United States v. Extreme Associates, Inc.

352 F. Supp. 2d 578, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2739, 2005 WL 121749
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 20, 2005
DocketCrim. 03-0203
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 352 F. Supp. 2d 578 (United States v. Extreme Associates, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Extreme Associates, Inc., 352 F. Supp. 2d 578, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2739, 2005 WL 121749 (W.D. Pa. 2005).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

LANCASTER, District Judge.

This is a criminal prosecution charging nine counts of violating the federal obscenity statutes and one count of conspiracy based on that conduct. 18 U.S.C. §§ 371, 1461, 1462 and 1465. The United States has charged defendants Extreme Associates, Inc., Robert Zicari, and Janet Roma *580 no with distribution of obscene material via the mails and the Internet. Defendants are in the business of producing and selling sexually explicit films. ■ Defendants have filed a motion to dismiss the indictment arguing that the federal obscenity laws infringe on the rights of liberty and privacy guaranteed by the due process clause of the United States Constitution. [Doc. Nos. 14 and 15].

Because we find that the obscenity statutes are unconstitutional as applied to these defendants, defendants’ motion to dismiss is granted.

I.FACTUAL BACKGROUND

A. Joint Stipulation of Facts

The parties submitted the following “Joint Stipulation of Fact” prior to oral argument. Additional facts not in dispute will be discussed in this memorandum in context.

Facts Regarding the Internet Generally:

1. The Internet is a decentralized, global medium of communication that links people, institutions, corporations, and governments around the world. It is a giant computer network that interconnects innumerable smaller groups of linked computer networks and individual computers. Although precise estimates are difficult to formulate due to its constant and rapid growth, the Internet is currently believed to connect more than 159 countries and close to 322 million users worldwide.

2. Because the Internet merely links together numerous individual computers and computer networks, no single entity or group of entities controls all of the material made available on the Internet or otherwise limits the ability of others to access such materials. The range of digital information available to Internet users — which includes- text, images, sound and video — is individually created, maintained, controlled, and located on millions of separate individual computers around the world. Each content provider of a web site is responsible for its content.

3. The Internet presents extremely low entry barriers to anyone who wishes to provide or distribute information or gain access to it. The Internet provides an affordable means for communicating with, accessing, and posting content to a worldwide audience.

4. In the United States, individuals have several easy means of gaining access to computer communications systems in general and to the Internet in particular. Many educational institutions, businesses, local communities, and libraries maintain an easily accessible computer network which is linked directly to the Internet. Many of these entities restrict access to sexually explicit material.

5. Internet service providers (“ISPs”) allow subscribers to access the Internet through the subscriber’s personal computer by using a telephone modem, broadband, including a cable modem or digital subscriber line (DSL), and dedicated access, such as a T1 line. Most ISPs charge a monthly fee in the range of $15.00 to $50.00, but some provide their users with free or very low-cost Internet access. Every ISP has a Terms of Service Agreement with those customers that desire to host content, in the form of a web site, on the ISP’s network. The Terms of Service Agreement may prohibit the individual or entity (customer) hosting a web site from posting certain material such as child pornography or sexually explicit content, on the ISP’s network.

Subscribers who do not host a web site, but utilize the ISP to access the Internet, also enter into a Terms of Service Agreement which may limit certain activities.

6. The World Wide Web is the most popular technology to access, information on the Internet. Anyone with access to *581 the Internet and proper software can create webpages or home pages which may contain many different types of digital information — text, images, sound, and video. The web comprises millions of separate websites that display content provided by particular persons or organizations. Any Internet user anywhere in the world with the proper software can view webpages posted by others, read text, view images and video, and listen to sounds posted at these web sites. Internet users wishing to make content available to others must create the content and publish it on the Internet through an ISP.

7. The web serves in part as a global, online repository of knowledge, containing information from a diverse array of sources, which is easily accessible to Internet users around the world. Though information on the web is contained on individual computers, each of these computers is connected to the Internet through a web protocol, the hyper text transport protocol, that allows the information on the web to be accessible to web users. The content of some web sites is available to all users while other content may not be accessible without a method of access, such as a login code, chosen by the web site host.

8. To gain access to the information available on the web, a person generally uses a web “browser” — software such as Netscape Navigator or Internet Explorer — to display, print, and download documents that are formatted in the standard web formatting language. Each page on a web site has an address that allows users to find and retrieve it.

9. Most web documents also contain “links.” These are short sections of text or images that refer and link to another document. Typically the linked text is blue or underlined when displayed; and when selected by the user on the user’s computer screen, the referenced document is automatically displayed, wherever in the world it actually is stored. Links, for example, are used to lead from overview documents to more detailed documents on the same website, from tables of contents to particular pages, and from text to cross-references, footnotes, and other forms of information.

10. Links may also take the user from the original website to another website on a different computer connected to the Internet, a computer that may be located in a different area of the country, or even the world.

Facts Regarding This Case During All Times Relevant to the Charges in this Case:

11. Extreme Associates, Inc. operated a website known as www.extremeassoci-ates.com. The website was divided into two sections — one section which could be accessed by the general public without cost and one section for members only. The “members only” section required a payment of $89.95 for a three month period, renewable automatically.

12.

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352 F. Supp. 2d 578, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2739, 2005 WL 121749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-extreme-associates-inc-pawd-2005.