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AMERICAN BOOKSELLERS FOUNDATION FOR FREE EXPRESSION |
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For further information, contact: Chris
Finan, American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression, (212) 587-4025 For Immediate Release
Booksellers Join Challenge To Michigan Censorship Law
DETROIT, Michigan, Jan. 7, 2004A coalition of booksellers, publishers and
magazine distributors filed a federal lawsuit here yesterday challenging the
constitutionality of a new Michigan law that makes it a crime to allow a minor to examine
a book that is harmful to minors. This
law would drastically alter the character of bookstores, Chris Finan, president of
the American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression (ABFFE), said. Today, bookstores are open, welcoming places
that invite their customers to browse and explore the wide range of works that are
available to them. This law threatens the
freedom to browse freely.
It is already illegal to sell harmful material to minors in Michigan
and most other states. But the new Michigan
law goes beyond the law of any other state by requiring booksellers to prevent any
possibility that a minor can examine harmful works, including novels and works
of non-fiction that do not contain pictures. Violations
are punishable by up to two years in jail and a fine of up to $10,000. The measure was signed into law by Governor
Jennifer Granholm on November 5 and went into effect on January 1. Plaintiffs yesterday filed a motion in federal
district court seeking a preliminary injunction to block enforcement of the law.
Finan said the new law is unconstitutional because it would make it difficult for
adults and older minors to obtain books, magazines and music that they have a First
Amendment right to purchase. If booksellers can be sent to jail for two years
because a kid picks up the wrong book, they will have no choice but to protect themselves
by rigidly restricting what their customers can see, he said. Booksellers will either have to segregate
harmful material in an adults only section or to wrap it in
plastic. In addition, they will be
forced to impose these restrictions on books and other materials that are
harmful to the youngest minors, including romance novels, works relating to
sexual education and health, photography and art books, and classic literary texts.
In addition to ABFFE, the booksellers voice in the fight against censorship,
the plaintiffs are the Great Lakes Booksellers Association, six bookstores, the
Association of American Publishers, the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, the Freedom to Read
Foundation, and the International Periodical Distributors Association.
The plaintiffs are represented by Herschel P. Fink of Honigman Miller Schwartz
& Cohn LLP, in Detroit, and Michael A. Bamberger of Sonnenschein Nath and Rosenthal in
New York.
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