Judge Blocks Tennessee Sex Trafficking Law

Siding with Backpage.com, a federal judge in Tennessee banned state law enforcement authorities from enforcing a new law aimed at curbing the sex-trafficking of teens.
The law, which was similar to a measure enacted in Washington State, made it a felony to sell ads that appear to offer a "commercial sex act" with a minor. Last year, the classifieds site Backpage.com sued to block the law, arguing that it conflicted with a federal statute about the Internet, and that it was so broad that it could block legitimate speech.
U.S. District Court Senior Judge John Nixon granted Backpage's request on Thursday. "The state may not use a butcher knife on a problem that requires a scalpel to fix. Nor may a state enforce a law that flatly conflicts with federal law," he wrote in a 57-page ruling.
The ruling is in line with a decision last year by U.S. District Court Judge Ricardo Martinez in Seattle, who blocked a comparable Washington state law.
Nixon ruled that the Tennessee measure is trumped by the federal Communications Decency Act, which provides that interactive services providers are not responsible when users create or post illegal content.
The judge also found the law unconstitutional because it applies to ads based on how they "appear," regardless of whether the ads actually feature people who are underage.
"The state law is likely substantially broader than required for its regulatory purpose to protect the health and safety of minors trafficked in Tennessee," he wrote. "The statute would impose liability even if an advertisement did not involve actual minors or sexual acts with minors. ... The law could impose liability for advertisements, notices, announcements and online postings that do not involve minors at all, or that appear suggestive without actually involving a paid-for sexual act."
Recent Online Media Daily Articles
-
Yahoo Search Experiments With New Look May 23, 6:30 p.m.
Yahoo Search has been experimenting with colors, features and layouts, as the company tries to determine ... -
Path Seeks Dismissal Of Wireless-Spam Case May 23, 5:07 p.m.
Mobile social network Path is asking a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit alleging that the ... -
Amazon Appstore Goes Global May 23, 4:59 p.m.
Amazon may have been late to the app store game, but that hasn’t stopped it from ... -
Data Is Springboard For Product Development May 23, 4:44 p.m.
iProspect named Ben Wood to global president Thursday; he's tasked with growing the company's network and ... -
Vice, Twitter Partner For Mobile Show May 23, 2:14 p.m.
Simultaneously expanding its video and social strategy, Vice on Thursday unveiled #dailyvice -- a daily show ... -
MediaVest Database Charts Brand Experience, Social Media Impact May 23, 12:11 p.m.
After a year-long research effort, Publicis Groupe’s MediaVest has created a massive database designed to help ... -
Discovery Launches TestTube.com, Ups Digital Video Involvement May 23, 11:27 a.m.
Discovery Communications is looking to get into digital video platforms in a big way -- launching ... -
Network Advertising Initiative Proposes New Mobile Privacy Rules May 22, 9:03 p.m.
Moving forward with its plan to issue mobile privacy rules, the self-regulatory group Network Advertising Initiative ... -
Entertainment, Travel Bet On Mobile Banners May 22, 4:16 p.m.
Banner ads have long been the whipping boy of online advertising, and the same is now ... -
Marketers Should Tailor Specific Pitches To Tablet, Smartphone May 22, 2:51 p.m.
Don’t lump tablets in with mobile. That’s the takeaway of a new Forrester study looking at ...


1 comment on "Judge Blocks Tennessee Sex Trafficking Law".
Leave a Comment