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Free Expression Victory in Indiana: Judge Strikes Down Bookstore Registration Law
July 02, 2008
On Tuesday, July 1, a federal judge struck down an Indiana law requiring bookstores
and other retail establishments that sell even a single "sexually explicit"
book, magazine, video, or recording to register with the state and pay a $250
license fee. Judge Sarah Evans Barker declared in a written opinion: "Clearly,
a vast array of merchants and materials is implicated by the reach of this statute
as written. A romance novel sold at a drugstore, a magazine offering sex advice
in a grocery store checkout line, an R-rated DVD sold by a video rental shop,
a collection of old Playboy magazines sold by a widow at a garage sale
-- all incidents of unquestionably lawful, non-obscene, non-pornographic material
being sold to adults -- would appear to necessitate registration under the statute."
"Judge Barker's decision is a resounding victory for the First Amendment
rights of booksellers and their customers," said American Booksellers Foundation
for Free Expression President Chris Finan. In
May, ABFFE, Big Hat Books of Indianapolis, Boxcar Books and Community
Center of Bloomington, and the Great Lakes Booksellers Association had joined
with publishers and other free expression groups in a lawsuit challenging the
law.
Big Hat owner Liz Houghton Barden told BTW that she was relieved by
the judges ruling and thankful to ABFFE for leading the fight. "Out here
in Indiana all eyes and all media were focused on a big property tax issue,
and nobody picked up that [the Bookstore Registration Law] was going through
the House," said Houghton Barden. "It was Chris Finan who threw up
the red flag. He orchestrated everything -- the ACLU and Ken Falk [an attorney
for the ACLU of Indiana]. I always checked the little box on the ABA dues form
that asks for a $50 donation to ABFFE. I just did it, never understanding how
much I would need it someday."
Judge Barker agreed with the plaintiffs' contention that the law would have
a chilling effect on the sale of constitutionally protected works. To avoid
being labeled an "adult" store, retailers would have been forced to
suppress the sale of almost all works with sexual content. "There can be
no doubt that compliance with such a vague mandate will be unduly burdensome,
will have a chilling effect on expression, and will fail to provide ordinary
people with a reasonable degree of notice as to the law's requirements; the
Constitution demands no less," Barker said. (The opinion is online
at www.abffe.com.)
Other plaintiffs in case are the Association of American Publishers, the Entertainment
Merchants Association, the Freedom to Read Foundation, the National Association
of Recording Merchandisers, the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana Foundation,
the Indiana Museum of Art, and the Indianapolis Downtown Artists and Dealers
Association. They are represented by Michael A. Bamberger of Sonnenschein, Nath
and Rosenthal. Bamberger is general counsel of Media
Coalition, a legislative and legal watchdog on First Amendment issues
for producers and distributors of media, including books, magazines, recordings,
videos, and video games.
The State of Indiana, which conceded that the registration was "badly
drafted" in spots, has 30 days to decide whether to appeal Barker's decision.
The plaintiffs will seek reimbursement of the money they have spent for attorneys'
fees, and an unsuccessful appeal will only cost Indiana taxpayers more money.
This is not the first time that Barker has ruled in a First Amendment case
brought by booksellers. In 1984, in her first case as a judge, Barker, who was
appointed by Ronald Reagan, struck down an Indianapolis anti-pornography law
drafted by Catharine MacKinnon and Andrea Dworkin. Her decision in the case,
American Booksellers Association v. Hudnut, was affirmed by the Seventh Circuit
Court of Appeals and the U.S. Supreme Court.
Topics: News - Bookselling, Free Expression,
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