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News
Alabama
Ban On Sex Toys Is Struck Down As Unconstitutional
October
14, 2000
An
Alabama law banning the sale of sex toys was struck down by a
federal judge as a violation of the right to privacy.
The
statute deemed selling or distributing "any obscene material or
any device designed or marketed as useful primarily for the stimulation
of human genital organs" to be a misdemeanor punishable by up
to one year in jail and a $10,000 fine.
He
said the state did not prove it has a legitimate interest in banning
the sale of sex devices for use in private, consensual relationships
between adults.
The
1998 law - part of a package of legislation strengthening the
state's obscenity law - banned the sale of devices designed for
"the stimulation of human genital organs." It was challenged by
six women who either sell sex aids or said they need them for
sexual gratification.
US
District Judge Lynwood Smith Jr said: "The fundamental right of
privacy, long recognized by the Supreme Court as inherent among
our constitutional protections, incorporates a right to sexual
privacy."
Also
See Article- The War On
Sex Toys
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