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Extreme porn

Ian Reuben

Published 10 May 2008

Civil liberties campaigners remain concerned about the impact of new rules aimed at regulated more extreme forms of pornography introduced in the wake of a horrific murder

Tough new rules aimed at banning so-called extreme pornography have been branded as “Orwellian” by Backlash - an umbrella group of civil liberties and human rights organisations.

The new amendment to the Criminal Justice Bill came about as a result of a long-standing campaign by Liz Longhurst, the mother of Brighton school teacher Jane who was murdered by Graham Coutts in April 2003 in Pulborough, West Sussex.

Musician Coutts, sentenced to life in 2004, and expected to serve 26 years, was obsessed with strangulation - and, it came out in evidence, was a regular user of violent necrophilia and strangulation internet porn sites. Jane Longhurst had been strangled with a pair of tights; her body kept in storage and remained undiscovered for weeks.

In defence of the legislation – that received Royal Ascent on May 8th - Justice Minister Lord Hunt Lord said: “The problem that we’ve got is that the current obscene publications act doesn’t really impact on this really extreme pornographic material because the vast majority of it originates abroad and there is very little we can do, so the key thing this does is make possession an offence”.

But Backlash's Deborah Hyde said, “We already have the tightest regulation of any Western country on pornography…but now they can come into your home whenever they like and they can cast doubt about your character amongst your community and with your employers and we have no rights to recourse."

One of the more controversial aspects of this legislation is the difficulty that comes in defining the boundaries of extremity with regard to pornographic images. Last week's amendment attempts to delineate these boundaries by means of a ‘test’.

The criteria however are still the object of some debate due to the fact it will rely in its final analysis on the subjective ‘opinion’ of police.

The justice minister explained the criteria for assessing ‘extreme porn’. "First of all the material has to be pornographic, then it has to contain an extreme image which portrays an act that threatens a persons life or an act that results in serious injury to a person’s anus, breasts or genitals, an act which involves sexual interference with a human corpse and a person performing an act of intercourse or oral sex with an animal. It also has to meet the test of being grossly offensive, disgusting or otherwise of obscene character."

These criteria are intended to single out a particular kind of pornography. Judging something as ‘disgusting’ or of ‘obscene character’ would not normally be regarded as a test that is sufficiently precise or specific. It resembles a more general or ‘blanket’ definition that could be applied to a very wide variety of pornographic images.

But Hyde questions the motivation behind the amendment. “It becomes clear then that this is not actually about sex or what drives people to violence, this isn’t people being tough on crime or tough on the causes of crime, this is to give the police more power.”

There have been other concerns from many libertarian groups about possible infringement of the European Commission on Human Rights, in particular article ten of the ECHR that states, “everyone has the right to freedom of expression. This right shall include freedom to hold opinions and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers”.

Hyde contends the amendment does contravene articles within the ECHR directive pointing out Backlash sought legal counsel from Rapinder Singh QC who says the new rules contravene the European Convention on Human Rights. She also cites the Joint Committee on Human Rights for being "very, very critical” of the measure. "There have been many lawyers Baroness Kennedy among them pointing out that this is bad law.”

By contrast Lord Hunt who has been at the forefront of this legislation said: “I had to sign a declaration when we introduced the Bill in the House of Lords in January that it is compatible with the European Convention on Human Rights, obviously that means our lawyers have to look at legislation very carefully before we introduce it and the very strong advice I’ve had is that it is entirely compatible with the ECHR so I don’t think there is a problem there.”

He added there was “no intention for restriction on political or personal expression or public interest matters or artistic expression”.

However the likelihood that people will be affected to some degree by this law is the key issue. It is a concern that consensual sexual freedom, in whatever form it takes will be negatively influenced by this legislation.

More specifically, the ownership of images portraying extreme sexual acts in any context will become a criminal offence.


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9 comments from readers

SRJohn
10 May 2008 at 11:33

How typical of NEW LABOUR to NEED to get into our bedrooms with the excuse of one dastardly murder to justify it. I stubbed my toe on my dresser this morning can we please make a law to ban dressers, then we can lock up everyone who dares to make, sell or own one! This is pathetic beyond words and surely will be removed from the statute when Gordon is sent packing. John Haimes, Glos

SRJohn
10 May 2008 at 11:38

I also forgot to mention that it is really appreciated that New Labour bring all these sinister, mind controlling laws into being with loud hurrahs and fanfares. I wonder how many members of this nation will now be 'criminals' and not know it!! J.Haimes, Glos.

Grahamm
10 May 2008 at 12:45

In the Lords, Lady Butler-Sloss (who tried Jamie Bulger's killers) called this law "unworkable", Lord McIntosh called it "unenforceable", Lord Monson asked where we would find the prison places, The Earl of Onslow said the law should not be used to "send a message", Lord Faulkener said it was not "necessary, workable or desirable"...

Almost every Lord who spoke opposed this law, yet the Government decided to force it through simply, it seems, in a desperate grab for some positive headlines.

Also, to quote Baroness Miller when she referred to comments by Lord Hunt (who was speaking for the Government): "Perhaps the most chilling point in the Minister's summing up [...] was that when it came to policing this it was for dealing 'with individuals' who are 'causing concern'. Well, that is pretty difficult. How are they causing concern if they have committed no crime yet? They might be causing concern in all sorts of ways; they might be individuals whom the police do not much like, for a number of reasons, but then they get raided. Again, that really makes me feel worried."

This is Thought Crime, pure and simple.

SteveMD
10 May 2008 at 12:57

Yet another over-broad law is brought in and Labour says "trust us". I am a life-long Labour voter and I applaud many of the good things they have done in recent years. But I cannot bring myself to trust a Government that can persuade itself that it has the right to lock people up on the grounds of bad taste alone.

And taste is the only basis for this law, because they have no credible evidence that looking at images you know are fictional will cause harm of any kind.

I am appalled at the continual lying over this irrational law. The lied about the consultation response which was overwhelmingly against. They continue to lie by saying that this law is aimed at the worst of the worst, but then include images from BBFC certified films.

This lying came to a head with the creation of the so-called Rapid evidence assessment. Where the Home office commissioned well established anti-pornography campaigners to compile a report called "the harm of extreme pornography". This alone tells us that they set out to mislead. They used this document to deliberately mislead parliament and force through this abomination.

They insist on including fictional material and even if you can prove that no one was seriously harmed, no crime was committed and everyone happily consented.

Now we have a situation in this country where you can be locked up for up to three years, for looking, in private, at images of consenting adults taking part in perfectly legal activities.

To be clear, you can do these things, with absolutely no risk of committing a crime of any kind, but if you look at images of people doing them you are a criminal.

This is insane.

Guy Masterleigh
10 May 2008 at 13:53

One key aspect of this law is that under it the same image could be legal for one person to own it; but not another.

So the defendant is being tried on whether they intended to use it for arousal, or look at it for research.

In other words they will be tried for what they are thinking, not what they do, a classic "Thought Crime".

toakreon
12 May 2008 at 23:32

There are so many things wrong with this law.

* If you own an image, YOUR guilt could depend on whether that image is "pornographic" - and that, in turn, is defined as whether a THIRD PARTY (the photographer) is believed by a FORTH to FIFTEENTH PARTY (the jury) to have intended the image to be sexually arousing at the time it was taken.

Hang on. YOUR guilt depends on a JURY's perception of the intentions of someone ELSE who you may never have met, probably never will meet and might even be dead?

And this is JUSTICE?

* To be illegal an image has to be a "realistic portrayal" of one of four things. Let's take the case of being a realistic portrayal of threat to life.

Some images are obviously realistic portrayals of a threat to life. Someone tied to a heavy weight being pushed into a swimming pool, for example.

Some are obviously not, such as a person being "threatened" with an ostrich feather.

Between these two extremes, however, is a vast raft of images where you simply cannot know whether they are a realistic portrayal of a threat to life or not.

Is a knife held to the throat such a portrayal? There is just such an image in Madonna's book "Sex", and legal advice is divided on the subject, with some legal professionals stating they believe such an image is illegal and others not.

Is a hand gripping the throat such a portrayal? We don't know.

Tight bondage around the chest? We don't know.

Images where there is an "external" threat from which the "victim" could not save themselves - such as a person tied onto a railway track? We don't know.

You can take the wording in this legislation in one hand, and an image in the other, and look backwards and forwards between the two - and NOT KNOW whether you are a criminal who will go to jail for up to three years for owning that image, or not.

How can this be right?

* There is no requirement for the prosecution to show that any harm was caused in the making of the image, or will be caused by ownership of the image, or even that the activities shown in the image are illegal. There is no defense that the image is simulated fiction, or that the people in it are completely consensual adults.

You have the farcical situation where consenting adults are engaging in completely legal activities, yet if someone presses a camera button while thinking "this'll turn people on" anyone who possesses the resulting image can be sent to jail for up to three years.

This is nothing sort of criminally stupid.

* This legislation could almost have been WRITTEN for the purpose of abuse. Computer hard discs will be "trawled" as a part of ANY type of criminal investigation in order to give police a "second bite" at securing a conviction even if their primary investigation fails.

It will become the "second chance to 'get' the bastard" wherever it's needed and the opportunity presents itself. Another way of massaging the detection rates. Another way of keeping people in jail while the police take however long they want to investigate - who needs 42 days detention without charge now, when you just charge and hold in custody under the CJIA section 62 while investigating the real crime? For as long as you want.

IN CONCLUSION this piece of legislation is wrong in so many ways that it is nothing more than a disgrace it was ever presented to parliament. It is claimed to be legislation to control "extreme pornography", and yet the definitions within it are so vague we have no IDEA what it will actually criminalize - and the chances are that a lot will become illegal that actually isn't extreme at all.

It is based on false concepts.

When there was no evidence of a link between the viewing of pornographic images and violent, sexual crime the government INVENTED such a link and invented a study to "prove" it.

The government claimed widespread support during the consultation process when the majority of responders actually opposed the concept.

The government stated IN WRITING that it was not their intention to make illegal in possession any images which were not ALREADY ILLEGAL in production and distribution under the Obscene Publications Act - and that stated intention bears no relationship to what the Government actually DID.

This law is just, plain WRONG.

catherine brown
13 May 2008 at 02:19

The "study" has been massively criticized. In fact over FORTY academics in the field wrote to the parliamentary committee looking at the law. They protested that the research was heavily flawed, biased, not peer reviewed and selective in only incorporating studies that agreed with the proposal.

This is the most blatant case of a government lying, being found out and then commissioning corrupt researchers to bail them out..

It would be comic if the consequences weren't so tragic

thandeka
13 May 2008 at 22:36

So with this law, thousands of people owning a copy of Madonna's 'SEX' book will be criminals? Maybe they should burn these books, as they are obviously corrupting people!

This is a slippery slope. What concerns me the most is the scapegoating of a medium. Rather than giving the individual responsibility for his/her choice, they are displacing the blame onto something that is much easier to target. It's diverting attention from whats really going on and ostracising a lot of inocent people in the process.

nawawimohamad
14 May 2008 at 11:11

Pornography has got nothing to do with murder! Murder has existed even before there was pornography. Murder is simply murder!

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