Arizona's Revenge Porn Law Punishes First Amendment-Protected Activity By Making It A Sex Offense [Updated]
from the 'solving'-a-problem-by-creating-new-problems dept
[Update to the update: when writing this post, I misread Chapter 14 of Arizona's laws to mean that a sexual offense of this nature (revenge porn) would require registration as a sex offender. Not everything listed under "Sexual Offenses" is punishable in this fashion (which includes bestiality, inappropriate contact with a minor, violent sexual assault, etc.) and as Amanda Levendowski (whose post on the law is quoted below) pointed out on Twitter, the law equates revenge porn with domestic violence, which is not an offense requiring registration. My sincerest apologies to everyone for my error. -- Tim Cushing]
Updates have been added to the post to clarify that those found guilty under this law don't end up on the sexual offenders list -- instead the crime is considered the equivalent of "domestic violence."
Another revenge porn law has just gone into effect. This time it's Arizona seeking to create a new brand of criminal already covered by existing laws. But Arizona's law does make an effort to be the worst of the worst, what with its removal of wording related to "newsworthy disclosure" and the addition of violators to the state's sex offender registry making it sexual offense on par with domestic violence (Update: earlier reports saying that it required you to be put on the sex offender's list are incorrect).
Those jokes about retweeting US Airways' model-plane-as-'marital-aid' gaffe from a few weeks back putting certain states' residents on the wrong side of newly-minted revenge porn laws aren't really jokes. Or, at least, they're the kind of "funny" that kills off your amusement in mid-laugh. The wording of Arizona's law would (much like New Jersey's) make violators out of every Arizonan who passed that photo along, as New York defense lawyer Scott Greenfield points out.
Do you have personal knowledge that the woman in the US Airways tweet consented to your distribution of her image on twitter? But you did know she was in a state of nudity, right? And you did it anyway, right? And while it may have been “newsworthy” (or at least lulzworthy) that US Airways made this huge gaffe, there is no rational nexis between a corporate screw up and a woman’s right not to have her nude landing field spewed across the interwebz, right?Here's the law in its totality:
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Arizona: Section 1. Title 13, chapter 14, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended by adding section 13-1425, to read: 13-1425. Unlawful distribution of images; state of nudity; classification; definitions.Section 14 is Arizona's catchall for sexual offenses, which pushes this law past the usual expansions of stalking or harassment laws
A. IT IS UNLAWFUL TO INTENTIONALLY DISCLOSE, DISPLAY, DISTRIBUTE, PUBLISH, ADVERTISE OR OFFER A PHOTOGRAPH, VIDEOTAPE, FILM OR DIGITAL RECORDING OF ANOTHER PERSON IN A STATE OF NUDITY OR ENGAGED IN SPECIFIC SEXUAL ACTIVITIES IF THE PERSON KNOWS OR SHOULD HAVE KNOWN THAT THE DEPICTED PERSON HAS NOT CONSENTED TO THE DISCLOSURE.
B. THIS SECTION DOES NOT APPLY TO ANY OF THE FOLLOWING:
1. LAWFUL AND COMMON PRACTICES OF LAW ENFORCEMENT, REPORTING UNLAWFUL ACTIVITY, OR WHEN PERMITTED OR REQUIRED BY LAW OR RULE IN LEGAL PROCEEDINGS.
2. LAWFUL AND COMMON PRACTICES OF MEDICAL TREATMENT.
3. IMAGES INVOLVING VOLUNTARY EXPOSURE IN A PUBLIC OR COMMERCIAL SETTING. 4. AN INTERACTIVE COMPUTER SERVICE, AS DEFINED IN 47 UNITED STATES CODE SECTION 230(f)(2), OR AN INFORMATION SERVICE, AS DEFINED IN 47 UNITED STATES CODE SECTION 153, WITH REGARD TO CONTENT PROVIDED BY ANOTHER PERSON.
C. A VIOLATION OF THIS SECTION IS A CLASS 5 FELONY, EXCEPT THAT A VIOLATION OF THIS SECTION IS A CLASS 4 FELONY IF THE DEPICTED PERSON IS RECOGNIZABLE.
D. FOR THE PURPOSES OF THIS SECTION, "STATE OF NUDITY" AND "SPECIFIC SEXUAL ACTIVITIES" HAVE THE SAME MEANINGS PRESCRIBED IN SECTION 11-811.
But isn’t it unconstitutional, since “[t]he Supreme Court has held that offensive, embarrassing, disgusting, and even false speech warrant protection under the First Amendment”? Lawprof Danielle Citron debunks the “myth” (even though Citron doesn’t go as far as [Mary Anne] Franks in her zeal to get the evil men at any cost [see footnote 45]) because revenge porn is special, unlike the crush videos rejected in Stevens, by reasoning that aspires to sophistry.) But since revenge porn is so evil, it isn’t subject to logic that would otherwise apply, so we can blindly leap over logical gaps in a single bound. Constitution, gone. Well, at least non-lawyer fans see no problem dismissing it.Beyond the fact that the bill criminalizes First Amendment activity, and beyond the fact that it makes it a criminal offense to post newsworthy/notable photos as part of a journalistic endeavor, there's the all-encompassing language at the beginning of the law that will (if given over to zealous interpretation -- and what part of this bill isn't marked by zealotry?) make sex offenders out of people who've never posted a nude pic in their life. Amanda Levendowski's writeup of Arizona's new law purposefully excludes links to supporting information specifically because of the law's first paragraph.
The law could apply to the snaps of Anthony Weiner’s dangerzone that he didn’t publicly tweet (which Buzzfeed included in its July 25, 2013 story). Or US Airway’s gaff-tweet of a woman’s landing strip* and the subsequent sharing of the image (as HuffPo did in its story about the tweet on April 14, 2014), which is the very issue I blogged about last week.People who intentionally post "revenge porn" are inveterate assholes, but their actions hardly fit under a sexual offender law. And there are plenty of existing laws that tackle what they do. (Most revenge porn sites seem to be run by people who have no problem with breaking other laws as well.) People who inadvertently wander into the oncoming path of the DO SOMETHING Express aren't criminals in any sense of the word. But a whole lot of other complications (including limited/no employment) await Arizonans who post the wrong picture online. About the only positive in the bill is that it doesn't screw with Section 230 protections.
I’m intentionally NOT linking to these sites: It doesn’t look like the statute defines disclosure, and who knows what a determined prosecutor might interpret “distribution” to mean.
Just because the activity depicted can be described as "sexual" does not make this a sexual offense on the order of domestic violence. It's more closely aligned with harassment/stalking and should have stayed that way. This law will be abused. There can be no question about that. Revenge porn aficionados shouldn't walk away unscathed, but First Amendment-protected activity shouldn't be steamrolled simply to make the path to shutting down revenge porn as smooth as possible.
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Filed Under: arizona, first amendment, revenge porn, sex offenders
Reader Comments
The First Word
“America loves entrepreneurs, but should something really be founded and run by an entrepreneur if 1) the government is it's only customer, and 2) it would be illegal to sell the product or service to a private citizen? (if I paid a private prison to keep someone I hate in their prison I'd be charged with unlawful imprisonment)
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Hmm....
Where are the troll lawyers when you need them?
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This problem is actively being addressed by making the outside of prisons indistinguishable from the inside while on U.S. territory.
Current prison cells can then be reserved for death row inhabitants and those felons who are most dangerous for the well-being of other inmates, like copyright infringers.
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When everyone in your state is on the list, that eliminates the list.
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This was designed to "solve" a problem without actually doing the hard part.
The public will hear the right soundbites, assume it is all fixed, and then be baffled and angry when they see the state having to pay out to people who had their rights violated by the law.
They will blame whoever is handy, and demand it be written again but stronger.
Nothing will get solved, more people will suffer, and we'll move onto the next moral panic that needs a law now.
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Remember how pissed off Kate Middleton was when the Paparazzi snapped a photo of her sun bathing topless by a pool? She should fly to Arizona and file a lawsuit!
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How do you prove knowledge?
I don't get it. How could you prove that someone knows, or should have known, that, for instance, the plane-lady weren't okay with it? For all you know she might get off on it.
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That is an offensive stereotype. Arizona has generously made it legal to have up to two (2) dildos per household. (Regardless of the number of persons in that household.)
Furthermore, such a law increases the domestic consumption of certain shapes of fruits and vegitables.
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I would say it has already made the registry useless for its original purpose. Remember the idea that people could find out if there were any dangerous predators living in the area? That is essentially impossible now.
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Of course they would. Remember that porn (and sex toys) being legal is a pretty recent phenomenon in the US. It's still illegal in a fair number of states.
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The Horse has left barn syndrome
While revenge porn sites are disgusting and probably violate an number of laws (extortion is one) that are already on the books. There is no need for an overly broad, poorly thought out legislation.
According to Thomas Bracken "Czar" Reed (Speaker of the US House 1890's) many Congress critters subtract from the sum total of human knowledge. The Arizona legislature, by existing, subtracts from the sum total of human knowledge.
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In fact, if you are underage and cannot consent, a naked selfie could land you on the list.
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America loves entrepreneurs, but should something really be founded and run by an entrepreneur if 1) the government is it's only customer, and 2) it would be illegal to sell the product or service to a private citizen? (if I paid a private prison to keep someone I hate in their prison I'd be charged with unlawful imprisonment)
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Come get me
I provided a link. I'll be waiting for the police.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/d/d4/TrangBang.jpg
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Of course, if everyone got put on the list of sex offenders, people would stop caring about that list. Great news for rapists and pedophiles (who would suddenly be able to hide in plain sight again), not so great for the general public.
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Take, for example, the movies Traci Lords is most famous for. They've been outlawed in the "land of the free" but remain legal in certain other countries. Thus, because of the global nature of the net, Americans have access to these movies (just be careful).
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(Oh, wait. Pragmatic. I tired of your asininity long ago.)
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Re: How do you prove knowledge?
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