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CCP 11-16-1995
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CCP 11-16-1995
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<br /> . "33/sa <br /> , <br /> I .. from application of New York State nuisance law designed in part to close places of <br /> I- prostitution). <br /> . <br /> . Although the Working Group believes that nuisance injunctions with an obscenity <br /> predicate would be effective in controlling sexually oriented businesses, such <br /> provisions would probably be unconstitutional under current U.S. Supreme Court <br /> . decisions. Six Supreme Court justices joined in the Arcara result, but two of them - <br /> Justices O'Connor and Stevens -- concurred with these words of caution: <br /> I If, however, a city were to use a nuisance statute as a pretext for closing <br /> down a book store because it sold indecent books or because of the <br /> . perceived secondary effects of having a purveyor of such books in the <br /> neighborhood, the case would clearly implicate First Amendment concernS <br /> . and require analysis under the appropriate First Amendment standard of <br /> review. Because there is no suggestion in the record or opinion below of <br /> such pretextual use of the New York nuisance provision in this case, I concur <br /> I in the Court's opinion and judgment. <br /> Arcara, supra, 478 U.S. at 708,106 S. Ct. at 3178. <br /> I- In an earlier case, Vance v. Universal Amusement, 445 U.S. 308, 100 S. Ct. 1156 <br /> I (1980), the Court ruled unconstitutional a Texas public nuisance statute authorizing the <br /> closing of a building for a year if the building is used "habitual [Iy]" for the "commercial <br /> exhibition of obscene material." Id. at 310 n.2, 100 S. Ct. at 1158 n.2. <br /> I <br /> The Court's recent holdings in Sappenfield and Fort Wayne Books, Inc. give no <br /> I indication that the Court would now look more favorably upon an injunction to close <br /> down a facility which sold obscene materials. The Court assumed without deciding <br /> I that forfeiture of bookstore assets could be constitutional in a RICO case. But, in <br /> making this assumption, the Court distinguished forieiture of assets under RICO from a <br /> I general restraint on presumptively protected speech. The court approved the <br /> reasoning of the Indiana Supreme Court that, "The remedy of forfeiture is intended hot <br /> to restrain the future distribution of presumptively protected speech but rather te <br /> . disgorge assets acquired through racketeering activity.. Fort Wayne Books, Inc. at <br /> 4185. The Court assumed that RICO provisions could be upheld on the basis that <br /> . <br /> .e -29- <br /> . <br />
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