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Showing posts with label Criminal Justice and Immigration Act. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Criminal Justice and Immigration Act. Show all posts

Tuesday, 4 September 2012

Extreme Porn Prosecution and Conviction Stats

I've just been reading the latest newsletter from the Consenting Adult Action Network (CAAN).  You can contact CAAN and request being added to the newsletter circulation list here.  Interestingly, they reveal details of the the number of people the CPS has charged (and reaching first hearing) under the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 'extreme porn' provisions and the number of convictions (according to the Ministry of Justice).

It's worth remembering the following:

S63(7)(a): "life threatening" images
S63(7)(b): "serious injury to breasts, anus or genitals"
S63(7)(c): necrophilia
S63(7)(d): bestiality


                    2008/9 
       2009/10 
          2010/11 
            2011/12 
S63(7)(a): 
38 
40 
S63(7)(b): 
52 
132 
102 
S63(7)(c): 
S63(7)(d): 
213 
995 
1171 
Total 
270 
1165 
1319 


The updated MoJ data on convictions: - 

                      2010 
      2011 
S63(7)(a): 
S63(7)(b): 
11 
S63(7)(c): 
S63(7)(d): 
48 
67 
Total 
57 
81 


Apologies for the less than perfect formatting!  Anyway, the figures are rather mind-blowing.  Quite what happened in 2010/11 regarding bestiality porn is a bit of a mystery but 2011/12 suggests it wasn't a one off.  Far from being a law that is about protecting women, as was originally envisaged, this has clearly become the doggy porn legislation (and horses, pigs, impressively sized eels and so on).  We might snicker about animal porn, but for rather a lot of people, it's leading to life-changing legal actions, and also involving significant CPS and justice resources.

In fact, such is the extent of prosecutions, you do wonder why the legal profession isn't lobbying for the law of bestiality to be a required element of the law degree.

Justified or not, this is an interesting example of a rather new law being deployed to deal with a rather different problem to what the main 'thrust' of the law originally was intended to be.  One to keep an eye on.  


Friday, 31 August 2012

Extreme Pornography: Legal Theory, Institutional Reality

Nick Cowen, of the campaign group Backlash, has written a really important piece over at the Freedom in a Puritan Age webzine. He rightly challenges some of the comments by McGlynn and Rackley on the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act.  Whilst I recognise both legal scholars, they have been wrong on this issue.  He also explores an assertion by Paul Johnson (a scholar I nearly always agree with and published a chapter in his latest book early this year) around sending out moral signals - a fair comment by Johnson who draws upon a European lexicon in his argument - but one which Cowen notes the judge in R v Walsh ruled in appropriate (although the defence did put forward the Johnson argument).

The full piece can be read here.

Thursday, 9 August 2012

Reflections and future legal directions after #porntrial

Many superb commentators have already entered the fray of commenting upon the decision in R v Walsh.  Heresy Corner,  Myles Jackman, Alex Dymock, and David Allen Green should all be read at once, if you've not already done so.

I also need to declare my own interest, in that I had a very tiny role in the case as an expert witness, alongside my wonderful Sunderland colleague, Clarissa Smith.  The CPS must be wondering what they put in the water at Sunderland Uni.

Brit readers should also check out the lovely and eloquent Simon Walsh speaking last night on the BBC's Newsnight programme.  It's a very balanced interview and strikes a friendly, sometimes light, but never flippant tone.  A tribute to the presenter Eddie Mair (who is also gay).

I do not propose to re-state the facts, as they have been stated elsewhere, but whilst those descriptions have constructed the images as representing fisting, urethral sounds and one astonishing accusation of child pornography, I've been struck by the lack of mention of scat, which also featured in the fisting images.

Shit-play or sexual play incorporating excrement also characterised the fisting images and whilst the focus has been on injury, I always felt that the issue that might affect a jury more was that of 'disgust' - a term utilised in the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008, and part of the tests a jury must satisfy.  Representing - quite literally - the 'dirty', the 'unclean', this was for me the issue that a jury might find the most difficult to comprehend, and the most likely to cause discomfort.

Oh ye of little faith.  The jury demonstrated - in a unanimous verdict - that they did not find such an image 'grossly offensive, disgusting or otherwise of an obscene character' (within the meaning of S63(6)(b)) and so whilst the focus has been on fisting, I think the acceptance of scat images is just as  - if not more - significant.

If we position R v Walsh alongside the case of R v Peacock, concerning a prosecution (again, for fisting images) under the Obscene Publications Act 1959, we might conclude that fisting has now been rejected under both frameworks.  It would however, be a mistake to assume that the CJIA has been neutered.

The defence expert witnesses (myself and Dr Smith) both argued that the images of urethral sounds and fisting were not pornographic.  This is the first element that needs to be satisfied under the CJIA 'extreme' porn law.

Section 63(3) states:  An image is “pornographic” if it is of such a nature that it must reasonably be assumed to have been produced solely or principally for the purpose of sexual arousal.

The images concerned in this case were of an amateur nature, described by the defendant of mementos of private parties.  As such, they were documenting encounters which were of themselves, entirely legal.  They were not solely or principally produced for the purpose of sexual arousal.  Consequently, they failed this first test.  The CPS in contrast argued that it was obvious "as a pikestaff" that they were pornographic images.  The languages of the Act means that it is far from clear (and arguably non-intuitive given our broader cultural understanding of pornography).  Moreover, the same argument could not have been advanced if these were images/video produced by a porn studio - that would clearly be 'pornographic' but might still fall outside of the other tests aspects.  In Peacock, the fisting porn was commercial so we are arguably still clearer about where fisting stands in relation to the OPA than under the CJIA.

On we move to the second issue of whether the image is 'extreme namely grossly offensive, disgusting, or otherwise of an obscene character'.  Here we have a judgement for a jury and a legislative section which is appallingly drafted.  'Extreme' does not - I would suggest - equate to 'disgusting'.  I am 'disgusted' when I see sick in the street, the residue of someone having consumed a dodgy kebab and/or too much booze the night before.  I would not however regard an image of the said vomit as 'extreme'.

The law was designed to criminalise a particular type of image.  It had been the successful lobbying by radical feminists on the last government and a tragic murder which led to the current bad law.

Back in 2003, Graham Coutts was convicted of murdering Jane Longhurst. Wikipedia picks up the story... 'At his murder trial, Coutts confessed to a long-standing neck fetish and obsession with strangulation. His testimony, confirmed by other witnesses, stated that he had engaged in breath control play with several consenting partners on many occasions without incident over several years. He had spoken with his GP about his fixation and sought the help of a psychiatrist three years before the killing. Eventually, he started to access violent pornography on the Internet (especially simulated strangulation, rape and necrophilia). He had downloaded a collection of strangulation images the day before Jane's death. This, according to the prosecution, had caused his dangerous sexual behaviour and murderous intent. Critics of the prosecution's argument doubt this explanation, since the behaviour preceded the exposure to such pornography by about five years. No evidence of premeditation was presented to the jury. Mr. Coutts testified that he wrapped a pair of nylon tights around Ms. Longhurst's neck as part of a consensual sexual practice known as erotic asphyxia, which he had undertaken on numerous previous occasions with several different partners. The prosecution claimed that he had invited her to his flat under false pretences, then attacked her.'

Coutts was found to have 69 violent pornographic images on his computer and the argument was that it was this violent pornography which had fuelled his desire, and thus led to the killing of Jane Longhurst.  The logic therefore of a new 'extreme' porn law was to prevent other people being murdered by someone who becomes stimulated into such desires via pornography.

However flawed that rationale - and it seems pretty flawed to me - it is a similar rationale to child porn laws, but has had a far wider application.  You might - quite reasonably - assume that Parliament did not intend to criminalise men consensually fisting one another when they passed this law, but Walsh  - and the failure to demonstrate any regrets abut bringing the case by the CPS - highlights that the CPS do not accept such a narrow focus of the legislation.  The very fears that those who campaigned against the legislation expressed, have been realised, and will I fear, be subsequently further demonstrated.

The third element for consideration is whether 'the image portrays in an explicit and realisitc way any of the extreme acts sex out in section 63(7).  These consist of:

(a) an act which threatens a person's life,
(b) an act which results, or is likely to result, in serious injury to a person's anus, breasts or genitals,
(c) an act which involves sexual interference with a human corpse, or
(d) a person performing an act of intercourse or oral sex with an animal (whether dead or alive),and a reasonable person looking at the image would think that any such person or animal was real.

In R v Walsh, (b) was arguably the relevant provision and this is for a jury to decide within the ordinary meaning of the term.  Consequently, opposing medical evidence was marshaled by both sides in Walsh, although the CPS expert seemed to suggest that penetrating the anus with anything beyond six inches was akin to taking one's life in one's own hands.   A line which the less-well endowed men of a gay village near you might be trying out soon:  "you don't want that hung like a donkey stud over there, my 3 inches of moderate pleasure are within the safety parameters".  On second thoughts, perhaps not.

It is of course easy to joke about the case.  So much about it was utterly absurd.  Yet, at the heart of the case was a man whose life was turned upside down.  Throughout the case, Simon displayed remarkable fortitude.  He was of course represented by a terrific team, and Myles Jackman in particular should be congratulated for his work as the solicitor in the case.  Whilst we comment and reflect, Simon must pick up the pieces of his life, and try and glue them back together.

Where now?

Alex Dymock has suggested this evening, that 'It becomes difficult to imagine, after Simon Walsh's landmark acquittal on all counts, under what circumstances charges relating to possession of extreme pornography may be brought to the crown court again, but it seems the CPS has a rather prurient interest in bringing other people's private sex lives to light and persecuting them for it.'

I'm not so sure.  As another law colleague, Gary McLachlan noted in a comment on this blog earlier this evening, it's possible that the CPS might bring a case in which HIV transmission is depicted so as to constitute extreme pornography.

It's certainly easy to envisage a scenario under the CJIA - and one which would attract few defenders.  Two consenting male adults.  Both are HIV negative.  Both desire to become 'pozed up'.  Both enjoy bareback sex.  They organise a bareback party, at which only HIV positive men are invited.  They record the party in photos and video in order to share it on their blog for other men who are aroused at the prospect of becoming HIV positive.  One of the 'couple' becomes HIV positive from the encounters at the party.  The video is retained on the hard-disk of the negative partner and the pair split up.  The negative partner retains his sexual desire to become positive and regularly watches the video - alongside other similar videos that friends share on websites and through file-sharing sites - while he masturbates.  The said individual comes to the attention of the police following a child pornography prosecution.  Our negative man was a Skype contact for a man charged for being in possession of child pornography.  The police raid the property of our negative man.  They find no child pornography but do find a series of videos of videos and photographs from the party described above and footage from other parties.  They also discover that the defendant has been hosting a website for the images.  He is charged under the extreme pornography provisions.

Does it sound that far-fetched?  Are you certain of what would happen?

I do however think that Dymock is write in that R v Walsh does reduce the scope for cases under the CJIA.  That could however force the CPS to look more at the OPA.  Following R v Peacock, a number of people - including myself - expected the CPS to revise their guidelines on prosecution.  They didn't.

Let's therefore revisit those guidelines - which are available here.  Here's the key section:

'It is impossible to define all types of activity which may be suitable for prosecution. The following is not an exhaustive list but indicates the categories of material most commonly prosecuted:

  • sexual act with an animal 
  • realistic portrayals of rape 
  • sadomasochistic material which goes beyond trifling and transient infliction of injury 
  • torture with instruments 
  • bondage (especially where gags are used with no apparent means of withdrawing consent) 
  • dismemberment or graphic mutilation 
  • activities involving perversion or degradation (such as drinking urine, urination or vomiting on to the body, or excretion or use of excreta) 
  • fisting 

Unless any of the factors listed above are present within the given case, the Crown Prosecution Service will not normally advise proceedings in respect of material portraying the following: actual consensual sexual intercourse (vaginal or anal) oral sex masturbation mild bondage simulated intercourse or buggery fetishes which do not encourage physical abuse. Previously buggery involving humans (whether consensual or not) was regarded as suitable for prosecution under section 2 of the Obscene Publications Act 1959. Now, buggery per se between consenting adults is not regarded as suitable for prosecution under section 2. This includes consensual anal penetration in a situation involving simultaneous double penetration (anal and vaginal) between two men and a woman. However, a depiction of buggery would be regarded as obscene for the purposes of section 2 where one or more of the aggravating features set out above are present. Therefore, depictions of non-consensual buggery will still be regarded as section 2 material.'

So, we know fisting images would not now proceed to prosecution, but the guidelines need amending.  We do however have explicit reference in the guidelines to scat play - a feature of the images in R v Walsh.  Although that case was brought under the CJIA, it will be interesting to see if it influences the CPS in their interpretation  -and any revision to - their guidelines in relation to the OPA.  The CPS barrister did after all argue in Walsh that the images were 'degrading' and would be more so if they involved a woman.  If a scat photograph - this time comprising of a woman - formed part of an investigation, would the CPS now feel it inappropriate to bring a case (on the basis that they are unlikely to secure a conviction)?  I'm still not sure.

Walsh is a significant, and welcome, decision.   It is a victory, but the battle goes on.

R v Walsh: 'Extreme' Pornography on Trial #porntrial

I promised last night to post a full post of my take on the historic R v Walsh decision, and that will follow later today.  I did however want to explain for any non-Twitter followers why I seemed oddly silent during the whole case.  A few people got in touch asking me what my views were and I'm afraid I was less than helpful.  As you've probably now realised, I was an expert witness in the case which prevented me from commenting on what was going on.  Sorry for not being more helpful but I hope you now understand.

There's an excellent summary and analysis of the case from Alex Dymock which makes a really useful initial briefing on things.

You can read a little more in this piece.

This piece examines R v Walsh alongside R v Peacock and asks if the law is 'homophobic'. There's a nice mention of some of my work published earlier this year (those REF chants in my sleep must be paying off).


Wednesday, 4 January 2012

Obscenity Trial Continues

The #ObscenityTrial involving the issue of fisting (among others) goes into day three tomorrow (read my previous post on the trial here).  If you're not already doing so, be sure to follow on twitter the excellent activist and scholar, @lexingtondymock. I'd also suggest following the journalist @NichiHodgson. Both have been providing fascinating coverage through their live tweets from the courtroom.  Many of the exchanges today would be comical, were they not so serious.  I'll blog a comment on the trial once it's over - as I'm sure will many others.

Wednesday, 22 September 2010

Art, Law and Mapplethorpe

A Mapplethorpe Exhibition opens later this week at Towner in Eastborne. I'm not sure if it's the first Mapplethorpe exhibition in England and Wales since the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act and in any case it looks as if the exhibition is decidedly safe on that front.

The exhibition looks as if it will include some of my favourite Mapplethorpe pieces (I am a bit of a fan) but not some of the ones that have me in utter delight (and censors having palpitations). It left me wondering how a broader collection of his work would be dealt with by a gallery today. What would their legal advice say? This continues to remain a rapidly developing and muddled area of law. You can see the pictures that feature in the exhibition here and read a review of the show here.

Mapplethorpe has long been controversial. Carl Stychin noted in his work Law's Desire that US legislators found his work troubling in the 80s forcing the Corcoran Gallery in Washington DC to cancel an exhibition and contributed to controversy about arts funding in the US. More recently, the writer Daryl Champion has chronicled how Peter Knight, then Vice Chancellor of the University of Central England found himself at the centre of another Mapplethorpe scandal in 1998 when Police seized a Mapplethorpe book from the library that featured a collection of his black and white photos. Knight took on the Police and fought for the right of his university (and all universities) to have such a book int heir collection.

He won but that was before the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act was passed and although that Act should not stop the possession of such a book by a library it inevitably created confusion for collection holders.

Friday, 24 April 2009

Skin Two: Fetish Yearbook 2009

A few weeks back I was generously sent a copy of the 60th issue of 'Skin Two' (thanks guys!). I've been holding off blogging about it until I had time to write a proper post on the text. It takes a different format to past issues which were in a magazine format. I've never seen one of those but this copy, a hardback book priced at £25 or $50 is a quality production. The website claims it is a coffee book and it's a very accurate description of the text (provided your visitors are not overly sensitive). Many so called coffee table books are quality productions but can sometimes feel a bit of a rip off. I have to say, this feels worth it. It has terrific and wide ranging content. The bag of the book includes advertisements for a number of latex, rubber and fetish stores but it's perhaps a tribute to the scene that these are great compositions too. There is erotic fiction and some amazing art. A couple of pictures by James Stiles are included which are in the Mapplethorpe tradition. Mapplethorpe himself features pretty extensively in an earlier section of the book entitled 'From Mapplethorpe to Mosley' written by Daryl Champion. It's a well written short overview. it's followed by what I would regard as something of a coup and worthy of much wider dissemination - an interview with Peter Knight who as Vice Chancellor of the University of Central England, Birmingham (now Birmingham City University) defended the right of his library to hold Mapplethorpe, a large black and white collection of the artist's photography. It is a work of brilliance and was rightly defended from Government and Police censors who were seeking to destroy the book under Obscene Publications legislation. This area of law is then brought right up to date by John Ozimek who considers the new extreme porn law. Alex Henderson writes a thoughtful piece exploring whether the English law could have an impact across in the USA and considers the 1969 Supreme Court decision in Stanley v Georgia. You're probably getting the idea, this is not a wank mag. it's a serious but entertaining piece of work. It's also beautiful.

It has some terrific photography by Will Santillo who designed the cover shown on the right, and some photos that I loved by Mark Varley who explores rope bondage. He travelled to the homes of 18 women and 'introduced them to his style of rope bondage'. This takes the form of women tied to kitchen tables. There are wonderful pictures that are clever and engaging.I have to confess I have fallen in love with some work by Silent-View, a photography project led by a German photographer and model. The artist produced the gas mask/cup and tea photograph which I've posted here. The only picture I could find is in black and white but the original is in colour and it does make a difference. I adore the intersection of gender, sexuality and domesticity portrayed in the image which somehow reminds me of the quite different American Gothic by Grant Wood.

There are more pictures and comment sections but the book begins with photos from various balls and parities. The pair at the top of this picture (which I rather like for reasons that I consider obvious) are from the San Francisco Fetish Ball.

The whole thing has been put together and published by Tim Woodward and it is a brilliant production. It can be bought on the Skin Two website which has a host of links, materials and an online store. It can be viewed here.

Thursday, 15 January 2009

CAAN Call to Action

The Consenting Adult Action Network (CAAN) has released the following call to action:

Join us to mark the death of another freedom.

* Sunday 25th January 2009, Parliament Square, Westminster, London, 2-5pm*

Beware the kinky porn ban!

On the eve of the commencement of the kinky porn ban, CAAN are back in London for another awareness raising action about laws which criminalise adults because of their sexuality. A law we don't think the Government is publicising widely enough, which all adults who possess or access pornography need to know about.

This law is based on lack of evidence and lies!

Provisions 63-68 of the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008 come into effect on 26th January 2009. Despite lack of evidence, the government claims criminalising of the possession of what it calls 'extreme pornography' will reduce sex crime. In fact, what evidence exists provides grounds for thinking this measure will have exactly the opposite effect to that intended - making sex crime MORE prevalent.

This law creates harmless criminals!

This law now gives the police the power to invade anyone's home and interfere with their privacy. Convictions for possessing extreme porn will carry up to 3 years jail sentence and inclusion on the Sex Offender Register. Just for possessing an image.

This law gives murderers and abusers excuses!

Abuse is illegal, holding images of crimes is illegal and material which promotes abuse is illegal, and quite rightly so – so where's the need for a new law? This law is aimed at consensually made adult fantasy images and based on the bad excuses of a murderer. "The pictures made me do it".

What do we want? Autonomy! When do we want it? Now!

Please join us. Feel free to bring placards and banners and dress as you please, as long as it's not obscene or involving nudity. Yes, you can bring masks, chains and cuffs. Do not bring: alcohol, non prescription drugs or weapons.

If you can attend the action, or are able to assist with things behind the scenes like transporting equipment, people, or donating resources during the time surrounding the action, or are interested in sharing a lift (there’s several carshares already, please get in touch with us ASAP at info@caan.org.uk

Wednesday, 7 January 2009

Extreme Pornography Guidance

Following on from my last post, the Home Office released guidance on the new extreme pornography offences last month. That guidance can be read here. It highlights just how absurd the legislation is. Paragraph 5 which examines how pornographic material will be defined is a particularly good example. This legislation is appallingly conceived, badly drafted and a disgrace in the twenty first century.

Monday, 17 November 2008

"I like kinky sex games. So what?"

The words of Ben Westwood the son of fashion guru Vivienne and an artist/campaigner in his own right. The Guardian carries a brilliant interview with him today following his recent protest outside Parliament along with other human rights campaigners and members of the Consenting Adult Action Network (which I also recently joined as a supporter along with lots of other UK academics). The photograph on the right is taken from the first CAAN newsletter which also covered the protest story. The protest is a result of the new provisions contained in the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008 which seeks to ban 'violent pornography'. The law marks a significant development in the state seeking to ban non-harmful images because it disapproves of those images. It is a re-assertion of a moral orthodoxy that is more akin to the views of the late Lord Devlin.

All supporters of CAAN sign up to the following statement: "We believe in the right of consenting adults to make their own sexual choices, in respect of what they do, see and enjoy alone or with other consenting adults, unhindered and unfettered by government."

"We believe that it is not the business of government to intrude into the sex lives of consenting adults."

If you agree, you can sign up here.

Tuesday, 11 November 2008

'Normal' Behaviour and Press Freedom

Paul Dacre (pictured right) delivered a keynote address to the Society of Editors on Sunday evening. The Daily Mail editor's remarks were reported on most of the morning media and The Guardian included a summary of his comments yesterday. Dacre criticised the Human Rights Act and attempts to introduce a right to privacy by the back door, particularly in relation to the recent Max Mosley case. Today the story continues with a series of lawyers responding to the comments and making some very sensible points.

I was struck by one section in Dacre's original speech. At one point he said (speaking of the Mosley case): '[Justice Eady] found for Max Mosley because he had not engaged in a "sick Nazi orgy" as the News of the World claimed, though for the life of me that seems an almost surreally pedantic logic as some of the participants were dressed in military-style uniform'.

Hang on Mr Dacre, would you suggest that all of those old soldiers at the Remembrance ceremonies on Sunday looked like Nazis? They were wearing military or military-style uniforms after all. To make a distinction is apparently 'pedantic' for Mr Dacre. Not satisfied with making himself sound rather silly he continues:

'Now most people would consider such activities to be perverted, depraved, the very abrogation of civilised behaviour of which the law is supposed to be the safeguard. Not Eady. To him such behaviour was merely "unconventional". The legal enforcement of sexual morality as Dacre argues is, for me, backwards and inappropriate but it sadly has foundation in law. The Brown or 'Spanner' case and the more recent HIV case law echoes the remarks of Lord Templeman who talked of the 'civilised' society in much the same way as Dacre, arguing that certain acts were not appropriate. The recent moves of government to criminalise certain forms of pornography and imagery in the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act is a further sign of this legal paternalism that is attacking our so called free society.
However much I might find the views of Dacre offensive I do find he raises a valid point about what the public would consider 'perverted' and 'depraved' and those acts that might be considered 'unconventional' and what acts the law should regulate.
 
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