The US Supreme Court upheld a federal law that
punishes people who advertise or solicit child pornography. The court, in a 7-2
decision, upheld the PROTECT Act (Prosecutorial Remedies and Other Tools to End
the Exploitation of Children Today), the law that makes a federal crime to “pander,”
of offer for sale or trade material that is advertised as child pornography. The
act is a vital instrument in targeting the trafficking of online child
pornography.
Justices said the child pornography “proliferated
through the new medium of the Internet.”
The law also punishes any Internet user who
tries to obtain child pornography from an undercover agent. A person who
advertises child pornography also violates the statute. Even if the material
turns out later not to be child pornography, if a person offered it for sale,
or if someone intended to offer, to buy, or trade it, that person is considered
guilty, said attorney Pat Trueman, who headed up the Justice Department's Child
Exploitation and Obscenity Section during the 1980s.
Authorities said the pandering provision is
needed because it is often difficult to prove that pornography on the Internet
involved real children engaged in sexual activity. The law would apply to “any
promoter – be they a braggart, exaggerator, or outright liar – who claims to
have illegal pornography,” the appellate court said, even if the person had
nothing more than “a video of 'Our Gang,' a dirty handkerchief or an empty
pocket.”
On the other hand, the American Bookseller
Foundation for Free Expression had asked the court to overturn the law, saying
that the measure will restrict free-speech acts. Opponents of the law also said
that it could apply to movies like “Traffic,” “Titanic,” “American Beauty,”
which depict sexual activity by teenagers. They say the pandering provision
went too far by punishing people for soliciting or offering images that might
not involve real children.
Justice Antonin Scalia said the law takes a
reasonable approach to the issue and the Congress had “responded with carefully
crafted attempt to eliminate the First Amendment problems we identified.” He
said that distribution of a documentary, for example, would not be punished by
the law.