SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Bush-The Mastermind behind 9/11? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Don Earl who wrote (1821)8/8/2003 2:15:52 PM
From: Rock_nj  Respond to of 20039
 
The "War on Drugs" is moving to the back burner because pols know they can't afford it in this economy and also know that it is failing in it's present law and order incarnation. The public attitudes are changing towards drugs. People generally favor medical uses of MJ and want hard drug addicts to receive treatment, not jail (if they're non-violent).



To: Don Earl who wrote (1821)8/8/2003 4:46:32 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 20039
 
Now Ashcroft and the thought police are going after the porn industry once again.....
First he COVERS LADY JUSTICE WITH A CURTAIN....and now this comes back once again.....


August 8, 2003

E-mail story


Print

U.S. Indicts Porn Sellers, Vowing
Extensive Attack
Charges against a Valley video company and two executives signal that fighting
obscenity has become a high priority for Atty. Gen. Ashcroft.

By P.J. Huffstutter, Times Staff Writer

The Justice Department on Thursday charged a North
Hollywood wholesaler of adult films with violating
federal obscenity laws, launching the first of what it
promised would be a wave of criminal cases against
purveyors of pornography.

The 10-count federal grand jury indictment against
Extreme Associates and its executives, Robert Zicari
and Janet Romano of Northridge, raised alarm among
adult entertainment companies in the San Fernando
Valley, which is considered the capital of the nation's
multibillion-dollar pornography industry.

Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft promised upon taking office
that he would crack down on the distributors of adult
entertainment material such as movies, magazines and
Web sites, much as his Reagan administration
predecessor Edwin Meese III did in the 1980s.

With the government's antitrust trial against Microsoft
Corp. completed and the war on terrorism well
underway, Thursday's charges suggest pornography has moved closer to the
center of Ashcroft's radar.

"Today's indictment marks an important step in the Department of Justice's
strategy for attacking the proliferation of adult obscenity," Ashcroft said.

The department, he said, will "continue to focus our efforts on targeted obscenity
prosecutions that will deter others from producing and distributing obscene
material."

Executives at Extreme Associates did not return calls Thursday, but one industry
official said adult entertainment businesses were preparing for a fight.

"This is just another form of harassment by the government," said William Lyon,
executive director of the Free Speech Coalition, a Canoga Park-based trade
group for the adult entertainment industry. The government will "try to get
convictions on the edges of this industry, and we will fight them all the way."

Thursday's indictment came after investigators with the U.S. Postal Inspection
Service set up a sting operation in Pennsylvania. From September 2002 through
July 2003, the indictment says, the defendants sold allegedly obscene material
over the Internet and distributed videotapes and DVDs across state lines through
the postal system, a violation of federal law.

Extreme Associates produces movies such as "Extreme Teen #24" and "Forced
Entry — Directors Cut," which depict the fictional rapes and murders of several
women, according to court documents.

The sting came in conjunction with an obscenity investigation conducted by the
Los Angeles Police Department as well as complaints sent to the Justice
Department in western Pennsylvania, said U.S. Atty. Mary Beth Buchanan.

"If a company is wanting to take advantage of the Internet for marketing and
distribution purposes, it's their responsibility to make sure they're not violating
local laws," Buchanan said. "If their conduct is not legal, it's up to them to take a
firm stance not to operate there."

Extreme Associates, a relatively small player in triple X-rated entertainment, has
garnered both financial success and public attention in the last several years for
its line of hyper-aggressive adult films.

The privately held company employs 15 people and has annual sales of $20
million to $49.9 million, according to the U.S. Business Directory.

Extreme's offices were searched in April under a federal search warrant. The
unsealed warrant shows that federal and postal investigators seized copies of five
different movies as well as sales records, distribution invoices and an array of
other business documents.

On the company's Web site, which Thursday featured an American flag waving
in the breeze, Zicari posted a statement that said no one had been arrested and
that the company remained in business. He vowed to fight the government and
wrote, "I definitely will not sit here and cry a bunch of tears."

He went on to name the five allegedly obscene films and, in an act of defiance,
announced that the company was selling what he called "The Federal Five" tapes
at a discount on the firm's Web site.

Zicari and Romano are scheduled to be arraigned in Pittsburgh on Aug. 27.

If convicted, Zicari, 29, also known as Rob Black, and Romano, 26, also
known as Lizzie Borden, each could face as much as 50 years in prison and a
fine of $2.5 million. The company could pay a fine of as much as $5 million.

The case is a flashback to the war on pornography that the government waged in
the 1980s, which shut down dozens of production companies and sent
executives to prison for distributing raunchy fare.

Meese's Commission on Pornography linked sexually violent materials with
"antisocial acts of sexual violence" and attempted to draw ties between extreme
sex entertainment and child molestation.

The commission's 2,000-page report set off an unprecedented flood of anti-porn
sentiment and legislation that landed several high-profile porn executives in prison
— including Russell Hampshire, head of the video manufacturing company VCA
Labs Inc. In 1988, he served nine months for shipping obscene videotapes
across state lines to federal agents in Alabama.

Hampshire wasn't alone. Vivid Video Inc. in Van Nuys and founders Steven
Hirsch and David "Dewi" James were indicted by a federal grand jury in
Mississippi in 1991 on obscenity counts for shipping four hard-core tapes to the
state. The company pleaded guilty and paid a $500,000 fine. The founders
served no prison time.

The industry has been bracing for a renewed crackdown since Ashcroft became
attorney general in 2001. Film producers took note when the department spent
$8,000 on curtains to cover two partly nude classical statues in its Washington
offices.

Though there has been a steady string of state and federal cases tackling
obscenity issues in the last few years, many of the suits have focused on online
child pornography.

"Every time we get a Republican administration, these kinds of cases seem to
perk up," said lawyer Elliot Abelson, who defended the industry in obscenity
cases from the late 1970s to the mid-'80s.

The adult entertainment industry has grown dramatically since then. Annual
rentals and sales of adult videos and DVDs top $4 billion, and the industry
churns out about 11,000 titles each year — more than 20 times as many as
Hollywood, according to Adult Video News, a trade magazine.

Adult film stars regularly lobby legislators in Sacramento on issues ranging from
government regulation to taxation. Industry-funded research touts the estimated
$31 million in sales tax revenue California receives each year from the rental of
130 million adult videos and from Internet sales.

Social mores also have changed, allowing the industry to be perceived as more
mainstream. Academics plumb porn for its cultural and business significance.
Cable television channel Showtime airs a reality show called "Family Business"
about the day-to-day life of pornography producer Adam Glasser.

Jerry Bruckheimer, the Hollywood producer behind "Pirates of the Caribbean:
The Curse of the Black Pearl" and the "Bad Boys" movies, is working on a
prime-time series this fall for Fox Television called "Skin," in which the son of a
Los Angeles district attorney falls for the daughter of a porn giant.

This week legendary pornographer Larry Flynt, the publisher of Hustler
magazine, and adult film actress Mary Carey began gathering signatures to run in
California's gubernatorial race.

Because of the industry's increasing public presence, obscenity convictions are
becoming more scarce, said Frederick S. Lane III, an attorney and author of
"Obscene Profits: The Entrepreneurs of Pornography in the Cyber Age."

CC



To: Don Earl who wrote (1821)8/8/2003 6:17:03 PM
From: Raymond Duray  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 20039
 
Hi Don,

Re: Something else I've noticed is the "war on drugs" doesn't seem to be even a talking point for most politicians these days

Here in Oregon, the taxpayers are waking up to the fact that their overzealous embrace of the prison-industrial complex in the 1990's is getting awfully expensive to maintain.

It is going to be interesting to see the clash of values created by John Ashcroft's ongoing campaign to punish lenient judges vis a vis the taxpayer who is getting punished financially to pay for all that state subsidized housing for folks who are to serve the long, mandatory (and expensive) sentences.

***********
Re: I'd like to see the press start digging into the chemical and biological claims as well.

Don't hold your breath. Come September, when Sen. Levin's Permanent Investigations Committee will meet and expose drastic malfeasance and daring lies from the Bush Cabal, the news media will be swooning over Ahhh-nold, the Viennese brat-worst. Levin's committee hearings will become a titillation for the C-SPAN junkies and the inside-the-Beltway crowd, but the Pox News and their ilk will make certain to deploy their weapons of mass distraction on the dimmed-down populace.