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Sex and Relationships

Judges, Hide Those Porn Collections

By Dr. Marty Klein, Sexual Intelligence. Posted June 18, 2008.


An interest in porn now disqualifies someone for a federal judgeship? That's obscene.
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A judge owns a car and drives it legally. Should she be allowed to preside over a trial that will determine if a car was used illegally?

A judge collects guns, even displays his collection on his website. Should he be allowed to preside over a trial that will decide if a gun was used illegally?

A judge belongs to a religion which believes that masturbation is a sin, using pornography is a form of infidelity, and sexual purity is the battleground between God and Satan. Should he be allowed to preside over a trial that will establish if something's obscene?

Answers: Of course, of course, and of course -- if we believe in the integrity of the judicial process.

So why can't a judge who owns a porn collection preside over an obscenity trial?

Answer: Because when it comes to "obscenity," the judicial system isn't fair.

Obscenity is the only crime you can't know in advance that you're committing. Only a jury can decide if you've created or sold something obscene, and juries across America keep disagreeing with each other.

More to the point, local, state, and federal prosecutors across America keep demanding that juries decide this. Now that's obscene.

You may have heard that Judge Alex Kozinski was asked to run a trial about four DVDs the feds claim are obscene. Apparently the judge has a website that contains essays, legal writings, music files, personal photos -- and oh yes, sexually explicit material, including images of masturbation, women's crotches in tight clothes, naked women on all fours painted to look like cows, and a half-dressed man cavorting with a sexually aroused farm animal.

The judge is a highly respected scholar appointed to the Federal bench by President Reagan over 20 years ago. But when the L.A. Times reported on His Honor's website, the blogosphere lit up: an adult man (who happened to be a judge) who looked at porn! It was a real dog-bites-man story, but so-called morality groups saw their opening and pounced.

Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council proved that he needs a basic lesson in American civics when he brayed, "Kozinski not only defended the rights of people to sell revolting -- and potentially illegal -- smut, Kozinski is ill-equipped to try an obscenity case when he clearly does not understand the definition of obscene. We call for his recusal in this case and a reexamination of his fitness" as a chief judge."

We expect extremist "decency" groups to undermine American democracy on a weekly basis, and here the FRC didn't disappoint: "potentially illegal"? "The definition of obscene"?

But we expect better from Kozinski's own senator. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, intoned "If this [website content] is true, this is unacceptable behavior for a federal court judge."

So this is the latest pinnacle of America's porn hysteria: being interested in the (legal) stuff now disqualifies someone for a federal judgeship. An interest in porn affects a man's mind so deeply -- or reflects a pathology so deep -- that he can't be depended upon to think about legal principles or fairness.

So are divorced judges now unwelcome in family court? Are judges who drink now unacceptable in DUI cases? What about judges who are 20-year sober members of AA? Must judges in bankruptcy cases be rich or poor, stingy or generous?

Demanding Kozinski's recusal from the Ira Isaacs obscenity trial -- indeed, questioning his fitness to be a judge altogether -- is a fundamental failure of faith in American democracy.

While most people tried on criminal charges are assumed innocent unless the government can prove their guilt, people arrested for the creation or distribution of "obscenity" have to prove that their material has some merit -- artistic, scientific, or political. Kozinski's real sin is believing that the government has to justify censorship, rather than believing that the burden of defeating censorship falls on arrested Americans.

Americans would howl if the government tried to criminalize pictures or stories about anything other than sex. As it is, the public -- uncomfortable with their own sexuality, easily frightened about others' -- is complicit in destroying their own rights. Instead of damning Kozinski, we should be questioning why we care so much about his sexual fantasies, and so little about the terror our neighbors feel about ours.

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See more stories tagged with: porn, law, sexuality, judge alex kozinski, obscenity

Dr. Marty Klein is a Licensed Marriage & Family Therapist, Certified Sex Therapist, and sociologist with a special interest in public policy and sexuality. He has written 6 books and over 100 articles about sexuality.

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Well said.
Posted by: mr. joshua on Jun 18, 2008 12:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Er...written. Why indeed do we demand that people (whether public officials or private citizens) be held to account for legal, harmless, and (formerly) private behavior? I want to know about this judge's record of public service, not his exploits in the (presumed) privacy of his own home. Can we get the MSM to report on his stellar judicial accomplishments? Or are they too busy trying to get a peek under his robe to see if his fly is open?

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The whole picture
Posted by: Crazy H on Jun 18, 2008 1:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I do agree that most of what we call obscene shouldn't be illegal - but this story is just a little bit biased.

The "obscene" DVDs in question dealt in part with bestiality. So, therefore, a judge who delights in "naked women on all fours painted to look like cows, and a half-dressed man cavorting with a sexually aroused farm animal" probably isn't the best choice.

Under today's US laws, bestiality is not legal, to the point where you can't shoot a porno flick with any animal on screen whatsoever, regardless of whether he's participating in the action. Personally, I think that's bull(dog?)shit, but there you go. A half-dressed man with an aroused farm animal is borderline at best; and a judge interested in the borderline isn't the best one to judge where the line should be drawn.

IMHO - "No harm, no foul (fowl?)" If you don't want to see it, don't look. But posting that kind of stuff whilst presiding over a related trial shows a distinct lack of common sense.

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Humor-Not Porn
Posted by: MJKT on Jun 18, 2008 1:56 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts." Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynahan.

I am Marcy Tiffany, Judge Kozinski's wife.

Please see my memo posted on Patterico.com for a discussion of the facts.

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» RE: Humor-Not Porn Posted by: Crazy H
» RE: Humor-Not Porn Posted by: mr. joshua
personally...
Posted by: undrgrndgirl on Jun 18, 2008 9:40 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
i find the blood, gore, horror and violence of films like saw and hostel pornographic...

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Here it is again...
Posted by: WyrdSister on Jun 19, 2008 9:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Someone else who thinks they are "entitled" to control others. Give me a EFFing break. I am having the same response as i did over on the contraception thread. It just FLOORS me that there are so many who think they are the Morality Police and have ANY say what-so-EVER about what other people do.

We do NOT, i repeat, do not live in a Theocracy here people, and if you do not find this stuff interesting, then dont look, dont read it, but most of all dont try to control others regarding it...its just not your place.

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Deliberately Ignorant?
Posted by: hysperia on Jun 23, 2008 12:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But why would you be? So you must be just ignorant. Ever heard of, justice must not only be done, it must be seen to be done? And by a person who is not obviously biased. How can someone who has really really creepy porn, not Playboy, plastered on the internet, be seen to be an unbiased arbiter of whether or not someone else's porn is obscene? It may be a stupid law, but that's another matter. For now, it IS the law which judges are appointed to enforce in appropriate circumstances. The judge ought to have known better and, since he didn't, he clearly has bad judgement, not a great quality for a judge. Your examples are disingenuous. For instance, with respect to a traffic issue, a judge with a car sure can preside over traffic violations. But perhaps a judge who makes public his views that traffic violations are really really fun ought to recuse him/herself.

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