Tokyo Valentino Owner Fights to Keep Georgia Adult Boutiques Open

Tokyo Valentino Owner Fights to Keep Georgia Adult Boutiques Open

EAST COBB, Georgia — Michael Morrison, owner of the Southern adult boutique chain Tokyo Valentino, gave an interview to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, published yesterday, explaining the ongoing zoning battle provoked by conservative city council politicians and lawyers attempting to chase his business out of two Georgia locations.

“While a court decision could be coming next month for the East Cobb location of Tokyo Valentino, the owner is fighting in court to keep it and a second store in Marietta open,” reported Atlanta’s establishment newspaper.

Morrison told the AJC that “the court battles come with the territory for his retail operations.”

In 1978, Larry Flynt was shot near a Georgia courthouse by a would-be assassin while engaged in a local court battle trying to protect his adult business.

Tokyo Valentino’s two Cobb County locations continue operating while the zoning dispute is litigated.

“I think like any controversial business — whether it’s this, or gentlemen’s clubs or marijuana stores — part of the business model is you have to fight some of this litigation,” Morrison told the AJC. “I think it gets us a lot of publicity, which always helps. But really it hurts the customer because all these fees get passed on in higher prices to the consumer.”

The AJC explained that Tokyo Valentino “operates six different adult novelty establishments throughout the metro area. It has two locations in Atlanta as well as shops in Sandy Springs and Gwinnett County. Tokyo Valentino has a decades-long track record of suing municipalities for the right to operate, despite pushback from residents and elected officials.”

Morrison seemed unfazed and defiant by the political and moral grandstanding of city officials. “We’ve been doing this since 1995,” he added. “We’ve seen situations like this where they change rules to accomplish their own purposes.”

Conflicts of Interest and Moralistic Posturing

As XBIZ has been reporting, the East Cobb and Marietta hearings attempting to shutter Tokyo Valentino are full of conflicts of interest and moralistic posturing by law enforcement and conservative politicians. Some of the supposedly impartial city officials admitted to orchestrating absurd so-called “sting operations” where undercover cops purchased sex toys at the adult boutique, which were then revealed at the hearings for a bizarre “show-and-tell” testimony

In a written counterclaim, the city of Marietta “argued that Tokyo Valentino was not allowed to sell the ‘massive amount of pornography’ that was found in the shop,” the AJC reported.

Marietta business inspectors then claimed “sexually oriented products made up 80-90% of the merchandise on the shelves,” while including in their definition such items as shoes and lotions.

"Pornographic" Shoes

During a July 2020 hearing, the Tokyo Valentino lawyer asked one of the undercover cops about the merchandise he had classified as being “sexually related.”

“Lotions and gels,” the lawyer asked. “Are they considered 'sexual devices?'”

“It wasn’t a lotion I’d seen at [supermarket] Kroger, so it was all geared to sexual activity,” the policeman replied.

The lawyer then asked about the shoes sold by Tokyo Valentino.

“They are not shoes [you'd] see on normal people walking around,” replied the policeman; instead, he described the styles as common to "strippers and ladies of the night.”

The policeman also described the shoes as “seductive in nature.”

“I think this was driven by a bunch of soccer moms in the neighborhood,” Tokyo Valentino’s Morrison told the AJC in the report published yesterday.

“When we first opened up, the [City of Marietta] knew exactly what we were and there was no problem until we opened the store in East Cobb. Now all of a sudden, they want to change their argument and say they had no idea what our stores sell or what we represented," Morrison added.

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

Canadian Officials, Experts Lambast Anti-Porn Senator's Age Verification Bill

Canada’s privacy commissioner warned a parliamentary committee on Tuesday that the expansive age verification bill promoted by vocal anti-porn and anti-sex-work Senator Julie Miville-Dechênel has broad censorship implications and could end up applying to mainstream services such as Netflix.

FSC Director: New Tennessee Age Verification Law is 'Attack on 1st Amendment'

Free Speech Coalition (FSC) Executive Director Alison Boden called Tennessee’s new age verification bill, signed into law by Republican Governor Bill Lee on Tuesday, “an attack not only on the adult industry but on the First Amendment rights of millions of people who engage with adult content online.”

South Carolina Governor Links Age Verification Law, Trans Youth Care Ban

South Carolina’s Republican Governor Henry McMaster held a ceremony on Wednesday combining the signings of the state’s new age verification law for adult content and a controversial ban on gender affirming care for trans youth.

Judge in Performers' Blacklisting Lawsuit Says Meta Policy Sounds 'Nefarious'

A California federal judge, overseeing a lawsuit claiming that Meta conspired with OnlyFans to blacklist rival premium fan platforms’ talent, said during a hearing Wednesday that the tech giant’s lack of archiving of its “Dangerous Organizations and Individuals” (DOI) list sounded “nefarious.”

Eldorado to Host 'Virtual Elevation' Webinar With Kiiroo

Eldorado Trading is hosting a private "Virtual Elevation" live webinar for retailers with Kiiroo U.S. Sales Manager Kate Kozlova on June 6 at 10 a.m. PDT.

Blush, QueerCrush Partner for Pride Month

Blush has teamed up with QueerCrush to celebrate Pride Month.

Tamara Payton Bell Launches 'New Attitude' Consulting Firm

Tamara Payton Bell has launched New Attitude Business Consulting.

LA Direct's Derek Hay Pleads Guilty in Conspiracy Case

LA Direct Models’ Derek Hay pleaded guilty Tuesday in Los Angeles to one charge of conspiracy to commit pandering and a charge of perjury, as part of a plea agreement with the California attorney general in a criminal case.

Blush Appoints Ian Kulp as Director of Marketing

Blush has hired industry veteran Ian Kulp as its new director of marketing.

Congressional Republicans, Democrats Renew Attack on Section 230

The ranking members from both parties in the U.S. House of Representatives Communications and Technology Subcommittee have teamed up to propose an end to current liability protections under Section 230, known to digital rights activists as “the First Amendment of the internet.”

Show More