PHE, Inc. v. United States Department of Justice

743 F. Supp. 15, 1990 WL 106992
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedAugust 28, 1990
DocketCiv. A. 90-0693
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 743 F. Supp. 15 (PHE, Inc. v. United States Department of Justice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PHE, Inc. v. United States Department of Justice, 743 F. Supp. 15, 1990 WL 106992 (D.D.C. 1990).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

JOYCE HENS GREEN, District Judge.

Plaintiff PHE, Inc., d/b/a Adam & Eve (“PHE”), a North Carolina corporation which engages in, inter alia, mail order distribution of sexually oriented magazines and videotapes, and its President and principal owner, Philip D. Harvey, bring this action for declaratory and injunctive relief to restrain defendants United States Department of Justice, United States Attorney General Richard Thornburg, the National Obscenity Enforcement Unit (“NOEU”) and its Acting Director Patrick Trueman, Assistant United States Attorney for the District of Utah Richard N.W. Lambert, and United States Attorney for the Western District of Kentucky Joseph M. Whittle from continuing to engage in what plaintiffs characterize as unconstitutional and bad faith conduct calculated to coerce plaintiffs to cease distribution of constitutionally protected speech. Specifically, plaintiffs contend that defendants have used or threatened to use their prosecutorial powers, including simultaneous multiple prosecutions and/or multiple consecutive prosecutions for obscenity, seizures of expressive materials, and criminal subpoenas, to coerce plaintiffs into ceasing distribution of certain sexually oriented materials which defendants have acknowledged would not be found to be obscene under current legal standards.

Presently pending before the Court are plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary injunction and defendants’ motion to dismiss. The Court heard argument on these motions at a hearing held on April 19, 1990. Upon consideration of the parties’ memoranda, argument of counsel, and the entire record, plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary injunction *17 shall be granted and defendants’ motion to dismiss shall be denied.

I.

A. Plaintiffs’ Business

PHE is one of the largest retail distributors of sexually oriented magazines and videotapes in the United States and has been engaged in this business for several years. 1 In an effort to ensure that the materials they distribute will not be found to be obscene, plaintiffs have attempted to obtain guidelines from the federal officials entrusted with the enforcement of obscenity laws. These efforts have proved largely unsuccessful. Patrick Trueman, Acting Director of the NOEU, declined to give plaintiffs any guidance whatsoever, asserting that to do so would itself be a First Amendment violation. 2 As a result of requests made under the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), plaintiffs obtained the “obscene matter file” in the FBI Library, which consists “only of commercially reproduced pornography relating to the sexual exploitation of children and commercial adult pornography dealing with sadomasochism, bestiality, and coprophilia behavior.” II FBI Manual of Investigative Operations and Guidelines § 145-2(2) (August 12, 1986). 3 Plaintiffs contend that none of the materials they distribute would violate any of these guidelines.

Plaintiffs also utilize internal review procedures to guarantee that the materials they distribute do not violate the law. For instance, plaintiffs do not distribute materials depicting rape or sexual violence. 4 In addition, plaintiffs employ an external review procedure, by which two independent experts, selected from a group of psychiatrists, clinical psychologists and/or trained and credentialed sex therapists, review all materials to be distributed. If either expert believes that any material fails any one of the three prongs of the Miller test for obscenity, 5 that material is immediately rejected and never offered for sale by plaintiffs. 6 Plaintiffs sell their materials only on request, only to adults, and only for use in the privacy of the customer’s home. 7

B. Defendants’ Actions

Plaintiffs allege that defendants’ initial efforts to put plaintiffs out of business began in 1986. On May 29 of that year, federal prosecutors in Utah and the Eastern District of North Carolina, in coordination with state prosecutors in North Carolina, organized and conducted a search of plaintiffs’ premises. 8 According to Marguerite Kohus, an employee of PHE, the *18 day long search was extremely intrusive. Federal and state agents from Utah and North Carolina conducted the search jointly, posting armed guards at the doors, closing the switchboard, and ordering all employees into a single area, refusing to allow them to leave until each had submitted to an interview, which they were told they were not free to refuse. The agents refused to allow employees to speak with their attorneys, including a company attorney who had come to the premises for the purpose of advising employees of their legal rights. The agents searched the personal purses and briefcases of the employees without warrant and over their objection, and took their photographs with threats of public embarrassment if they did not consent. As a result of this episode, 11 employees, constituting roughly eight percent of PHE’s workforce, terminated their employment. 9 Simultaneously, federal agents served plaintiffs’ employees with 118 subpoenas. 10 The United States District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina subsequently characterized these subpoenas as government “harassment” of plaintiffs and their employees. 11

Beginning after the search of plaintiffs’ premises and continuing through 1986, the defendants made clear that PHE, Harvey, and other individuals associated with PHE would be prosecuted in multiple jurisdictions across the United States unless plaintiffs agreed to substantially curtail what they contend are their constitutionally protected expressive activities nationwide, and to go out of business entirely in Utah. 12 In one meeting, Brent Ward, then U.S. Attorney for the District of Utah, and defendant Lambert stated that the only way for plaintiffs to avoid multidistrict federal prosecution would be if plaintiffs agreed to cease distribution of all sexually oriented expressive materials nationwide, except for films that had received an “R” or less restrictive rating from the Motion Picture Association of America. 13 Among the other materials included in the prohibition were unrated films, magazines, or books containing “mere nudity” as well as Playboy and Penthouse magazines and the book The Joy of Sex. 14

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Bluebook (online)
743 F. Supp. 15, 1990 WL 106992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phe-inc-v-united-states-department-of-justice-dcd-1990.