3rd Circuit Makes 2257 Judgment Official

3rd Circuit Makes 2257 Judgment Official

PHILADELPHIA — The 3rd Circuit on Friday made official its judgment against the Justice Department in its petition for a rehearing over a decision involving 18 U.S.C. §§2257 and 2257A.

The case, which challenges the federal statutes that govern performer record-keeping for sexually explicit content, now moves back to U.S. District Judge Michael Baylson’s courtroom in Philadelphia, barring a U.S. Supreme Court review.

The Justice Department has up until Nov. 9 to file a petition for writ of certiorari to ask the high court to review the 3rd Circuit’s decision. It could have opted to seek a stay of the 3rd Circuit ruling within seven days but did not file a motion to do so.

Adult entertainment trade group the Free Speech Coalition and various performers and industry stakeholders sued the government over the laws, holding that the inspection provisions of the statutes are facially unconstitutional.

The initial win at the 3rd Circuit for the plaintiffs in June, and consequently all adult entertainment producers, was hailed as one of the greatest adult industry legal victories in decades.

In June, the 3rd Circuit vacated and remanded a lower court’s July 2013 ruling that held that performer record-keeping for adult entertainment producers are constitutional.

The 3rd Circuit, in the judgment, held that the inspection provisions of the statutes are facially unconstitutional under the 4th Amendment.

With the ruling, most of 2257 became unenforceable due to its violation of the 4th Amendment on unreasonable seizures.

Barring a high court review, the case now goes back to the trial court over the case’s 1st Amendment claims.

Industry attorney Lawrence Walters, who is not a party to the case, said that the “the government still has some time to decide whether to seek review of the 3rd Circuit’s opinion, from the U.S. Supreme Court.”

“Until the decision is made, things will move forward at the trial court level, which now has jurisdiction over the case,” he told XBIZ.

Allan Gelbard, another industry attorney, observed and called the judgment issued on Friday "another positive move."

"I suppose the government may be thinking that the trial judge is more likely to give them yet another bite at the apple, so the fat lady hasn’t sung just yet," Gelbard told XBIZ. "But perhaps he’s tired of being reversed by the 3rd Circuit and, this time, he finds the entire statute unconstitutional. Fingers crossed."

Industry attorney, J.D. Obenberger, told XBIZ that the remand is about the rest of the requirements of §2257, data acquisition, records-keeping, organization and indexing and mandatory notices.

“The inspection provisions of §2257 were declared unconstitutional on their face — and so, there is nothing left for Judge Baylson to decide about them,” said Obenberger, who also is not a party to the suit.

“Because the 3rd Circuit has determined the rest of §2257's provisions to be content-based, they can only survive if they withstand strict scrutiny,” Obenberger said. “That's a question that involves taking facts and evaluating facts and finding facts — and applying the appropriate legal standard to them.

“It's a task appropriate to trial courts rather than appellate courts to find facts. That's what will happen next,” Obenberger said.

“The continued survival of §2257 faces a very stiff test based on the 3rd Circuit's understanding of the Reed v. Town of Gilbert case, and the odds seem to be against §2257.

In any event, Obenberger said, nothing has been lost to either party by this remand, and all of the issues most recently decided, and those decisions to come, still have the potential to be argued and decided again at the U.S. Supreme Court.

“Before this case ever gets there, other cases waiting in the wings will test the limits of Reed v. Town of Gilbert, and give the Supreme Court a chance to articulate whether it really meant the decision to be as broad as it appears, and in fact whether that decision permits legislation that take the nature of adult entertainment into account is setting special rules in licensing, zoning, and other area, and sets different rules for adult entertainment,” Obenberger said.

“We should have a hint about those issues before the FSC case gets to the Supreme Court, if it makes it that far.”

 

View 2257 judgment

Related:  

Copyright © 2024 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

Age Verification: FSC's Mike Stabile Reports from the Frontlines

Two years into the religiously-inspired crusade to ban free access to adult material in the U.S. through carefully drafted "age verification" legislation, the constant onslaught of state-by-state proposals and laws — many of them copied from each other — can be hard to follow.

Written Erotica Platform 'Hevvn' Launches

Hevvn, a new platform aimed at erotica writers seeking to publish, promote and profit from their work, debuted Thursday.

Sssh.com's Angie Rowntree Speaks at Brown University

Sssh.com founder Angie Rowntree spoke at a Brown University class last week, discussing several topics related to adult filmmaking.

Bella Rolland Toplines 'The Sex Impulse' From Sweet Sinner

Bella Rolland headlines "The Sex Impulse," the latest release from Mile High Media studio brand Sweet Sinner.

Online Industry Veteran Joe E. Passes Away

Online industry veteran Joe E has passed away, according to friends and industry associates.

Judge Acquits Backpage Defendants of Most Charges Before 2nd Retrial

A federal judge acquitted former co-owner of Backpage.com Michael Lacey and two co-defendants on most of the counts remaining from the protracted trial launched against the website operators by the Justice Department in 2018.

Adult Time Partners With Animation Studio 3DGspot

Adult Time has signed a deal to distribute content on its streaming platform from animation studio 3DGspot.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp Signs Age Verification Bill Into Law

Republican Gov. Brian Kemp this week signed into law a bill that includes provisions requiring age verification for viewing adult content in Georgia, mirroring legislation being sponsored around the country by anti-porn religious conservative activists.

AEBN Publishes Popular Searches by Country for February, March

AEBN has released the popular searches from its straight and gay theaters in more than three dozen countries during February and March.

Willow Ryder, Angelina Diamanti Topline 'Lesbian Neighbor Affairs'

Willow Ryder and Angelina Diamanti headline "Lesbian Neighbor Affairs," from Girlfriends Films.

Show More