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Top Massachusetts court refuses to throw out anti-sodomy laws but limits enforcement
AP ^ | 2-21-02

Posted on 02/21/2002 12:36:24 PM PST by Oldeconomybuyer

Edited on 04/13/2004 2:39:43 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]

BOSTON (AP) -- Massachusetts' highest court on Thursday upheld two anti-sodomy laws but limited enforcement to cases when specific sex acts occurred in public or weren't consensual.

Gay activists said the Supreme Judicial Court ruling clarified for the first time that anti-sodomy laws don't apply to private, consensual sex.


(Excerpt) Read more at sfgate.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: masslist
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To: JMJ333
State’s incest law toughened

Gazette

Thursday, January 17, 2002 -- (BOSTON AP) - Lawmakers in the House approved a bill Wednesday designed to toughen the state's incest law by broadening the definition of sexual contact.

The move was sparked by a Supreme Judicial Court ruling two years ago that found that current Massachusetts incest law only applies to intercourse between a child and parent and not other forms of sexual conduct.

The state's highest court made the ruling after it threw out an incest indictment in the case of a Plymouth County man. One of the allegations was that he had his daughter perform oral sex on him.

The court said at the time that its ruling "undoubtedly offends both common sense and fundamental decency," but it was compelled by the language in the law.

The bill would change the law by expanding the definition of incest to include a wide range of sexual behavior, including oral sex and digital contact.

The bill was approved unanimously by the Senate last year. The House passed a slightly different version of the bill unanimously on Wednesday.

"It's vitally important that we close the loophole that was created by the SJC decision," said state Sen. Cheryl Jacques, D-Needham, the bill's sponsor.

"Clearly the intent of the Legislature was to outlaw all sexual acts between a child and a parent and this bill would do that," she said.

Rep. Elizabeth Poirier, R-North Attleboro, pushed the bill in the House saying it would send a clear message that the state would not tolerate any form of sexual abuse of children by their parents.

If both houses can agree on a single version of the bill, it will be sent to acting Gov. Jane Swift's desk. An aide to Swift said she would likely sign the bill. The legislation is more than just a technical correction, Jacques said. She said people already convicted of incest could point to the SJC decision and try to appeal.

The bill would also strengthen the ability of prosecutors to charge defendants with incest. Jacques said prosecutors sometimes use the charge because it carries a higher penalty than lesser charges like indecent assault and battery of a minor.

In the Plymouth case, the man was convicted of indecent assault and battery of a person under 14 and sentenced to two years in prison and three years probation, she said. A conviction for incest could have drawn a 20-year sentence.

41 posted on 02/21/2002 6:39:29 PM PST by Looking for Diogenes
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To: JMJ333
Should we legitimize incest?

Two of my cousins, first cousins to each other, dated for a while.

The worst problem was that after breaking up they now feel uncomfortable attending family events where the other will be present.

Maybe there is a good reason not to legitimize incest among adults(birth defects), but I don't think it is against the law. Some states prohibit marriage between cousins, others do not.

42 posted on 02/21/2002 6:41:12 PM PST by Looking for Diogenes
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To: counterrevolutionary
Oh, and about the Ninth Amendment (help me, I can't stop posting): it is clearly intended to restrict the power of the federal government. Since the original idea of federalism was that the federal government was permitted to do only those things which were explicitly permitted in the Constitution, the Ninth Amendment is meant to say, "Just because we explicitly forbade the feds from abridging freedom of speech and of the press and all that, don't think that gives them a wide variety of new powers."

In fact, the federal government is constitutionally forbidden to outlaw sodomy. But the federal government is also constitutionally forbidden to outlaw murder, and rape, and robbery. That's all in the Ninth Amendment, too.

And here's a question (I'm leaving now--really!--but I'll be back in the morning). When was the first anti-sodomy statute passed in the US? And when was the first court ruling overturning an anti-sodomy statute? In other words, how long did it take the courts to realize that sodomy was an inalienable human right?

43 posted on 02/21/2002 6:42:37 PM PST by counterrevolutionary
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To: zoyd
I did answer your question. I side with the judge which limits enforcement. Its stupid at this time in the culture to enforce jail for breaking sodomy laws. My point is that societal standards are important. These standards are decided by voters within the community. If the majority of citizens voted in favor of stigmatizing sodomy then that should be respected.

And I keep asking you the same question too. Do you think incest should be legitimized in the same manner that homosexuality has been? If incestual couples lobby to have anti-incest laws overturned will you support that? If incestual couples demand the same type of normalization of their sexual behavior as the homosexuals will you defend that? In order to be consistent, you'll have to.

44 posted on 02/21/2002 6:42:39 PM PST by JMJ333
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To: counterrevolutionary

Leaving aside the fact that this is a Massachusetts case, not Maryland:

A) I've dealt with general provisions such as that (e.g., the Ninth Amendment) in previous posts. Yours raises no further issues.

Mine addresses the false assertion (often raised on FR) that only the federal government's powers are limited and the states are 50 experiments in unlimited majoritarian socialism.

B) As far as I know, neither the Massachusetts State Constitution nor the US Constitution authorizes the Massachusetts legislature to forbid murder...

In the case of Maryland, Article V of Maryland's Declaration of Rights says that the inhabitants of Maryland are entitled to the Common Law of England--which I think forbids murder--but, that's a bit of a stretch, to be consistent with the theory of limited enumerated powers one should see them listed in the power enumerating section (article 3 of Maryland's). So I'll take your point under advisement.

C) Massachusetts may well someday put a sodomy protection in their state constitution. But we were discussing provisions of the US Constitution.

I took your question to mean, "please cite the state constitutional enumeration of the right to be free from J Edgar and his vice-mates."

D) If you don't like a law, but can't find a constitutional provision forbidding it, why don't you try behaving like a citizen of a republic and attempt to get it repealed through the legislative process?

Why don't you behave like a true citizen in a republic who understands that all of his rights need not be enumerated?

45 posted on 02/21/2002 6:46:11 PM PST by Libertarian Billy Graham
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To: Looking for Diogenes
I'm talking about two adults...say a Father and daughter. Should their sexual behavior be legitimized and accepted because it is between two consenting adults? Yes or no?
46 posted on 02/21/2002 6:46:59 PM PST by JMJ333
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To: zoyd
Yeah, I was beginning to wonder if you disagreed with my eating dinner... ;)

Not a chance! I hope it was tasty! =)

47 posted on 02/21/2002 6:48:39 PM PST by JMJ333
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To: counterrevolutionary
I don't think I can be blamed for not recognizing that "life, liberty, or property, without due process of law" was an attempt to answer my question:
"Care to give me a list of everything that Amendment 14, Sec. 1 forbids states to outlaw, and everything it doesn't?"

--- The 14th lists deprivations of "life, liberty, or property, without due process of law", as a type of law "No state shall make or enforce".

Number one, it doesn't actually answer the question. Number two, even gramatically, it makes no sense as an answer to the question.

As you see above, --it makes perfect sense, -- if you have a bit of common sense. -- And can read the 14th.

Number three, no one has suggested that people arrested under an anti-sodomy law are not entitled to due process. People arrested under anti-murder laws are also entitled to due process. Does that make anti-murder laws unconstitutional? And now this discussion has gotten annoyingly silly, and so I will be saying goodbye, then, sir. Goodbye, then, sir.

Yep, its been made silly, -- by you. -- Thanks for scurrying away.

48 posted on 02/21/2002 6:53:08 PM PST by tpaine
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To: tpaine
regardless of the near impossibility of enforcing such law with any semblence of due process

Come on now! We need cameras in every room of the house linked to the poh-poh station. That way we can make sure everyone is only having heterosexual sex - missionary, on the bed, and in the dark.

As a side note we could also make sure no one was smoking the devil weed, and that everyone was getting drunk on beer and or wiskey. Their drug baaaaaaad, our drug gooooooood!

:-)

49 posted on 02/21/2002 6:55:38 PM PST by realpatriot71
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To: JMJ333
I was mistaken in my earlier post. Sex between consenting adults who are closely related is a felony in at least a couple of states: Alabama and Missouri.

Here is site with a survey of sex laws: http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/2269/

Of course, different jurisdictions define incest differently, whether the law be crimimal or civil. Some states include cousins, others do not. Some include adopted persons.

50 posted on 02/21/2002 7:05:57 PM PST by Looking for Diogenes
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To: Libertarian Billy Graham
Why don't you behave like a true citizen in a republic who understands that all of his rights need not be enumerated?

The problem is that your position requires that those unemumerated rights be determined by judges--in other words, by a cabal of black-robed lawyers. And since our other rights are unenumerated, they can pretty much rewrite the laws any way they want them. What about the right to self-government?

I prefer to be governed by the people's representatives, except in very specific and enumerated instances. I believe that my unenumerated rights are safer in the hands of the citizenry than in the hands of the lawyers.

Can you find instances from the early history of this nation (when the founding generation was still alive) of anyone using the Ninth Amendment as an argument against state anti-sodomy laws, let alone of courts overturning them? If you can, I will grant that perhaps your interpretation of the effect of the Ninth Amendment is correct. If not, please explain to me why the Founders so badly misinterpreted their own work.

51 posted on 02/22/2002 4:26:53 AM PST by counterrevolutionary
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To: Oldeconomybuyer
Gay activists had argued the laws violated freedom of expression

Uh? Since when impersonation became legal?

52 posted on 02/22/2002 4:28:30 AM PST by lavaroise
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To: tpaine
OK, one more time.

No one is talking about depriving anyone of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. People accused of violating anti-sodomy laws receive due process, just the same as anyone accused of violating any other law.

If you're talking about the idiotic and tyrannical notion of "substantive due process," then I give up.

53 posted on 02/22/2002 4:40:51 AM PST by counterrevolutionary
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To: counterrevolutionary
I think we need to talk about the basics here. Isn't it repulsive to allow any type of sexual activity in a "secluded" location simple because no one is supposed to be able to see you? So if I am barely out of sight and my girflriend and I are having wild and noisy sex, this is legal?

This is not about private behvior. This is about behavior which threatens the public order. You can do in your own bedroom to your heart's content, but I will not argue for anyone's right to have unencumbered sex of any type just because they are "barely" shielded from public view.

54 posted on 02/22/2002 5:49:03 AM PST by Fractal Trader
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To: Looking for Diogenes
I was wondering if you had an answer to post 46. Thanks.
55 posted on 02/22/2002 6:18:15 AM PST by JMJ333
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To: counterrevolutionary
The problem is that your position requires that those unemumerated rights be determined by judges--in other words, by a cabal of black-robed lawyers.

In our republics, each officer of the executive branch is also sworn to NOT enforce statutes of the legislature that each executive officer deems in violation of the un-enumerated inherent rights that our state and federal constitutions protect.

But most importantly, in every criminal case, all 12 randomly selected jurors are bound to NOT enforce unjust statutes. So a statute that 1/12th of the community thinks is in violation of the un-enumerated rights that our constitutions refer to will not be enforced.

What about the right to self-government?

The system of vetoes and separation of powers in our republics is a great advancement toward true self-government.

I prefer to be governed by the people's representatives, except in very specific and enumerated instances.

I prefer our system of citizen oversight of all statutes drawn up in smoke filled rooms.

I believe that my unenumerated rights are safer in the hands of the citizenry than in the hands of the lawyers.

Exactly. But the lawyers (and teachers unionists) that run our state legislatures as well as the lawyers that run the judiciary get a veto too.

Can you find instances from the early history of this nation (when the founding generation was still alive) of anyone using the Ninth Amendment as an argument against state anti-sodomy laws, let alone of courts overturning them? If you can, I will grant that perhaps your interpretation of the effect of the Ninth Amendment is correct.

Yes, up until the mid to late 19th century, the citizenry regulary vetoed statutes that they considered to be in violation of inherent rights. The best example is the slavery statutes. Godfrey Lehman has documented how juries were instrumental in slavery's abolition in the north AND the south. The Zengar case and the Sedition Acts of the 1790s are world famous cases of how our republics protect the un-enumerated rights of its citizens that are referred to in our constitutions.

Nowadays, all jurors are threatened by judges (lawyers) that they will be jailed for contempt if they attempt to exercize their power to nullify unjust statutes.

56 posted on 02/22/2002 6:18:18 AM PST by Libertarian Billy Graham
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To: zoyd
What? Are you having breakfast now? ;)
57 posted on 02/22/2002 6:19:03 AM PST by JMJ333
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To: counterrevolutionary
Please quote the Constitutional provision which forbids a state legislature to pass a law against sodomy.

I would say the 4th amendment covers it for private acts. However, anyone having sex in public, ought to be arrested.

58 posted on 02/22/2002 6:24:02 AM PST by southern rock
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To: Libertarian Billy Graham
Whatever one thinks of jury nullification, there is a major difference betwen jury nullification in a single case and the Supreme Court simply declaring that a law no longer exists on the basis of their own political preferences (e.g., Roe v. Wade).

Also, when a president or governor refuses to enforce a law, he can be turfed out of office at the next election and replaced with someone who promises to enforce the law. When do we get rid of Stephen Breyer? Only when he chooses to leave or dies. And then, under your system of jurisprudence, we have to hope that his replacement agrees with us politically, since it is his political desires that will govern the decisions he makes.

Pardon me, but I simply don't like that system.

59 posted on 02/22/2002 6:29:13 AM PST by counterrevolutionary
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To: southern rock
I would say the 4th amendment covers it for private acts.

No, the prohibitions on unreasonable searches and seizures might make such a law practically impossible to enforce, but that doesn't affect the constitutional standing of the law itself.

60 posted on 02/22/2002 6:31:37 AM PST by counterrevolutionary
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