Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
4.2.12
WC: 191694
criteria for bringing such a challenge, particularly if one were seeking an injunction against a state
prosecution, were quite narrow. Nevertheless, we decided to try it. We asked the three judges to
enjoin the Boston prosecutor, a man named Garrett Byrne, from prosecuting the theater owner.
The three judges we drew were not a promising crew.
When I learned that Judge Aldrich would preside over the panel selected to hear the I Am
Curious Yellow case, I was concerned that he would remember the incident we had when I turned
down his invitation to speak at his restricted club, and hold it against me. I didn’t know the other
two judges, both of whom were Italian American and Catholic. One of them, Judge Julian,
had anglicanized his original Italian name, but his strict Catholic upbringing and world views
became evident throughout the hearing. The third judge, Raymond Pettine, was from Providence,
Rhode Island and he surprised me with his apparent liberalism. I argued the case for several
hours over three separate days.
I began by presenting my broad challenge to the power of the state to regulate the content of films
shown in adult-only theaters:
If the First Amendment means anything, it means that a state has no business telling a man,
sitting alone in his own house, what books he may read or what films he may watch. Our
constitutional heritage rebels at the thought of giving government the power to control
mens’ minds.
I argued that the ruling in the Stanley case was analogous to what was occurring in our case:
There is no distinction in law, in logic, in common sense between the individual [watching
a film at home or] deciding to go to a movie theater [and] pay his $2.50 or $3.
I could see skepticism in the faces of the judges—they did not seem to see any connection
between the Stanley case and this one—as I continued with my argument:
I submit that it’s indistinguishable whether a person makes a private, individual decision to
go to a movie theater and there to satisfy his intellectual and emotional needs in the
company exclusively of voluntary people, people who have sought out and decided to see
this film (with the possible exception of a few policemen and officials who see this film
because of business reasons and who may indeed be offended by what they see, but with
respect, it’s part of their job.)
I acknowledged that “the Supreme Court ruled only on [home] possession in the Stanley case,”
but I argued that there was no real difference between possession and exhibition:
Surely Stanley could not have been prosecuted under Justice Marshall’s decision if he
were caught putting the film in the 8mm projector and showing the film to himself or his
friends in the privacy of his basement.
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