Library

Ernest Istook: Libraries need not expose kids to porn

Written March 7th, 2012
Categories: Blog, Library

By ERNEST ISTOOK / The Heritage Foundation

Originally posted here: http://www.ocregister.com/articles/libraries-342133-children-public.html

Librarians can be strict. In Seattle, for example, you can’t eat, sleep, go barefoot or be noisy in a public library. You can, however, “watch graphic porn on a public computer in front of kids,” the Seattle Post-Intelligencer recently reported.

You don’t need to be a literary expert to figure out that making computer porn available is not the highest and best use of limited public resources. And certainly patrons, whose tax payments keep the doors open, deserve better than to have their children exposed to hard-core pornography.

As a former chairman of a metropolitan library system, the story from Seattle appalled me. But it didn’t surprise me at all.

Sadly, Seattle is following a strategy promoted by the American Library Association, which regards pornography as just a routine aspect of protecting the First Amendment. But they generally omit an important qualifier: When taxpayers are paying for the computers they have a right to insist that children are protected.

I know because I authored the federal law on this, and it has passed muster with the Supreme Court. In 2003, the high court upheld The Children’s Internet Protection Act (CIPA) in United States v. American Library Association. Earlier federal attempts to address the problem had all been rejected by the court.

The 6-3 ruling affirmed the constitutionality of CIPA, which requires public schools and libraries that receive Internet-related federal funds to use blocking filters to restrict access to pornography.

The Supreme Court agreed that the Internet is “no more than a technological extension of the book stack.” The justices wrote that each public library has “its traditional role in identifying suitable and worthwhile material; it is no less entitled to play that role when it collects material from the Internet. … Most libraries already exclude pornography from their print collections because they deem it inappropriate for inclusion. … It would make little sense to treat libraries’ judgments to block online pornography any differently.”

Because “libraries cannot possibly segregate, item by item, all the Internet material that is appropriate for inclusion from all that is not,” the Supreme Court agreed that using filters to exclude categories of websites is appropriate and constitutional.

Adults who so request may have the filter temporarily turned off, but this intervention gives librarians the opportunity to make sure no one is using an unfiltered computer in an area open to children and other patrons.

Although Congress’ other approaches had been overturned, connecting this filtering requirement to receipt of federal funds was key to gaining Supreme Court approval, because use of government funds is commonly allowed to include restrictions.

Although many libraries now apply CIPA, others – encouraged by lawyers for the American Library Association – deliberately reject federal funds to avoid the requirement of filtering patrons’ access to the Internet. Unconfirmed reports claim a third of our public libraries are using this tactic. They should not be criticized for not tapping into the federal Treasury, but their motivation is worrisome.

These libraries still rely upon public funds from the state or local level. Lawmakers who provide that funding have an opportunity to protect children. States and local governments can do so if they use CIPA as their model. They can require that schools and libraries funded by local and state governments must protect children from Internet porn by installing these software filters. No such filter is perfect, but they protect children and they help parents who want libraries to be safe places for their entire family.

Nobody should have the Seattle experience of shocking their children, nor of having librarians who are indifferent to the problem.

Libraries vs. police in a suit sparked by porn – Kent, WA

Written February 10th, 2012
Categories: Child Porn @ Library, Library, News
By JEFFREY M. BARKER, SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER

August 12. 2002

KENT — Someone in the library, huddled close to a computer screen, was viewing images of child pornography.

There was a witness. A librarian was notified. Printouts of some of the images were left behind.

Police were called, and a detective seized two computers.

But now Kent police detectives are barred from investigating further — stymied by a legal battle over the privacy of library users and the bounds of police authority.

The King County Library System sued the Kent Police Department. The library system maintains that the detective violated constitutional protections against illegal search by seizing the two computers when he didn’t have a search warrant.

And the library system says police investigators will violate the privacy rights of library users by combing through the information in those computers.

The lawsuit puts the country’s third-largest library system in the odd position of protecting someone who downloaded child pornography onto its computers.

“The library isn’t defending pornography or child pornography here,” said Paul Kundtz, the attorney representing the libraries. “We want to tell the Police Department that it must follow the law — and more importantly, ‘Don’t do this again.’”

The suit puts new emphasis on timely topics, such as Internet filtering software, police conduct and the responsibilities of municipal workers — those President Bush would call “frontline patriots” — to report crimes.

To Kent police, though, the issue is much simpler: Protect the welfare of victimized children.

The department maintains that the detective aimed only to find out who was looking at the child pornography and to preserve evidence in a possible felony case.

“Child pornography is absolutely not protected under the First Amendment. Period,” said Kent Deputy City Attorney Arthur Pat Fitzpatrick.

This dispute isn’t the first of its kind.

In July 2000, two teenage girls saw a man masturbating in front of a library computer in Hanrahan, La.

When library officials refused to turn over computer sign-up logs, police shut the library down and seized a computer terminal. A 38-year-old man with another pending obscenity charge was arrested the next day.

In 1999, Los Angeles detectives arrested a registered sex offender who maintained a child pornography Web site using computers at the main branch of the L.A. library.

And in some suburban Atlanta libraries, viewing pornography has become so popular that libraries arrange computer terminals so they are in plain view. The thinking goes that such a move would prevent patrons from looking up illegal or offensive material.

Attorneys for the Kent Police Department say some libraries estimate that 20 to 25 percent of patrons use computers to access pornography.

In its suit, the King County Library System says the detective illegally seized two computers, and that investigators would be violating the privacy of library users if they sifted through the information stored on those computers.

In a hearing in U.S. District Court in Seattle this morning, Kundtz will ask that the computers be returned to the library.

 

No search warrant

 

On May 31, Kent police were called to an argument between a husband and wife.

The woman told police she had found printouts of child pornography in a stack of her husband’s papers.

The man told police that earlier in the day, he’d sat down at a Kent Regional Library computer immediately after another man finished with it.

When the man tried to print his own work, the pornography came out of the shared printer, he said.

About a month later, on June 22, the woman’s husband returned to the library and saw the same man, again looking at illegal images, he said.

So he notified a librarian.

About a week later, Kent Detective Wayne Himple asked for the names of all library patrons who had accessed the Internet on May 31. His request was denied by library staff.

On July 9, Himple returned to the library and seized two computers he believed to have been used to access the pornography.

Read more: http://www.seattlepi.com/news/article/Libraries-vs-police-in-a-suit-sparked-by-porn-1093410.php#ixzz1m0NJf4zj

TELL SEATTLE LIBRARY “STOP THE PORN! PROTECT OUR CHILDREN AND RIGHTS!”

Written February 4th, 2012
Categories: Blog, Library

Seattle’s Lake City library has been fighting a particularly contentious fight lately, upholding patrons’ right to watch pornography on library computers

It started when a patron, Julie Howe, asked a librarian to do something about a man watching hardcore, obscene pornography (which might actually have been ILLEGAL) right next to her and her daughter. The librarian refused to do anything.

Now the Seattle public library is saying:
“We’re a library, so we facilitate access to constitutionally protected information. We don’t tell people what they can view and check out. Filters compromise freedom of speech protected by the First Amendment. We’re not in the business of censoring information.”

It’s worth noting that they aren’t bound to this stance. Washington State Supreme Court has actually given libraries limited and understandable filtering rights. In a 2010 decision, the court ruled that libraries have historically had some amount of control as to what they carried in their collection, and that ought to be extended to the Internet. Additionally, the U.S. Supreme Court has upheld these rights too. LIBRARIES HAVE THE RIGHT TO FILTER, ESPECIALLY PORNOGRAPHY. Also, OBSCENITY IS NOT PROTECTED SPEECH. LEARN MORE ABOUT LAWS at www.WarOnIllegalPornography.com

We have a project underway to get filters in schools and libraries – we have the law on our side and we definitely have a majority of public opinion. LET’S USE THIS to pressure these libraries to protect our children from the dangers of pornography. Contact the Seattle Library Administration and let them know why they should care about the dangers of pornography.

ARTICLES ABOUT THIS ISSUE IN SEATTLE:
“Woman says child saw porn at Lake City library” – http://mynorthwest.com/11/620022/Woman-says-child-saw-hardcore-porn-at-Lake-City-library
“Mother challenges viewing of Internet porn at library; girl saw it” – http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/avantgo/2017387133.html
“Seattle Library Upholds Man’s Right To Watch Porn On Its Computers” – http://www.geekosystem.com/seattle-library-porn/

LIBRARIAN SUIT: COMPUTER PORN USE LEAD TO GROPING WHILE CHILDREN PRESENT – Birmingham, AL

Written February 1st, 2012
Categories: Laws & Cases, Library, News

A Birmingham, Alabama librarian has filed a federal lawsuit alleging a hostile work environment because, according to her, the public library where she is employed is filled with men surfing the internet for porn who sometimes grope her and perform lewd acts in front of children.

According to ABC News, 10-year Birmingham Public Library veteran Barbara Ann Wilson alleges that the library is a “sexually charged hostile work environment.”

“I don’t think people realize that if you send your kids to the downtown library in cities like these, they better think twice,” Wilson’s lawyer, Adam Morel, told ABC. “There is stuff going on that quite frankly shocks me, and taxpayers are funding the place.”

What kind of stuff? “They are using the computer to access hard-core porn in front of other patrons and children, and some of these people manipulate themselves in the open library,” Morel said.

Morel also said that Wilson has made multiple written and oral complaints to her employer, but to no avail, and has even filed at least one police report.

While the library’s computers do have filters, those filters can be turned off at the request of any adult, the ABC report says. Officially, the library’s policy allows staff to end internet sessions if patrons are viewing graphic sexual images in sight of children, or anything involving sex with minors, or anything that encourages others to break the law.

Yet Morel alleges that Wilson and other employees have tried, but are met with hostility and sexual comments. When they have called security to handle the issue, “security rolls their eyes like it’s her problem,“ and say they can only do something if they ”catch them in the act.”

Attempts by ABC to contact the central branch of the Birmingham Public Library and its administration, and the press office at City Hall, were unsuccessful. Wilson, who is suing the Birmingham Library Foundation and the City of Birmingham, was also unavailable for comment.

Chris Hansen of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) told ABC that if Wilson’s allegations of being touched are true, and nothing was done about it, she has a case.

“But the fact that the patrons in the library are accessing sexual material she doesn’t like is not sexual harassment.”

 

Originally posted here: http://www.theblaze.com/stories/librarian-suit-computer-porn-use-lead-to-groping-while-children-present/  12/9/2010

 

Internet Porn Statistics at Dallas Central Library Prompt City Concern

Written February 1st, 2012
Categories: Library, News
  • 7.5% of Internet traffic is pornography
  • Statistics seem higher than in previous analyses
  • City Council to examine issue next month

A local newspaper’s analysis of web pages accessed at the Dallas Public Library’s central library showed that some 7.5 percent of the web pages viewed during one 45-minute period contained pornography, prompting concern from city officials and a new debate about whether to install software filters. On February 11, library officials will brief the Dallas City Council. “We will explain our procedure for dealing with inappropriate behavior at the library,” assistant director Miriam Rodriguez told LJ, and will explore “any new technology available.”

The 7.5% statistic, which Dallas Morning News reporter Dave Levinthal confirmed to LJ was representative of several samples studied, seems somewhat high compared to other analyses. In his 2000 survey, Dangerous Access, librarian/activist David Burt estimated that “between 0.5 percent and 2.5 percent of Internet use in public libraries is probably for pornographic purposes,” though some larger libraries may have higher statistics. The Chicago Public Library in 1999 reported that less than five percent of its traffic went to sexually explicit web sites.

While the newspaper reported that the mayor and deputy mayor said software filters are probably warranted, Dallas City Manager Mary Suhm, trained as a librarian, told the newspaper the city was concerned about the issue but doesn’t support filtering. The library requires patrons to click on an Internet Acceptable Use Policy before using the Internet, and uses a Code of Conduct to police “behaviors that disturb the normal activities or environment for other users or city staff;” computer privileges can be withdrawn or customers ejected. Also, computers are in clear view of library staff, who can send pop-up messages to the customer telling them “the materials they are looking at are inappropriate, please close the site,” Rodriguez noted.

The library has barred 36 people for violating library policies. Morning News columnist Jacquielynn Floyd acknowledged that filtering or more intense monitoring are not ideal solutions, but argued that “doing nothing is worse than not ideal.”


Find article here: http://www.libraryjournal.com/lj/community/intellectualfreedom/860514-269/internet_porn_statistics_at_dallas.html.csp   1/25/2008

 

 

 

Homeless Men Caught Watching Porn at Laguna Beach, CA Library, Patrons Say

Written February 1st, 2012
Categories: Library, News

LAGUNA BEACH (KTLA) — Laguna Beach Public Library patrons say there’s a big problem with homeless people watching porn on library computers.

Police found eight homeless men gathered around a computer inside the library Saturday afternoon watching pornography.

One was arrested for allegedly fondling himself.

Joseph Clarence Cormier II, 46, was put under citizen’s arrest by another library patron.

The reported to police that he noticed Cormier touching himself and saw porn on his screen.

Cormier was arrested for lewd conduct and possession of marijuana.

The library was packed with kids at the time, and some parents are outraged.

The library says the First Amendment prevents them from blocking porn sites, and from monitoring what people research.

But one parent, who is also an attorney, had a different view of the matter.

“They don’t have porn magazines in the library,” Jason Farhadian told KTLA.

“So if they can prohibit that, why can’t they apply it to the websites?”

The library says that computers set aside for children’s use do have filters.

 

ARTICLE POSTED HERE ORIGINALLY: http://www.ktla.com/news/landing/ktla-man-arrested-for-watching-porn-at-library,0,6809263.story

Fan of Library Porn Admits Raping Little Girl in Library Bathroom – Philadelphia, PA

Written February 1st, 2012
Categories: Library, News

The next time the taxpayer-supported members of the American Library Association rail against anti-porn filters on taxpayer-supplied Internet service, consider the little Philadelphia girl who went to her library to learn and instead got a vicious lesson from a pedophile rapist who loves library porn.

Brian McCutcheon, a 23-year-old vagrant, is charged with rape and attempted murder after his “brutal attack” Saturday on an 8-year-old in the restroom of Philadelphia Free Library’s Independence branch, the Philadelphia Daily News reported today.

He admitted to police he choked her to mute her screams of terror. The child remains hospitalized with injuries to her neck, shoulders, eyes and buttocks.

Shades of Carlie Brucia: McCutcheon was freed after only seven months in prison “for a similar attack on a 9-year-old girl in a rec center bathroom” in 2000.

McCutcheon was banned from the library’s central branch last summer for abusing computers to feed his lust for pornography, but the system failed to apply the ban to any of the other branches.

“McCutcheon apparently was adept at using library computers to access pornography. In July 2002, when Fox News (Channel 29) walked into a branch to do a story on the subject, they found McCutcheon — who willingly put on an impromptu demonstration for the camera,” the Daily News reported.

Article originally posted here at NewsMax.com – http://archive.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2004/2/11/170407.shtml 

 

February 4, 2004

 

 

 

 

 

D.C. Public Library: Please Don’t Watch Porn On Our Computers

Written February 1st, 2012
Categories: Library, News

On public computers inside Brooklyn’s public libraries, you are welcome to watch pornography. No, really. The Village Voice’s Runnin’ Scared blogconfirmed it after learning about a fight that broke out between a guy who was watching porn and another guy who wanted to use the same computer.

 

According to the friendly library spokesperson we talked to, not only are adult customers able to view whatever they wish on public library computers, the library actually provides privacy screens (those dark covers for monitors that the user can see through but those beyond cannot) for customers who wish to view “questionable material.” There’s a separate area for children and teens, which is the youth wing (where questionable material is not allowed).We asked, of course, for clarification. So, really, you can watch porn?

“This means you can watch porn,” he said.

This, of course, begs the question: are the District’s libraries similarly cool with customers enjoying pornography inside Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial or in the shiny new facilities in Shaw, Petworth and Tenleytown? George Williams, the library’s spokesperson, tells us that DCPL would really prefer it if customers left the porn at home.

 

“Actually, what we do here, which is a little different than Brooklyn,” explained Williams, “is we filter to comply with the Children’s Internet Protection Act. But ours is a system-wide filter” — as opposed to Brooklyn’s, where the filter is only in place in areas where young people have access to shared computers. See, in many of D.C.’s newer libraries, the area where computers are accessible are places where children could conceivably walk by, so places where it’d probably wouldn’t be great for an orgy (or what have you) to be on display.

But what about the installation of those privacy shades, like the ones in Brooklyn — wouldn’t that solve the problem of some kid getting a glimpse of some T&A? Not really, said Williams, who indicated that D.C. libraries weren’t using them because they weren’t really that effective.

Of course, with wireless internet and private conference rooms now available at several libraries, there’s very little that the library can actually do — aside from making users agree to a series of terms — from preventing someone who’s dead set on watching porn inside the library from doing so.

“If someone is looking at something that is somewhat objectionable, and we were informed of it, the library can just ask them to not look at that material anymore,” Williams admitted.

 

Original article posted here: http://dcist.com/2011/04/dc_public_library_please_dont_watch.php

by: Aaron Morrissey

April 22, 2011

 

Grand jury again pushes porn filter for Santa Rosa, CA library

Written December 1st, 2011
Categories: Library, News

The Sonoma County grand jury again has addressed what it sees as problems of access to pornography in public libraries, calling for filters to be installed on computers in the children’s section while their effectiveness is gauged.

Pornography filters are “still an important issue that needs to be dealt with. It is a fact that minors may be exposed to pornographic images of a shocking and offensive nature,” the grand jury wrote in the report, released Wednesday afternoon.

The library’s reluctance, however, has been that filters are not 100 percent effective, and some offensive material will still get through while legitimate material is blocked.

“Someone who has breast cancer who wants to research treatment can’t get it because the filter prevents it, and it may not filter out other things that may be offensive,” said Melissa Kelley, vice chairwoman of the Sonoma County Library Commission.

There are also First Amendment issues, said Margaret Lynch, commission chairwoman.

“We do have people who are actively reviewing how we can do this. It is an issue of the American Library Association, we are not the only library to deal with it,” Lynch said. “It is trying to strike that balance.”

The grand jury last year recommended the Central Library move the public access computers to a side wall and install pornography filters.

This year’s grand jury also believes that the filters may be more effective than the library commission believes, filtering 85 percent of the objectional material and blocking 15 percent of the legitimate material.

Read more the article here: http://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/20100630/ARTICLES/100639947

Denver Post Editorial: Library No Place for Pornography

Written August 1st, 2011
Categories: Library, News

There is a time and a place for everything, and that old saw is particularly true for those who insist on watching Internet pornography.

We don’t think public libraries are appropriate places to view such material and were surprised to learn that Jefferson County Public Library allows it.

Library systems around the country have differing rules on the matter, with New York City allowing access to pornography and others, including Denver, blocking it.

To be clear, we have no issue with adults exercising their First Amendment right to view pornography in private at their own expense.

But it’s another matter entirely to allow people access to Internet pornography in a public place using public resources. The unfortunate truth is that even well-meaning attempts to shield such material from youngsters and those who’d rather not see it invariably go awry.

That was the gist of a 9News story this week quoting a mother who said she and her 5-year-old son came upon a teenager watching an X-rated movie on a Columbine Library computer in Jefferson County.

Not only did they see more than they wanted to as they walked by, the teenager apparently was fondling himself while watching the movie.

Carolyn Berry told a librarian about the spectacle and, eventually, the young man was forced to leave the facility.

Rebecca Winning, Jeffco library spokeswoman, said the teenager in question was violating several tenets of library policy. First, those under 18 are not allowed to watch porn. She conceded, however, there are numerous ways to get around that restriction.

Furthermore, the young man failed to shield his screen from other patrons. And it should go without saying that public masturbation is never acceptable in the library.

But Winning also acknowledged that the library board’s position is that patrons are allowed to access legally obtainable information — including porn — on library computers.

“We follow the law,” Winning told 9News.

However, there also is clear law and precedent allowing libraries to block porn on their computers.

Granted, such filters are imperfect and sometimes mistakenly deny access to non-porn sites. But patrons having difficulty viewing, say, a medical site about breast cancer could ask for assistance in getting beyond the filters. That’s what Denver does and it seems to work just fine.

To be sure, it’s complicated work to devise the right policies and use appropriate technology to block pornography in public libraries. But we think it’s worth the effort so libraries can be a comfortable place for everyone, including children, to visit.

Read more:Editorial: Library no place for pornography – The Denver Posthttp://www.denverpost.com/opinion/ci_18524963#ixzz1lAo5Mxn7

7/22/2011