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For further information, contact:
Chris Finan, American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression,
chris@abffe.com, (917)
509-0340.
ABFFE Charges Madison, WI, Ordinance
Threatens Reader Privacy
NEW YORK, NY, June 13, 2007 – The American Booksellers Foundation for
Free Expression (ABFFE), the bookseller’s voice in the fight against
censorship, today urged the repeal of a new Madison, WI, ordinance that
requires bookstores that purchase used textbooks to give police the
names of the sellers and the titles purchased. “This ordinance forces
bookstores to turn over confidential customer information without a
court order, undermining the privacy that protects our right to read
whatever we want,” ABFFE President Chris Finan said. “The police have no
business monitoring the purchase or sale of books in a bookstore.”
The Madison City Council passed the ordinance on May 1 to deter the
theft of textbooks at the University of Wisconsin. It requires
booksellers to obtain a license from the city and to request
identification from any person from whom they wish to purchase a used
textbook. In addition, booksellers will be required to maintain detailed
records of their used textbook purchases with the title, author and name
of the patron from whom the book was purchased and make these records
available to the police upon demand during the six months following the
date of purchase. The ordinance goes into effect on July 1.
In a letter to Madison City Attorney Michael P. May, Finan said that the
ordinance conflicts with recent court decisions that have declared that
the confidentiality of bookstore records is protected by the First
Amendment. In 1998, ABFFE joined in the successful challenge to Kenneth
Starr’s effort to obtain Monica Lewinksy’s book purchase records from
two Washington, DC, bookstores. In 2000, it supported the Tattered Cover
Book Store’s fight against a search warrant for customer information in
a drug case. The Colorado Supreme Court quashed the warrant in a
unanimous decision.
In his letter, Finan urged the city attorney to recommend that the city
council repeal the textbook ordinance as both a violation of the First
Amendment and a contradiction of its own strong support for reader
privacy. In 2002, it passed a resolution that condemned the USA Patriot
Act for invading a citizen’s right of privacy in their bookstore and
library records. To read the letter, visit:
http://www.abffe.com/abffeletters-madtbooks.htm.
The textbook ordinance was passed over the strong opposition of Sandra
Torkildson, the owner of A Room of One’s Own Feminist Bookstore, who
testified and wrote letters opposing the bill.
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