Santa Fe New Mexican

Lawmaker seeks porn warning label

- By Lindsay Whitehurst

SALT LAKE CITY — A Utah lawmaker has unveiled a proposal to require pornograph­y to carry warning labels or be subject to a possible $2,500 penalty, though an adult-entertainm­ent industry group warned the idea would violate the First Amendment.

The label about the potential harm to minors would have to appear on both print and digital material that appears in Utah if the bill proposed by Republican Rep. Brady Brammer passes the Legislatur­e.

If the label doesn’t appear, the producer could be sued for $2,500 per violation, either by the Utah Attorney General’s Office or a private group. The enforcemen­t process would be similar to warning labels about toxic substances that are required in California, Brammer said Tuesday.

“We continue to have people complain about the prevalence of obscene materials and the impact on their children,” Brammer said.

The bill doesn’t contain a specific definition of pornograph­y. Instead, that would be decided in court if a lawsuit is filed under the law, Brammer said.

The law wouldn’t regulate the content itself, so doesn’t violate free-speech rights, he said.

“It’s not censorship because it doesn’t stop anything from being said or printed or published,” he said.

Mike Stabile, a spokesman for the Free Speech Coalition, an adult-industry trade group, disagreed. Such a warning label would violate the First Amendment because it would require producers to communicat­e a specific message, he argued.

“You can’t force someone to say something,” he said, pointing to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling overturnin­g a California law that would have required anti-abortion pregnancy crisis centers to post signs saying they are not medical facilities.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States