Free Speech Coal., Inc. v. Sessions

314 F. Supp. 3d 678
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 21, 2018
DocketCIVIL ACTION NO. 09–4607
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 314 F. Supp. 3d 678 (Free Speech Coal., Inc. v. Sessions) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Free Speech Coal., Inc. v. Sessions, 314 F. Supp. 3d 678 (E.D. Pa. 2018).

Opinion

Baylson, District Judge *682TABLE OF CONTENTS

I. Litigation History...684

A. The Statutes (enacted 1988 and 2006) and Regulations...684

1. Substantive requirements of the Statutes...684
2. Scope of the statutes...685
3. Criminal penalties imposed by Section 2257 and 2257A...686

B. FSC I: Initial District Court Proceedings (2009-10)...687

C. FSC II: First Appeal to the Third Circuit (2012)...687

D. FSC III: First Remand and Results of Trial (2012-13)...687

1. Trial evidence...688
2. Legal Analysis...688
3. As-applied challenge...689
4. Substantial overbreadth...690

E. FSC IV: Second but Now-Vacated Decision of the Third Circuit (2015)...690

1. Associational standing...690
2. As-applied challenge...690
3. Substantial overbreadth challenge...691

F. FSC V: Most Recent Third Circuit Decision and Remand in light of Reed...691

II. Proceedings After Remand...692

A. Summary of the parties' arguments...692

1. Plaintiffs...692
2. Government...693

B. Government's Supplemental Evidence...695

1. Declaration of John Shehan...695
2. Declaration of Jackie Dougher...695
3. Declaration of Janine Johansen...696

III. Burdens of Proof...696

IV. Standing...697

V. The Court rejects the Plaintiff's facial overbreadth challenge...698

VI. How Courts Approach Strict Scrutiny Analysis...700

A. COPA Litigation...700

B. United States v. Marcavage...702

VII. The Government's Theory of Partial Invalidation...703

A. As-applied challenges...703

B. Limiting construction of statutory language...703

C. Severance...704

D. This Court Cannot Hold that the Statutes Apply Only to Performers over a Specific Age...704

VIII. As-applied Strict Scrutiny Analysis...705

A. Scope of the Statutes...706

1. Review of statutory provisions...706
2. Applying the Statutes to secondary producers is not narrowly tailored to the Government's compelling interest in protecting *683children from child pornography...706
3. Applying the Statutes to secondary producers is not the least restrictive means of effecting the Government's interest...706
4. The Statutes' application to commercial producers...707

B. Identification and Age-Verification...707

1. Review of statutory provisions...707
2. As applied to Plaintiffs, the identification and age-verification requirements are narrowly tailored to the Government's interest in protecting children from child pornography...708
3. As applied to Plaintiffs, the identification and age-verification requirements are the least restrictive means of advancing the Government's interest in protecting children from child pornography...710
a. A statutory scheme, including identification and age-verification requirements, applying only to individuals over a specific age...710
b. Relying on criminal laws punishing child pornography...711

C. Record-keeping...712

1. Review of statutory and regulatory provisions...712
2. The record-keeping requirements are not narrowly tailored to the Government's compelling interest in protecting children from child pornography...712
a. Application to the Regulations...713
3. The record-keeping requirements do not add protection and are not protecting children from sexual exploitation...714
a. Plaintiffs' self-policing alternatives...714
b. Self-certification under § 2257A(h)...714
c. FSC's "self-certification" form...714
d. Relying on the fact that minors cannot enter binding contracts is a less restrictive, equally effective alternative to record-maintaining rule...715

D. Labeling...715

1. Review of statutory and regulatory provisions...715
2. The labeling requirements are not narrowly tailored or the least restrictive means as applied to Plaintiffs...716

E. Criminal Penalties...716

1. Review of statutory provisions...715
2. Except for the required age verification, criminal penalties are not narrowly tailored or the least restrictive alternative as applied to Plaintiffs...716
3. A statute allowing criminal punishment for record-keeping and labeling violations is not the least restrictive means of protecting minors from child pornography...717

IX. Conclusion...717

This case concerning the constitutionality of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2257 and 2257A and their implementing regulations, which impose labeling, recordkeeping, and inspection requirements governing the production of sexually explicit images, including pornography, returns once again to this Court. In 2009, Plaintiffs Free Speech Coalition, Inc., the American Society of Media Photographers and individuals involved in the production of adult media, filed suit in this Court alleging that the Statutes and their implementing regulations violated the First, Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments, and were unconstitutionally vague.1

*684Only Plaintiffs' First Amendment challenge remains. Specifically, this Court must again decide, under new controlling precedents, whether the Statutes violate the First Amendment as-applied and/or are facially overbroad.

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Related

Free Speech Coal., Inc. v. Sessions
322 F. Supp. 3d 605 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2018)

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Bluebook (online)
314 F. Supp. 3d 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/free-speech-coal-inc-v-sessions-paed-2018.