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Free Speech Victory: High Court Bars Enforcement of COPA
June 30, 2004
On Tuesday, June 29, the Supreme Court, by a 5-4 vote, upheld a lower court
ruling barring enforcement of the Child Online Protection Act (COPA) and remanded
the case back to District Court. A broad group of plaintiffs -- including the
American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression (ABFFE), A Different Light
Bookstore in San Francisco and West Hollywood, City Lights in San Francisco, and Powell's Books in Portland,
Oregon -- hailed the decision as a victory for the First Amendment.
"By in effect staying the action of the law, it keeps things as they are,"
Michael Powell of Powell's Books told BTW. "This will give people
more time to come up with a solution that would not restrict adults' First Amendment
access to materials -- to give parents better tools [to restrict what their
children can view online], and not make a blanket law that restricts access
to permissible materials."
ABFFE President Chris Finan said of the decision, "The Supreme Court has
once again told Congress that First Amendment rights are paramount on the Internet."
COPA, signed into law in 1998, would make it a crime for any commercial Web
site to distribute to a minor material that is "harmful to minors."
Those convicted under COPA could be fined up to $50,000 and imprisoned for up
to six months. The plaintiffs had argued that the law violates the free expression
rights of adults.
Although the Supreme Court declared that COPA probably violates the First Amendment,
it postponed a final decision until a lower court determines whether the provisions
of the law -- for example, the requirements that adults obtain passwords to
access "harmful" material -- are more effective in preventing minors
from seeing explicit sexual material than software filters installed by parents.
Experts believe that this will be hard for the government to prove for a number
of reasons, including the fact that much of the explicit material on the Internet
is posted on foreign Web sites that are not subject to American law.
In the decision, Justice Anthony Kennedy, in writing for the majority, noted:
"[T]he potential harms from reversing the injunction outweigh those of
leaving it in place by mistake
. There is a potential for extraordinary
harm and a serious chill upon protected speech
.
"There are substantial factual disputes remaining in the case
. [T]here
is serious gap in the evidence as to the effectiveness of filtering software
.
For us to assume, without proof, that filters are less effective than COPA would
usurp the District Court's fact-finding role. By allowing the preliminary injunction
to stand and remanding for trial, we require the Government to shoulder its
full constitutional burden of proof respecting the less restrictive alternative
argument, rather than excuse it from doing so.
"Third, and on a related point, the factual record does not reflect current
technological reality -- a serious flaw in any case involving the Internet.
The technology of the Internet evolves at a rapid pace. Yet the fact-findings
of the District Court were entered in February 1999, over five years ago. Since
then, certain facts about the Internet are known to have changed
. More
and better filtering alternatives may exist than when the District Court entered
its findings. Indeed, we know that after the District Court entered its factfindings,
a congressionally appointed commission issued a report that found that filters
are more effective than verification screens."
The COPA victory may very well affect similar Internet "harmful to minors"
challenges at the state level, said Michael Bamberger, general counsel for the
Media Coalition. The higher court's ruling could influence the decisions in
pending cases in South Carolina and Ohio. "In the South Carolina case,
the judge said he was waiting to see what the Supreme Court would [rule in the
COPA case]," he explained. "[Overall,] I think the effect of the COPA
decision is positive, since it will reinforce lower court decisions in respect
to state statutes."
ABFFE, the Media Coalition, and others have successfully challenged cases in
three states where Internet "harmful to minors" laws could have stopped
adults from viewing materials on the Web that they already have a constitutional
right to view in bookstores and libraries. The challenges occurred in New Mexico,
New York, and Vermont. --David Grogan
Topics: Internet Commerce, Free Expression, News - Bookselling,
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