Pornography labeling bill passes Utah Legislature but could face First Amendment legal challenges

Utah Capitol, Salt Lake City, Utah, date unspecified| Photo by AndreyKrav/iStock/Getty Images Plus, St. George News

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Pornography in Utah would have to come with a warning label under a bill passed by the Legislature that has sparked concerns about a potential lawsuit.

The proposal cleared its final hurdle Monday in the Legislature and now goes to Republican Gov. Gary Herbert for consideration. HB 243, Warning Labels Amendments, would mandate a one-sentence warning label about potential harm to minors for online or print material deemed legally obscene. Producers who don’t include the warning could face a $2,500 penalty per violation.

The measure is aimed at helping people worried about the widespread availability of porn online and how easily children can find it, Republican sponsor Rep. Brady Brammer has said.

The label would have to be on any obscene porn entering the state and say “exposing minors to obscene material may damage or negatively impact minors.” Producers could avoid the penalty by showing that they have included the label most of the time.

Forcing producers to attach the warning label would be a violation of First Amendment protections against compelled speech and the measure would likely be challenged in court, said Mike Stabile with the Free Speech Coalition, an adult-entertainment trade group.

He pointed to a similar bill from 2005 that was the subject of a years-long court battle before a judge ordered it significantly narrowed.

Brammer has said his proposal is different because it wouldn’t regulate the content itself. It’s also aimed at the relatively small slice of pornography that’s considered legally obscene and therefore has fewer constitutional protections.

Legal obscenity must be determined by a judge, so the law could still unfairly make a wide range of producers vulnerable to a flood of lawsuits, Stabile argued. That could be doubly true because the law allows for private citizens as well as the state to file complaints, a mechanism based on California laws regulating toxic substances.

“Sure, the lawsuit might eventually be thrown out, but you’ll have to spend much more to defend yourself,” Stabile said in an email. “The law may be narrowed, but the chilling effect on speech is huge — people not speaking or creating out of fear of prosecution.”

Utah lawmakers have a history of addressing concerns about pornography. In addition to the 2005 law, the state declared it a public health crisis in 2016. More than a dozen states have advanced similar resolutions since then.

Southern Utah representatives Walt Brooks, Lowry Snow, Brad Last, Rex Shipp, Phil Lyman and Merrill Nelson voted yea to pass the amendment, and Rep. Travis Seegmiller was absent or not voting.

Although Seegmiller wasn’t present for the March 10 vote, he has expressed strong support for the bill and voted in favor of the bill when it originally passed in the House Feb. 18.

Written by LINDSAY WHITEHURST, Associated Press.

Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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