Is Indiana’s revenge porn law constitutional?

revenge porn constitutional
Stained glass window at Pokagon State Park in Angola, Indiana, near where the underlying events in this case took place.

 

In 2019, Indiana joined a number of other states and enacted a statute that makes it a crime for a person to distribute an “intimate image” when he or she knows or reasonably should know that an individual depicted in the image does not consent to the distribution. In March 2020, defendant sent a video of himself receiving oral sex to his ex-girlfriend via Snapchat. After being charged under the statute, defendant moved to dismiss, arguing in part that the statute violates both the Indiana and U.S. constitutions. The trial court agreed and dismissed the case. But the state appealed to the Indiana Supreme Court.

What part of the Indiana constitution applied?

The court’s analysis under the Indiana constitution is particularly interesting. Indiana’s constitutional protection in this area reads quite a bit differently than the language of the First Amendment.

Article 1, Section 9 of the Indiana constitution reads as follows:

No law shall be passed, restraining the free interchange of thought and opinion, or restricting the right to speak, write, or print, freely, on any subject whatever: but for the abuse of that right, every person shall be responsible.

The court first had to evaluate whether videos – and in particular the video at issue – were covered by the applicable Indiana constitutional provision. “Our encounters with Article 1, Section 9 have always involved words, thus invoking the ‘right to speak’ clause.” The court held that the video content was protected under the “free interchange” clause of the state’s constitution. “We understand the free interchange clause to encompass the communication of any thought or opinion, on any topic, through ‘every conceivable mode of expression.’” And the court quickly ascertained that being prosecuted for the distribution of the video was a “direct and substantial burden” on defendant’s right to self-expression.

Abuse of rights?

But defendant’s expressive activity in this case – though within his right to free interchange as expressed in the constitution – was an abuse of that right. Looking through the lens of the natural rights philosophy that informed the drafting of the Indiana constitution, the court cited to previous authority (Whittington v. State, 669 N.E.2d 1363 (Ind. 1996)) that explained how “individuals possess ‘inalienable’ freedom to do as they will, but they have collectively delegated to government a quantum of that freedom in order to advance everyone’s ‘peace, safety, and well-being.'” Thus, the court observed that the purpose of state power is “to foster an atmosphere in which individuals can fully enjoy that measure of freedom they have not delegated to government.”

Citing to State v. Gerhardt, 145 Ind. 439 (Ind. 1896), the court evaluated how “[t]he State may exercise its police power to promote the health, safety, comfort, morals, and welfare of the public.” And citing to other authority, the court noted that “courts defer to legislative decisions about when to exercise the police power and typically require only that they be rational.” So the question became whether – approached from the standpoint of rationality – the statute’s restriction on the right to self-expression was appropriate to promote the health, safety, comfort, morals and welfare of the public.

Rationality favored public protection

“Under our rationality inquiry, we have no trouble concluding the impingement created by the statute is vastly outweighed by the public health, welfare, and safety served.” In reaching this conclusion, the court examined, among other things, the tremendous harms of revenge porn – including its connection to domestic violence and psychological injury. Accordingly, the court found the statute did not violate the Indiana constitution.

The court also found that the statute did not violate the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. It held that the statute is content-based and therefore subject to strict scrutiny. Even under this standard, the court found that it served a compelling government interest, and was narrowly tailored to achieve that compelling interest.

State v. Katz, 2022 WL 152487 (Ind., January 18, 2022)

See also:

Affirmative defense asserting that Copyright Act is unconstituational survives motion to strike

Plaintiff sued defendant search engine for copyright infringement alleging that defendant wrongfully reposted a picture plaintiff had taken. Defendant’s answer included a number of affirmative defenses. Plaintiff moved to strike the affirmative defenses. The court struck some of them but allowed at least a couple of them to survive.

Unclean hands – Defendant apparently perceived some trollish behavior on the part of the plaintiff. Defendant alleged that, in light of plaintiff’s practice of taking photographs of no actual value, for which there is no market, and seeding them on the internet for the purpose of attempting to extort revenue through litigation, that the claims for equitable relief should be barred by unclean hands. Plaintiff objected, claiming that it was scandalous to characterize plaintiff’s enforcement efforts this way. The court found, though, that the defense was adequately pled and not scandalous. “While the … defense is unfavorable to Plaintiff, it does not ‘cast a cruelly derogatory light on’ Plaintiff as necessary for the Court to conclude that the defense is scandalous.”

Unconstitutionality of portions of Copyright Act – Defendant also asserted that 17 U.S.C. §§ 102 and 410, statues dealing with copyright protections, are unconstitutional as applied to pictures based on technological advancements in photography. Plaintiff responded by pointing out that the Supreme Court since 1884 has found copyright protection for photographs to be constitutional, and argued that defendant presented no cognizable legal argument to suggest that Congress exceeded its constitutional powers by enacting the Copyright Act. Perhaps surprisingly, the court rejected plaintiff’s argument. It noted that the defense was not insufficient, redundant, immaterial, impertinent, or scandalous, but that defendant was arguing that the law, or at least the application of the law, should be changed, and defendant presented grounds for its argument.

Miller v. 4Internet, LLC, 2019 WL 1937567 (D.Nev. April 30, 2019)

Court rejects constitutional challenges to obscenity statutes in prosecution of adult website owner

U.S. v. Little, No. 07-170, 2008 WL 151875 (M.D. Fla. January 16, 2008)

The operator of the Max Hardcore website was indicted under 18 U.S.C. §§1462 and 1465 for distributing allegedly obscene video files which agents downloaded in Tampa, Florida. Max Hardcore moved to dismiss the indictment, raising a number of constitutional challenges to the prosecution. The court rejected each of the defendant’s arguments and denied the motion.

Statutes not facially unconstitutional

The court declined to accept the defendant’s argument that because of the evolving nature of substantive due process law, prior Supreme Court decisions upholding the federal obscenity statutes were no longer valid. It also refused the defendant’s argument that the constitutional right to privately posses obscene materials should translate into a corresponding right to distribute such material.

Statutes not unconstitutional as applied

The defendant also launched a couple of challenges to the application of the Miller test, set forth in the Supreme Court’s decision of Miller v. California, 413 U.S. 15, 93 S.Ct. 2607 (1973). Under the Miller test, the finder of fact determines whether material is obscene by applying the following test: (a) Whether “the average person, applying contemporary community standards’” would find that the work taken as a whole, appeals to prurient interest; (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value.

Max Hardcore’s challenge to the Miller test dealt with the requirement that the works at issue be “taken as a whole.” The defendants argued that because of the interconnected nature of the Web, it would be impossible to know what the term “taken as a whole” means, and it would similarly be impossible to determine the community standards against which the works should be evaluated. At the very least, the defendant argued, the entire Max Hardcore site should be considered the work “taken as a whole,” and not just the individual video files.

With little analysis, the court sided with the government, holding that the individual files – and not the whole website – should be the works “taken as a whole.” And the court concluded that the absence of a universal community standard was okay. Citing to U.S. v. Bagnell, 679 F.2d 826 (11th Cir. 1982), it held that “[i]t is constitutionally permissible to subject defendants in obscenity prosecutions to varying community standards of the various judicial districts into which they transmit obscene material.”

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