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Adult nudity on the Internet. I am shocked beyond belief. I thought the Internet was only for child pornography.
1 posted on 02/18/2003 12:20:42 PM PST by AdA$tra
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To: AdA$tra
Yeah right. There's more to this than we are being told.
2 posted on 02/18/2003 12:22:57 PM PST by AppyPappy (Caesar si viveret, ad remum dareris.)
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To: AdA$tra
"After Yahoo told Klazura in an e-mail that the pictures could be illegal, he immediately canceled his order, court records show. But the postal inspector got permission from federal authorities to deliver Klazura's canceled order, leading to his arrest and giving authorities the right to search his home computer."

This doesn't pass the smell test. This is WOD warrior tactics of the worst kind. The last time I looked Playboy and other "gentlemen" magazines are still legal.

4 posted on 02/18/2003 12:26:35 PM PST by bigfootbob
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To: AdA$tra
Jeffrey Klazura, 30, was sentenced for possessing two pictures of adult women posing nude on his home computer.

What I want to know is if they were both posing on his computer at the same time. He must have a very big computer.

Oh, never mind...this is Associated Press English.

Hank

5 posted on 02/18/2003 12:27:11 PM PST by Hank Kerchief
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To: AdA$tra
part of a plea agreement in a rare federal obscenity case against him

Not rare enough, given that the Constitution does not give the federal government the authority to do this at all.

7 posted on 02/18/2003 12:38:32 PM PST by alpowolf
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To: AdA$tra
Jeffrey Klazura, 30, was sentenced for possessing two pictures of adult women posing nude on his home computer.

Had they been pictures of a nude, hunky State Trooper and a pretty choir boy, however, prosecution of him would have been a Hate Crime...

11 posted on 02/18/2003 2:02:55 PM PST by Gorzaloon (Contents may have settled during shipping, but this tagline contains the stated product weight.)
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To: AdA$tra
The Commonwealth v Sharpless, 2 Serg & R. 91 (Sup. Ct. Penn. 1815)

Jesse Sharpless ... John Haines . .. George Haines ... John Steel . . . Ephraim Martin . . . and --- Mayo . . . designing, contriving, and intending the morals, as well of youth as of divers other citizens of this commonwealth, to debauch and corrupt, and to raise and create in their minds inordinate and lustful desires . . . in a certain house there . . . scandalously did exhibit and show for money ... a certain lewd ... obscene painting, representing a man in an obscene ... and indecent posture with a woman, to the manifest corruption and subversion of youth, and other] citizens of this commonwealth . . . offending . . . [the] dignity of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

The defendants have been convicted, upon their own confession, of conduct indicative of great moral depravity. . . . This court is ... invested with power to punish not only open violations of decency and morality, but also whatever secretly tends to undermine the principles of society. . .. Whatever tends to the destruction of morality, in general, may be punished criminally. Crimes are public offenses, not because they are perpetrated publicly, but because their effect is to injure the public. Burglary, though done in secret, is a public offense; and secretly destroying fences is indictable. Hence, it follows, that an offense may be punishable, if in its nature and by its example, it tends to the corruption of morals; although it be not committed in public.

The defendants are charged with exhibiting and showing . .. for money, a lewd . . . and obscene painting. A picture tends to excite lust, as strongly as a writing; and the showing of picture is as much a publication as the selling of a book. . . . If the privacy of the room was a protection, all the youth of the city might be corrupted, by taking them, one by one, into a chamber, and there inflaming their passions by the exhibition of lascivious pictures. In the eye of the law, this would be a publication, and a most pernicious one.

Although every immoral act, such as lying, etc., is not indict able, yet where the offense charged is destructive of morality in general ... it is punishable at common law. The destruction of morality renders the power of the government invalid. . . . The corruption of the public mind, in general, and debauching the manners of youth, in particular, by lewd and obscene pictures exhibited to view, must necessarily be attended with the most injurious consequences.. . . No man is permitted to corrupt the morals of the people; secret poison cannot be thus disseminated.

12 posted on 02/18/2003 2:50:50 PM PST by FF578 (Indeed I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just and His justice cannot sleep forever)
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To: AdA$tra
I just love the smell of tyranny in the morning.
13 posted on 02/18/2003 2:56:16 PM PST by fifteendogs
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To: AdA$tra
For the next two years, a former parochial school teacher in Wichita will have the government watching his every move on the Internet, as part of a plea agreement in a rare federal obscenity case against him.

Maybe he gets the last laugh. Maybe that was his fetish in the first place.

16 posted on 02/18/2003 3:04:13 PM PST by lorrainer (EVERYBODY thinks I'm paranoid!)
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To: AdA$tra
Jeffrey Klazura, 30, was sentenced for possessing two pictures of adult women posing nude on his home computer.

Ewwww... I hope he wiped down all peripherals touched by these ladies.
21 posted on 02/18/2003 5:14:40 PM PST by GirlShortstop
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To: AdA$tra
I doubt this is the whole story.

If so, even Mr. Christian Conservative here has some concerns about this.
26 posted on 02/20/2003 1:07:08 PM PST by rwfromkansas ("We hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to public office." --Aesop)
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To: AdA$tra
...for possessing two pictures of adult women posing nude on his home computer.

Number 1...Nudity is not necessarily pornography.

Number 2...There is more to this case than is readily apparent.

27 posted on 02/20/2003 1:11:16 PM PST by Bloody Sam Roberts (®)
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