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SPEECH TO COLLECT ATTORNEY FEES IN VIRTUAL CHILD PORN CASE
By
Mark Kernes
Feb. 12, 2003
SAN
FRANCISCO - By order of the United States District Court for the
Northern District of California dated Feb. 7, the Free Speech Coalition,
which last year prevailed before the U.S. Supreme Court in its suit
against portions of the Child Pornography Prevention Act (CPPA)
case, will be able to recoup the money it laid out for litigating
the case.
"We
had oral argument on the motion last Thursday [Feb. 6], and the
court ruled that we're entitled to the fees," said H. Louis
Sirkin, attorney for the plaintiffs, which included not only the
Coalition, but publisher Bold Type, Inc., author Jim Gingerich and
photographer Ron Raffaelli. "The only thing is, the court has
encouraged us to settle it, and if we can't come to some agreement,
he has set it for mediation. But he's already ruled that we're entitled
to the fees and expenses."
Almost
as remarkable as the award itself, however, was the decision by
U.S. District judge William Alsup, who painstakingly explained why,
though the government had prevailed in cases where the CPPA was
involved in four other circuits, the plaintiffs in this case had
nonetheless overcome the U.S. Attorney's burden to show that the
government's position was "substantially justified in law and
in fact."
"The
Supreme Court's decision herein held without dissent that an unqualified
ban on so-called youthful-adult sexual works, i.e., films and photographs
using adults made up to look like children would be invalid,"
Judge Alsup wrote. "Although the overall vote was six to three,
not a single justice was willing to hold that a categorical ban
on sexually-explicit films and photographs using youthful-adult
actors and models would be constitutional... It is rare that all
nine justices would line up in this way."
After
noting that the Supreme Court's decision in New York v. Ferber (1982)
specifically suggested that "if it were necessary for literary
or artistic value, a person over the statutory age who perhaps loooked
younger could be utilized" in a depiction of underage sexuality,
Judge Alsup continued:
"In
light of the clarity of the holding in the Supreme Court, one might
ask how four circuits had managed apparently to reach the opposite
result and thus had generated the 'string of successes' now relied
on by the government. This Court has gone back to study those decisions.
In doing so, it is not really so clear that the four decisions were
so uniformly pro-CPPA as the government now portrays them. To be
sure, all four sustained indictments or convictions in criminal
cases and turned aside facial challenges to the CPPA. Those decisions,
however, recognized the important First Amendment problem raised
by the statute. In various ways, they then struggled to contain
the problem so as to avoid a facial invalidation [of the Act]..."
"The
Supreme Court disagreed sharply with any case-by-case redemption
of the statute. The Supreme Court said the CPPA was 'a textbook
example of why we permit facial challenges to statutes that burden
expression,' going on to explain how the CPPA chilled a substantial
amount of protected expression."
FSC
board chairman Jeffrey Douglas was elated by the decision.
"The
decision is outstanding for two reasons," Douglas explained.
"First, the analysis of the government's position allowing
us to get attorneys fees is very positive. That is, the judge recognized
that the fact that the government prevailed in other circuits does
not define whether the position that they took was ultimately the
correct one. And secondly, the judge's analysis of the Ashcroft
v. Free Speech opinion by the Supreme Court is itself spectacular,
and assuming the case is published, will provide a great roadmap
for other attorneys and courts analyzing Ashcroft ."
The
judge has given both sides until March 3 either to agree to a settlement
figure for the claim, or to agree jointly to the name of a Special
Master who would decide on a figure after reviewing the evidence.
SOURCE>AVNONLINE.COM
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