I keep forgetting that your statutes are mostly administered by the
individual states.
If your kiddie porn laws are anything like ours, the kiddie in the
bathtub might well cross the line.

Our law doesn't even require nudity. All that is required under
Canadian law is for the subject to appear to be under the age of
eighteen, and be in a pose that may be of a sexual nature.

It's a pretty broad definition, since there is really no definition
at all.
It makes going after child pornographers the legal equivalent of
drift net fishing.
You may catch what you want, but you are going to hurt a lot of
innocent parties doing it.

William Robb


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Shel Belinkoff"
Subject: Re: a little something i've been working on.


> Bill,
>
> There are so many jurisdictions, and so many variations on
> "the law" that it would be impossible to quote anything.
> Most of what I've read about and seen deals with subjective
> interpretation of what constitutes pornography.  My comment
> to Tanya was made because recently a couple was prosecuted
> in (maybe) Florida because the photo lab they brought their
> film to turned them in to authorities because the lab people
> thought the pics were porn.  The photos were of the couple's
> child taking a bath.  I honestly don't recall the outcome,
> although I do believe the child was taken from the parents
> pending the outcome of an investigation.  There are more
> details, of course.


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