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Sharpe's porn has 'merit': court
National Post ^ | March 27, 2002 | Mark Hume

Posted on 03/27/2002 8:48:49 AM PST by ThreeYearLurker

VANCOUVER - A B.C. judge cited the "artistic or literary merit" of stories describing sadomasochistic sex between men and young boys yesterday in finding a man not guilty on two counts of possessing child porno-graphy.

Federal lawmakers were urged yesterday to narrow Canada's definition of artistic merit after the judge ruled John Robin Sharpe's "Kiddie Kink Classics" were not criminal.

At the same time, the court found Sharpe guilty of two other child pornography charges for having 400 pictures of young boys in sexual poses.

The ruling by Justice Duncan Shaw, of the Supreme Court of British Columbia, relied on an earlier Supreme Court of Canada decision that defined pornography under the current legislation, drawing a clear distinction between written and photographic material.

Sharpe was found not guilty of charges of possessing child pornography for the purpose of distribution, specifically a collection of stories he had written which one expert witness summarized as "boys being kidnapped by people with power and then systematically tortured."

However, two other expert witnesses described Sharpe's stories as literature, in line with the works of the Marquis de Sade.

"There is no question that [the stories] describe sadomasochistic scenes of violence and sex directed at boys generally 12 years of age and younger," wrote Judge Shaw. "The scenes portrayed are, by almost any standard, morally repugnant.

"Mr. Sharpe's method of portraying these scenes and the circumstances and story lines surrounding them have been closely examined by eminent literary scholars. Two have found literary merit and the other has not ... Mr. Sharpe shows skill in the literary quality of his work and the literary devices that he uses, although not to the level of most established writers."

Judge Shaw said the writings of the Marquis de Sade, an 18th-century French nobleman who spent 14 years in prison, are recognized as having artistic merit, though they include "scenes of sexual torture of women and children, scenes which in terms of sadistic cruelty and horror go far beyond those written by Mr. Sharpe."

Sharpe, a retired town planner, emerged from court smiling yesterday to face a swarm of reporters.

"I did expect that I would be acquitted on my writing. I was extremely pleased," he said.

The verdict on the works of Sharpe's imagination infuriated children's advocates and some federal politicians. The reaction made it clear that the argument over artistic merit -- which has stumped Canadian justice ministers for 20 years as they tried to craft child pornography laws -- is far from over.

The decision has again raised the troubling question of whether it is possible to define pornography when society's perception of obscenity is highly subjective, even when it comes to children.

Annabel Webb, of the advocacy group Justice For Girls, said it will promote the sexual abuse of children in Canada by helping to normalize the idea that sex with children is acceptable.

"I think the judgment has clearly opened the door for pedophiles to write and promote sexual abuse and torture of children," she said.

Detective Noreen Waters, of Vancouver police, said the decision will make it even harder to fight child pornography. Det. Waters said the B.C. court was limited by last year's Supreme Court decision, which held that even the smallest degree of artistic merit was a valid defence against a possession of pornography charge.

The stories she and other investigators seized from Sharpe, she said, would shock most people.

"The writings are horrific descriptions of children, as young as six years old, engaged in horrific violence, sexual sadomasochistic sex acts, written as if the children want it and are enjoying it -- and are coming back for more," she said. "Anybody who looks at this material is going to be horrified."

One MP yesterday called on the federal government to invoke the "notwithstanding clause" of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms to uphold child pornography laws.

Dan McTeague, a Liberal backbencher, wrote to the Prime Minister asking the government to overturn rulings protecting child pornography under the Charter, a move he said was justifiable when those limitations protect children.

Vic Toews, Canadian Alliance Justice critic, said: "We as politicians should look at the issue of whether we need to further define the limits of artistic merit by specifically excluding violent sexual exploitation of children."

Sharpe said he felt it was absurd he had to defend his writings at all.

He said the Supreme Court of Canada ruling, in a case in which he argued Canada's child pornography law contravened freedom of speech, underscored a contradiction in the law.

"They have an extremely broad and inclusive definition of child pornography as if it were some sort of highly toxic material. You know, I call it a sort of voodoo theory of child pornography. And yet at the same time, they provide a very generous artistic merit defence. In a sense, the artistic merit defence, well, almost makes a mockery of the main thrust of the law," he said.

"If this story has artistic merit I end up with fame, or more likely infamy, notoriety, but if it is child pornography, then I could face 10 years in jail.... I think that's a bit of an absurdity."

Sharpe refused to describe the contents of his 17 short stories written under the pseudonym Sam Paloc and grew angry when reporters asked him if he was a pedophile or if there was any difference between writing such stories and picking up children on the street. "Look, you people, oh, I don't know, you're sick," he said, pushing through the crowd.

Sharpe will be sentenced on the two possession of child pornography charges on May 2 and could get up to five years in jail.

In letters filed in court, Sharpe said the stories contained "my darkest fantasies," labelling them "sadomasochisticfaggotkiddieporn."

Police were shocked by the material, but literary experts disagreed in court over the key issue of artistic merit. Lorraine Weir, an English professor at the University of B.C., argued in support of the stories, saying Sharpe "has a level of expertise in his craftsmanship and in his controlled use of different literary forms."

But Paul Delaney, chairman of the Department of English at Simon Fraser University, said the stories had no literary merit.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: liberaljudges; pervs
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What a sick effing freak. And some people will say this is free speech.
1 posted on 03/27/2002 8:48:49 AM PST by ThreeYearLurker
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To: ThreeYearLurker
Bailiff, I'll take the evidence home for further study on the 'merits'.
2 posted on 03/27/2002 8:54:14 AM PST by Semper Paratus
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To: Semper Paratus
hmmm, was the judge the Honorable Kline?
3 posted on 03/27/2002 8:59:45 AM PST by Republicus2001
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To: ThreeYearLurker
Two have found literary merit and the other has not ... Mr. Sharpe shows skill in the literary quality of his work and the literary devices that he uses, although not to the level of most established writers.

Note the underlying assumption here: that artisitic merit trumps moral behavior. Writing stylishly excuses any underlying crime, apparently.

Lucky for Sharpe that he can write well -- if it had just been pages of heavy breathing, he'd have been found guilty.

Bob Packwood's probably kicking himself for not putting more "literary merit" into his diaries.

4 posted on 03/27/2002 9:00:33 AM PST by r9etb
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To: ThreeYearLurker
Canada is the NAMBLA strong hold, has been for years, lets just keep em north of the border.
5 posted on 03/27/2002 9:02:44 AM PST by HamiltonJay
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To: ThreeYearLurker
I believe that the average person has no idea what this writer might include in his book. I know that most of us consider ourselves to be rather enlightened, but when it comes to the very darkest side of dominance and submission between men, women and children, I'd say most of us are ignorant novices.

Perhaps the exposure to one book in our lives might be a good idea. It would spur most people to condemn this in ways they might never do, without having exposure to it.

That being said, I might see the need for a person to write one book. Seventeen books? Now you're talking about an individual I'd have serious conserns for. I would not only keep my kids away from him, I'd do my best to keep other kids away from him too.

6 posted on 03/27/2002 9:03:29 AM PST by DoughtyOne
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To: ThreeYearLurker
Judge Shaw said the writings of the Marquis de Sade, an 18th-century French nobleman who spent 14 years in prison, are recognized as having artistic merit, though they include "scenes of sexual torture of women and children, scenes which in terms of sadistic cruelty and horror go far beyond those written by Mr. Sharpe."

This is true. The Marquis is so viewed by intellectuals. they even made a recent movie about him with Kate Winslett, which made him out to be some sort of genius persecuted only because his works flouted convention.

A good friend of mine was telling me about the movie and how much she enjoyed it and it took me a fair amount of time to realize what she was talking about. I suggested she read some of the good Marquis' actual work before she decided he was unjustly imprisoned. The next time I saw her she was still pale from the experience and was of the opinion that the French courts should have executed him, not just imprisoned him.

7 posted on 03/27/2002 9:04:00 AM PST by Restorer
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To: Restorer
I've never bothered to read it. Is it that bad?
8 posted on 03/27/2002 9:09:45 AM PST by DoughtyOne
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To: HamiltonJay
You are talking through your hat.Unfortunately we do have some deviants in our community but the lion's share of the activity is in your back yard pal .
9 posted on 03/27/2002 9:22:25 AM PST by canuckwest
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To: DoughtyOne
De Sade will curl your hair. Even if you're bald.

I guarantee it.

Try "Justine," if you don't believe me.

A lot of the time we tend to believe that anything a couple of hundred years old must be inherently primitive, cute or cuddly. Not true. De Sade is the epitome of evil.

10 posted on 03/27/2002 9:30:36 AM PST by Restorer
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To: canuckwest
Sorry Canuck, this is NOT the first time the Canadian courts have allowed child porn or other pedophiles etc off the hook. Big difference between individual sickos existing and courts allowing and sanctioning their actions. Canada definately has been very friendly in their courts to these pedophiles and predators.
11 posted on 03/27/2002 9:32:44 AM PST by HamiltonJay
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To: Restorer
De Sade has been fashionable with the pseudo-artsy left for decades. I recall Marat/Sade as one of the most insufferably boring movies I ever saw. If the people on the left want to read this crap, let 'em, it will just add to their stupidity and banality.
12 posted on 03/27/2002 9:40:22 AM PST by Steve_Seattle
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To: Restorer
Thanks. I had suspected it touched on ripe topics without the graphic language that today's literature might contain. I appreciate the comments.
13 posted on 03/27/2002 9:45:41 AM PST by DoughtyOne
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To: Restorer
A lot of de Sade is certainly over the top, but it does have a certain merit as an absolutely savage attack on the excesses of the French aristocracy (by one of it's own). Kafka said something about only reading books that sting us, and de Sade certainly succeeds. That said, a little of him goes a long way. Having made his point, de Sade proceeds to bludgeon you with it for another 500 pages of small print. (I guess he had plenty of time on his hands in the nuthouse). But I'm surprised no one is picking up the deeper significance of this. They tried to prosecute this guy for his thoughts, and for writing down his thoughts. Now, despicable as those thoughts may be, he did not, in fact, exploit any children. He exploited the IDEA of children. There's no actual child that you can point to that he touched or otherwise exploited, traumatized, or sullied. And there's another case like this one in the US--guy being prosecuted for writing down his child-molesting fantasies in a diary. And while everyone might be disgusted by this guy, the next step is going to be to say, "he's a white supremacist writing despicable things in his diary." Or "He's a gun nut writing dangerous paranoid fantasies in his diary." Or "He's an Arab/Communist/Fascist/Republican/Catholic/Chinese/Pro-lifer/Nader voter/Freeper thinking repugnant thoughts." And hey, they did convict him for possessing the photos.
14 posted on 03/27/2002 9:52:41 AM PST by Heyworth
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To: DoughtyOne
'Quills' didn't make clear what it was that Sade wrote about. Let's say that rape was the least of it. Rape, roasting and eating of children; evisceration, coprophilia, vampirism, mutilation, cannibalism, pits full of corpses, necrophilia, mass poisonings, hearts ripped from living bodies and fried on griddles...oh, yeah, delightful stuff. 'The 101 Days of Sodom' has been described as 'the most devastating piece of literature ever written'. I guess academics would describe Sade's work as 'literature', but then we get into the old debate of 'but is it art?' I'm not gonna touch that argument with a ten-foot pole.
15 posted on 03/27/2002 9:54:20 AM PST by Calico Cat
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To: scholar;sultan88;mudboy slim
"A B.C. judge cited the 'artistic or literary merit' of stories describing sadomasochistic sex between men and young boys yesterday in finding a man not guilty on two counts of possessing child porno-graphy."

Canada, eh?
Now this is certainly a *all-new* twist to an old perverion!
This *finding's* more artistic than the case, itself.
When the Minnesotan "intellectuals" get ahold of this tack, it'll be Katy bar the door here.

(At first glance I thought, "Since when did ABC start hearing cases?")

16 posted on 03/27/2002 10:06:02 AM PST by Landru
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To: Calico Cat
Thanks for the comments. I had never heard of the coprophilia. I'll look that one up later. Vile stuff hugh. Don't bother explaining it. I'll check it out. Thanks.
17 posted on 03/27/2002 10:06:37 AM PST by DoughtyOne
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To: Calico Cat
I agree with you about de Sade's work. I couldn't care less whether he wrote artistically or not. I'm just glad he spent almost his entire life locked up.
18 posted on 03/27/2002 10:10:40 AM PST by Restorer
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To: ThreeYearLurker
I can't even stand to read the whole article, but I get the idea.
19 posted on 03/27/2002 10:11:07 AM PST by Prodigal Daughter
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To: Heyworth
I have to agree with you. As I see it, it's the same thing as trying to punish "hate crimes", i.e. punishing a person for thinking something. The article says he was convicted of possessing pictures which is against the law and children were exploited. The products of his imagination, while disgusting, should not be the basis of a prosecution. I would also say the same thing if he made drawings, again products of the imagination.
20 posted on 03/27/2002 12:38:03 PM PST by JMS
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