in New York v. Ferber, the Court held that child pornography involving actual children is a category of speech not protected by the Constitution and that such depictions may be prohibited even if they are not obscene. Although Ferber focused on production and distribution of child pornography, in 1990, the Court in Osborne v. Ohio upheld an Ohio statute criminalizing mere possession of child pornography.
Changed:
<
<
In 1996, Congress passed the Child Pornography Prevention Act. The CPPA expanded the definition of child pornography by criminalizing the creation of VCP. Under the CPPA, images that appeared to depict children but do not, including images of youthful-looking adults or images that are computer-generated, were illegal. The CPPA also included a “pandering” provision that stated that any visual image that has been promoted in a manner that “conveys the impression” that a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct is depicted, is illegal. Seemingly, the pandering provision would have criminalized cases where there was no pornographic image at all, such as a case where the sender of an email claims in the subject line of the email that there is a pornographic image of a child attached to the email, when in fact all that is attached is an image of a blank wall.
>
>
In 1996, Congress passed the Child Pornography Prevention Act. The CPPA expanded the definition of child pornography by criminalizing the creation of VCP. Under the CPPA, images that appeared to depict children but do not, including images of youthful-looking adults or images that are computer-generated, were illegal. The CPPA also included a “pandering” provision that stated that any visual image that has been promoted in a manner that “conveys the impression” that a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct is depicted, is illegal.
 
Changed:
<
<
In Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition, the Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional on numerous grounds. The pandering provision was deemed overbroad because it criminalized downstream possession of material described, or pandered, as child pornography by someone earlier in the distribution chain even if no minors were actually involved in the production. The Court criticized the provision because it criminalized speech based solely “on how the speech is presented” rather than on “what is depicted.”

Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). It is built on the same platform as the CPPA with some important distinctions: (1) The Protect Act includes any digital image “that is, or is indistinguishable from, that of a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct.” (2) The requirement of showing obscenity as defined by the Miller test, which was not an element of the 1996 law. (3) Congress removed the pandering provision from the definition of child pornography and drafted a separate section prohibiting only virtual images of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct that are knowingly advertised, promoted, presented, distributed or solicited in a manner that reflects the belief, or are intended to cause another to believe, that they are obscene. (4) Finally, by adding a knowledge requirement, Congress protects individuals in possession of materials pandered as child pornography by someone earlier in the distribution chain so long as those individuals do not pander the materials as or believe that the materials are child pornography.

In United States v. Williams, the Eleventh Circuit held that the pandering provision of the PROTECT Act was overbroad and impermissibly vague because it criminalized the speech of someone who touts material as child pornography even when in fact it is either nonexistent or not pornographic. In addressing the vagueness challenge, the court also found it problematic that the statute lacked any intent requirement. In the court's view, the provision could apply to an e-mail entitled "Good pics of kids in bed" sent by a grandparent, with innocent pictures of grandchildren in pajamas attached. As a result, the Eleventh Circuit declared the PROTECT Act unconstitutional. The Supreme Court reversed and found the PROTECT Act to be Constitutional.

Scalia reasoned as follows: A statute is facially invalid if it prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech. However, because the Court in Miller and Ferber had already proscribed the material involved in the speech – the child pornography - the pandering provision is Constitutional because it targets the “collateral speech”- the pandering which introduces this contraband material into the child pornography distribution network. First Amendment protection only extends to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are categorically excluded from First Amendment protection.

>
>
After the Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional on numerous grounds in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition, Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). It is built on the same platform as the CPPA with some important distinctions that avoid the Constitutional pitfalls of the CPPA. Even so, in United States v. Williams, the Eleventh Circuit held that the pandering provision of the PROTECT Act was overbroad and impermissibly vague because it criminalized the speech of someone who touts material as child pornography even when in fact it is either nonexistent or not pornographic. The Supreme Court reversed and found the PROTECT Act to be Constitutional. Justice Scalia reasoned as follows: A statute is facially invalid if it prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech. However, because the Court in Miller and Ferber had already proscribed the material involved in the speech – the child pornography - the pandering provision is Constitutional because it targets the “collateral speech”- the pandering which introduces this contraband material into the child pornography distribution network. First Amendment protection only extends to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are categorically excluded from First Amendment protection.
 Scalia points out that VCP which is marketed as VCP will not be proscribed by the PROTECT Act. The Act proscribes only pandering where the intention is to cause another to believe that the material is contraband. Scalia claimed that Williams was not overruling Free Speech Coalition. Both decisions agreed that the CPPA’s prohibition on creation and distribution of VCP was a violation of First Amendment rights. As a result, one who creates VCP – even if it is indistinguishable from real child pornography - and markets it as VCP is afforded First Amendment rights.

DavidMehlFirstPaper 3 - 15 Apr 2010 - Main.DavidMehl
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Virtual Child Pornography And The Constitution

Deleted:
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<
In the pre-online days, pedophiles trolled playgrounds for children, using various pretexts for luring them to where they could be abducted and molested. The internet has provided something of a bounty to the predators as pornographic images and videos can be easily transmitted via the web. Besides using the images to gratify themselves sexually and collecting them as trophies, pedophiles sometimes provide them to children to desensitize them and to suggest that sexual relations between adults and children are normal.
 
Changed:
<
<
The digital age has also brought with it a proliferation in the creation of child pornography. Twenty years ago, the only way to produce child pornography was to take photos of the children and develop them. Today, child pornography is easily ‘created’ with a computer and some software. This virtual child pornography (“VCP”) can be produced in a number of ways. Forms of such pornography include: modified photographs of real children, non-minor teenagers made to look younger, fully computer-generated imagery or adults made to look like children.
>
>
The digital age has brought with it a proliferation in the creation of child pornography. Today, child pornography is easily ‘created’ with a computer and some software. Virtual child pornography (“VCP”) can be produced in a number of ways. Forms of such pornography include: modified photographs of real children, non-minor teenagers made to look younger, fully computer-generated imagery or adults made to look like children.
 

Historical Background

Line: 17 to 16
 In 1982, in New York v. Ferber, the Court held that child pornography involving actual children is a category of speech not protected by the Constitution and that such depictions may be prohibited even if they are not obscene. Although Ferber focused on production and distribution of child pornography, in 1990, the Court in Osborne v. Ohio upheld an Ohio statute criminalizing mere possession of child pornography.
Changed:
<
<
In 1996, Congress passed the Child Pornography Prevention Act. The CPPA expanded the definition of child pornography by criminalizing the creation of VCP. Under the CPPA, images that appear to depict children but do not, including images of youthful-looking adults or images that are computer-generated, would be illegal. The CPPA also included a “pandering” provision. This provision stated that any visual image that has been promoted in a manner that “conveys the impression” that a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct is depicted is illegal. Seemingly, the pandering provision would have criminalized cases where there was no pornographic image at all, such as a case where the sender of an email claims in the subject line of the email that there is a pornographic image of a child attached to the email, when in fact all that is attached is an image of a blank wall.
>
>
In 1996, Congress passed the Child Pornography Prevention Act. The CPPA expanded the definition of child pornography by criminalizing the creation of VCP. Under the CPPA, images that appeared to depict children but do not, including images of youthful-looking adults or images that are computer-generated, were illegal. The CPPA also included a “pandering” provision that stated that any visual image that has been promoted in a manner that “conveys the impression” that a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct is depicted, is illegal. Seemingly, the pandering provision would have criminalized cases where there was no pornographic image at all, such as a case where the sender of an email claims in the subject line of the email that there is a pornographic image of a child attached to the email, when in fact all that is attached is an image of a blank wall.
 In Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition, the Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional on numerous grounds. The pandering provision was deemed overbroad because it criminalized downstream possession of material described, or pandered, as child pornography by someone earlier in the distribution chain even if no minors were actually involved in the production. The Court criticized the provision because it criminalized speech based solely “on how the speech is presented” rather than on “what is depicted.”
Changed:
<
<
Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). It is built on the same platform as the CPPA with some important distinctions: (1) The Protect Act includes any digital image “that is, or is indistinguishable from, that of a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct.” (2) The Protect Act establishes the requirement of showing obscenity as defined by the Miller test, which was not an element of the 1996 law. (3) Congress removed the pandering provision from the definition of child pornography and drafted a separate section prohibiting only virtual images of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct that are knowingly advertised, promoted, presented, distributed or solicited in a manner that reflects the belief, or are intended to cause another to believe, that they are obscene. (4) Finally, by adding a knowledge requirement, Congress protects individuals in possession of materials pandered as child pornography by someone earlier in the distribution chain so long as those individuals do not pander the materials as or believe that the materials are child pornography.
>
>
Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). It is built on the same platform as the CPPA with some important distinctions: (1) The Protect Act includes any digital image “that is, or is indistinguishable from, that of a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct.” (2) The requirement of showing obscenity as defined by the Miller test, which was not an element of the 1996 law. (3) Congress removed the pandering provision from the definition of child pornography and drafted a separate section prohibiting only virtual images of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct that are knowingly advertised, promoted, presented, distributed or solicited in a manner that reflects the belief, or are intended to cause another to believe, that they are obscene. (4) Finally, by adding a knowledge requirement, Congress protects individuals in possession of materials pandered as child pornography by someone earlier in the distribution chain so long as those individuals do not pander the materials as or believe that the materials are child pornography.
 
Changed:
<
<
In United States v. Williams, the Eleventh Circuit held that the pandering provision of the PROTECT Act was overbroad and impermissibly vague because it criminalized the speech of someone who touts material as child pornography even when in fact it is either nonexistent or not pornographic. In addressing the vagueness challenge, the court also found it problematic that the statute lacked any intent requirement. In the court's view, the provision could apply to an e-mail entitled "Good pics of kids in bed" sent by a grandparent, with innocent pictures of grandchildren in pajamas attached. As a result, the Eleventh Circuit declared the PROTECT Act unconstitutional. The Supreme Court reversed the judgement of the Eleventh Circuit by finding the PROTECT Act to be Constitutional.
>
>
In United States v. Williams, the Eleventh Circuit held that the pandering provision of the PROTECT Act was overbroad and impermissibly vague because it criminalized the speech of someone who touts material as child pornography even when in fact it is either nonexistent or not pornographic. In addressing the vagueness challenge, the court also found it problematic that the statute lacked any intent requirement. In the court's view, the provision could apply to an e-mail entitled "Good pics of kids in bed" sent by a grandparent, with innocent pictures of grandchildren in pajamas attached. As a result, the Eleventh Circuit declared the PROTECT Act unconstitutional. The Supreme Court reversed and found the PROTECT Act to be Constitutional.
 Scalia reasoned as follows: A statute is facially invalid if it prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech. However, because the Court in Miller and Ferber had already proscribed the material involved in the speech – the child pornography - the pandering provision is Constitutional because it targets the “collateral speech”- the pandering which introduces this contraband material into the child pornography distribution network. First Amendment protection only extends to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are categorically excluded from First Amendment protection.

Scalia points out that VCP which is marketed as VCP will not be proscribed by the PROTECT Act. The Act proscribes only pandering where the intention is to cause another to believe that the material is contraband. Scalia claimed that Williams was not overruling Free Speech Coalition. Both decisions agreed that the CPPA’s prohibition on creation and distribution of VCP was a violation of First Amendment rights. As a result, one who creates VCP – even if it is indistinguishable from real child pornography - and markets it as VCP is afforded First Amendment rights.

Changed:
<
<

Should VCP Marketed As VCP be Legal?

>
>

Should It Be Legal to Market VCP As VCP?

 

Instinctually, the vast majority of society is repulsed by child pornography. Children are usually the most innocent and defenseless of people. Child pornography harms and debases these innocents. The most damage to children occurs in the production of real child pornography. VCP obviously does not damage children in its production because children were quite possibly never involved in its production. Perhaps VCP is even beneficial to children. Perhaps potential producers of real child pornography might instead turn to its legal cousin so as to avoid prosecution. Perhaps VCP use may decrease cases of sexual abuse by allowing pedophiles to sublimate their desires. It is a victimless alternative that is not intrinsically related to the sexual abuse of children. As a result, goes the argument, the Government cannot restrict this harmless speech. As long as the VCP is not obscene, production is not proscribed under Ferber, nor is possession proscribed under Osborne. Let us examine whether VCP would at least be classified as obscene using the Miller test.


DavidMehlFirstPaper 2 - 15 Apr 2010 - Main.DavidMehl
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DavidMehlFirstPaper 1 - 15 Apr 2010 - Main.DavidMehl
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Added:
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Ready for comments.

Virtual Child Pornography And The Constitution

In the pre-online days, pedophiles trolled playgrounds for children, using various pretexts for luring them to where they could be abducted and molested. The internet has provided something of a bounty to the predators as pornographic images and videos can be easily transmitted via the web. Besides using the images to gratify themselves sexually and collecting them as trophies, pedophiles sometimes provide them to children to desensitize them and to suggest that sexual relations between adults and children are normal.

The digital age has also brought with it a proliferation in the creation of child pornography. Twenty years ago, the only way to produce child pornography was to take photos of the children and develop them. Today, child pornography is easily ‘created’ with a computer and some software. This virtual child pornography (“VCP”) can be produced in a number of ways. Forms of such pornography include: modified photographs of real children, non-minor teenagers made to look younger, fully computer-generated imagery or adults made to look like children.

Historical Background

In Miller v. California, the Supreme Court held that lewd and obscene speech does not receive First Amendment protection because obscenity serves no crucial role in the exposition of ideas and has little social value. The Court developed a balancing test that asks: (a) whether “the average person, applying contemporary community standards” would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest; (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value. Material that ‘passes’ the Miller test is thus deemed to be obscene and is not afforded First Amendment protection.

In 1982, in New York v. Ferber, the Court held that child pornography involving actual children is a category of speech not protected by the Constitution and that such depictions may be prohibited even if they are not obscene. Although Ferber focused on production and distribution of child pornography, in 1990, the Court in Osborne v. Ohio upheld an Ohio statute criminalizing mere possession of child pornography.

In 1996, Congress passed the Child Pornography Prevention Act. The CPPA expanded the definition of child pornography by criminalizing the creation of VCP. Under the CPPA, images that appear to depict children but do not, including images of youthful-looking adults or images that are computer-generated, would be illegal. The CPPA also included a “pandering” provision. This provision stated that any visual image that has been promoted in a manner that “conveys the impression” that a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct is depicted is illegal. Seemingly, the pandering provision would have criminalized cases where there was no pornographic image at all, such as a case where the sender of an email claims in the subject line of the email that there is a pornographic image of a child attached to the email, when in fact all that is attached is an image of a blank wall.

In Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition, the Supreme Court found the CPPA unconstitutional on numerous grounds. The pandering provision was deemed overbroad because it criminalized downstream possession of material described, or pandered, as child pornography by someone earlier in the distribution chain even if no minors were actually involved in the production. The Court criticized the provision because it criminalized speech based solely “on how the speech is presented” rather than on “what is depicted.”

Congress then came up with The PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to end the Exploitation of Children Today). It is built on the same platform as the CPPA with some important distinctions: (1) The Protect Act includes any digital image “that is, or is indistinguishable from, that of a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct.” (2) The Protect Act establishes the requirement of showing obscenity as defined by the Miller test, which was not an element of the 1996 law. (3) Congress removed the pandering provision from the definition of child pornography and drafted a separate section prohibiting only virtual images of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct that are knowingly advertised, promoted, presented, distributed or solicited in a manner that reflects the belief, or are intended to cause another to believe, that they are obscene. (4) Finally, by adding a knowledge requirement, Congress protects individuals in possession of materials pandered as child pornography by someone earlier in the distribution chain so long as those individuals do not pander the materials as or believe that the materials are child pornography.

In United States v. Williams, the Eleventh Circuit held that the pandering provision of the PROTECT Act was overbroad and impermissibly vague because it criminalized the speech of someone who touts material as child pornography even when in fact it is either nonexistent or not pornographic. In addressing the vagueness challenge, the court also found it problematic that the statute lacked any intent requirement. In the court's view, the provision could apply to an e-mail entitled "Good pics of kids in bed" sent by a grandparent, with innocent pictures of grandchildren in pajamas attached. As a result, the Eleventh Circuit declared the PROTECT Act unconstitutional. The Supreme Court reversed the judgement of the Eleventh Circuit by finding the PROTECT Act to be Constitutional.

Scalia reasoned as follows: A statute is facially invalid if it prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech. However, because the Court in Miller and Ferber had already proscribed the material involved in the speech – the child pornography - the pandering provision is Constitutional because it targets the “collateral speech”- the pandering which introduces this contraband material into the child pornography distribution network. First Amendment protection only extends to lawful speech; offers to engage in illegal transactions are categorically excluded from First Amendment protection.

Scalia points out that VCP which is marketed as VCP will not be proscribed by the PROTECT Act. The Act proscribes only pandering where the intention is to cause another to believe that the material is contraband. Scalia claimed that Williams was not overruling Free Speech Coalition. Both decisions agreed that the CPPA’s prohibition on creation and distribution of VCP was a violation of First Amendment rights. As a result, one who creates VCP – even if it is indistinguishable from real child pornography - and markets it as VCP is afforded First Amendment rights.

Should VCP Marketed As VCP be Legal?

Instinctually, the vast majority of society is repulsed by child pornography. Children are usually the most innocent and defenseless of people. Child pornography harms and debases these innocents. The most damage to children occurs in the production of real child pornography. VCP obviously does not damage children in its production because children were quite possibly never involved in its production. Perhaps VCP is even beneficial to children. Perhaps potential producers of real child pornography might instead turn to its legal cousin so as to avoid prosecution. Perhaps VCP use may decrease cases of sexual abuse by allowing pedophiles to sublimate their desires. It is a victimless alternative that is not intrinsically related to the sexual abuse of children. As a result, goes the argument, the Government cannot restrict this harmless speech. As long as the VCP is not obscene, production is not proscribed under Ferber, nor is possession proscribed under Osborne. Let us examine whether VCP would at least be classified as obscene using the Miller test.

1. Does the work, applying community standards, appeal to the purient interest?

The first question we are faced with in applying this standard to VCP is: who is the community whose standards we are applying? If one produces VCP and posts it on the internet, is the internet community the community we must look to? Perhaps applying the Miller test is not viable in the context of a global internet? This was actually the holding of the Circuit Court in ACLU v. Reno. The Supreme Court, however, disagreed with the Circuit Court’s ruling that the community standards test was overbroad. The Court held that refusal to permit national standards to apply online would make regulation of illegal expression online impossible.

Does VCP appeal to the prurient interest? Although some real images of children may seem innocuous to many people, often these images are found stimulating by pedophiles. Would those images be labeled child pornography by the ‘community’? If they are, then virtually all depictions of children – whom to pedophiles are highly eroticized sexual objects – are likely to be classified as child pornography. Obviously this line of reasoning is faulty, and although the pedophile might have nefarious uses for the innocent picture, it is nevertheless an innocent picture. Conversely, VCP is produced specifically for pedophiles and people who are stimulated by these images. As a result these images ought to be labeled as images that appeal to the prurient interests by community standards.

2. Does the work depict or in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law?

Arguably, there is no criminal more reviled by society than the child molester/pedophile. Any material that aids or incites the pedophile would undoubtedly be repugnant and offensive. According to the Mayo Clinic, studies and case reports indicate that 30% to 80% of individuals who viewed child pornography and 76% of individuals who were arrested for Internet child pornography had molested a child. As a result, any depiction of child pornography, even it involved no children in its production such as VCP, would arguably be found to be offensive.

Often the pedophile uses child pornography as a way of tricking his victim into believing that sexual relations between adults and children are normal. VCP that is indistinguishable from real child pornography is probably just as dangerous as the real thing. The pedophile would be able to utilize the virtual depiction the same way he would utilize the real one. Even if the VCP were distinguishable from real child pornography, what is to say that the child victim of the pedophile is able to distinguish between the virtual depiction and the real one? VCP would be offensive simply because it is a tool utilized by the pedophile in his perverse sexual desires.

3. Does the work, lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value?

The Court in Miller stated that “we do not adopt as a constitutional standard the ‘utterly without redeeming social value’ test.” As far as the Court was concerned, possessing some kind of value was not enough to save a work from being classified as obscene. It is unlikely that computer-generated VCP could ever have any serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value given that it is created and traded with pedophiles' interests in mind. In regard to real child pornography, the Court in Ferber stated: “We consider it unlikely that visual depictions of children performing sexual acts or lewdly exhibiting their genitals would often constitute an important and necessary part of a literary performance or scientific or educational work.” It is logical to assume that the same would hold true for VCP. However, even if such images did contain some value, it is unlikely that that value would be enough to afford them First Amendment protection.

Conclusion

Real child pornography has been recognized by the Courts as the repulsive tool of child molestation that it is. Those violating child pornography laws are subject to stiff penalties. Somehow, VCP has flown under the radar. Although Congress has attempted to equate VCP with real child pornography, the Supreme Court has thwarted Congress’ attempts on two occasions. Although debatable whether or not VCP is as damaging as real child pornography, it would seem to me that VCP is by its very nature obscene. Because VCP seemingly passes the Miller test it ought to be prosecuted as obscenity.

-- DavidMehl - 15 Apr 2010

 
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