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Federal Court OKs Ban on Sale of Sex Toys
By JAY REEVES, AP
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (July 29)
- A federal appeals court Wednesday upheld a 1998 Alabama law banning the
sale of sex toys in the state, ruling the Constitution doesn't include a
right to sexual privacy.
In a 2-1 decision overturning a lower court, a three-judge panel of the 11th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the state has a right to police the sale of
devices that can be sexually stimulating.
The American Civil Liberties Union, which represented merchants and users
who sued to overturn the law, asked the appeals court to rule that the
Constitution included a right to sexual privacy that the ban on sex toy
sales would violate. The court declined, indicating such a decision could
lead down other paths.
"If the people of Alabama in time decide that a prohibition on sex
toys is misguided, or ineffective, or just plain silly, they can repeal
the law and be finished with the matter," the court said.
"On the other hand, if we today craft a new fundamental right by
which to invalidate the law, we would be bound to give that right full
force and effect in all future cases including, for example, those
involving adult incest, prostitution, obscenity, and the like."
Attorney General Troy King said the court "has done its duty"
in upholding the law.
Sherri Williams, an adult novelty retailer who filed the lawsuit with
seven other women and two men, called the decision "depressing."
"I'm just very disappointed that courts feel Alabamians don't
have the right to purchase adult toys. It's just ludicrous,"
said Williams, who lives in Florida and owns Pleasures stores in
Huntsville and Decatur. "I intend to pursue this."
U.S. District Judge Lynwood Smith Jr. of Huntsville has twice ruled
against the state law, deciding in 2002 that the sex toy ban violated
the constitutional right to privacy. The state appealed both times
and won.
The state law bans only the sale of sex toys, not their possession,
the court said, and it doesn't regulate other items including condoms
or virility drugs. "The Alabama statute proscribes a relatively
narrow bandwidth of activity," U.S. Circuit Judge Stanley F.
Birch Jr. wrote.
Circuit Judge Rosemary Barkett disagreed, saying the decision was
based on the "erroneous foundation" that adults don't
have a right to consensual sexual intimacy and that private acts
can be made a crime in the name of promoting "public morality."
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