nemo999
Member
- Joined
- Jul 20, 2008
- Messages
- 277
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- 35mm
There have been some lunatic legal decisions relating to child "pornography" lately, but this one
http://www.mirror.co.uk/most-popula...-court-on-child-porn-charges-115875-20686977/
surely takes first prize for stupidity.
While, the judge's words, "always acting perfectly properly" and having "no base motive, sexual motive or wish to gain sexual gratification", a photographer takes pictures of 2 girls, aged 10 and 12, in the presence of and at the request of their parents. These pictures apparently include pre-pubescent nipples - the pictures are intended for use as raw material in digital composites, in the final versions of which the nipples may well not have appeared. Nonetheless, the said picture outrages a photo lab employee to the point where the police are called, a prosecution (with only the photo lab person as plaintiff) is mounted, and a sentence of 150 hours' community service results. A barrister is quoted in the British Journal of Photography as saying that "under the Protection of Children Act 1978 it is an offence to take an indecent photograph of a child. The circumstances in which the photographs were taken and the intentions of the photographer are irrelevant, because the test of indecency is objective and a matter for the jury to decide."
I am unable to understand the last part of the last sentence - there seems to be an automatic association (man takes pictures of children's nipples - filthy pervert), to call this objective is a joke and if there is such an automatic association, then there is absolutely no latitude for a jury to exercise judgement.
I sincerely hope that the photographer has the courage to appeal this decision, which I think is one of the shakiest and most risible I have ever heard. If it stands as a precedent, then every parent who photographs his/her own children with a naked torso must surely also have to fear prosecution. What a shambles!
http://www.mirror.co.uk/most-popula...-court-on-child-porn-charges-115875-20686977/
surely takes first prize for stupidity.
While, the judge's words, "always acting perfectly properly" and having "no base motive, sexual motive or wish to gain sexual gratification", a photographer takes pictures of 2 girls, aged 10 and 12, in the presence of and at the request of their parents. These pictures apparently include pre-pubescent nipples - the pictures are intended for use as raw material in digital composites, in the final versions of which the nipples may well not have appeared. Nonetheless, the said picture outrages a photo lab employee to the point where the police are called, a prosecution (with only the photo lab person as plaintiff) is mounted, and a sentence of 150 hours' community service results. A barrister is quoted in the British Journal of Photography as saying that "under the Protection of Children Act 1978 it is an offence to take an indecent photograph of a child. The circumstances in which the photographs were taken and the intentions of the photographer are irrelevant, because the test of indecency is objective and a matter for the jury to decide."
I am unable to understand the last part of the last sentence - there seems to be an automatic association (man takes pictures of children's nipples - filthy pervert), to call this objective is a joke and if there is such an automatic association, then there is absolutely no latitude for a jury to exercise judgement.
I sincerely hope that the photographer has the courage to appeal this decision, which I think is one of the shakiest and most risible I have ever heard. If it stands as a precedent, then every parent who photographs his/her own children with a naked torso must surely also have to fear prosecution. What a shambles!