Preliminary Statement
- Plaintiffs in this action, including parents, citizens, and
other public library users in Loudoun County, seek injunctive
and declaratory relief against improper restrictions imposed by
the Defendants that severely censor and limit access to public
information that would otherwise be available through the Internet
in Loudoun County public libraries. Purportedly seeking to limit
access to materials that are "pornographic" or "harmful
to minors," Defendants' restrictions improperly limit adults
to even less information than is fit for children, block access
to valuable, educational and constitutionally protected information
that has nothing to do with "pornography" under any
definition of that term, fails to promote its purported objectives,
and ignores readily available less restrictive alternatives. While
labeling the policy as a prohibition on "sexual harassment,"
Defendants' Internet restrictions are far removed from any legitimate
concern with such matters, and their chosen means of implementation
are counterproductive. Defendants' conduct in adopting these Internet
censorship restrictions has injured and continues to injure Plaintiffs
in violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United
States Constitution.
- As explained in one recent decision, the Internet "may
well be the premier technological innovation of the present age."
American Libraries Ass'n. v. Pataki, 969 F. Supp. 160,
161 (S.D.N.Y. 1997). "The Internet is a far more speech-enhancing
medium than print, the village green, or the mails." ACLU
v. Reno, 929 F. Supp. 824, 882-883 (E.D. Pa. 1996) (Dalzell,
J.), aff'd., 117 S. Ct. 2329 (1997). The Supreme Court
has explained that from the readers' viewpoint, the Internet is
comparable to "a vast library including millions of readily
available and indexed publications." Reno v. ACLU,
117 S. Ct. 2329, 2335 (1997).
- On October 20, 1997, Defendant Board of Trustees of the Loudoun
County Public Library ("the Board"), voted 5-4 to impose
arbitrary and restrictive limits on the information that patrons
may obtain over publicly available Internet access terminals provided
in Loudoun County libraries. The Board adopted what it called
a "Policy on Internet Sexual Harassment" ("the
Policy") to prevent library patrons from accessing certain
Internet resources, to be enforced by library staff and by a content
blocking service controlled by a California corporation. The Policy
applies the blocking software at all times for all users, regardless
of age, without exception or individual choice. The Policy expressly
threatens library patrons with criminal enforcement if they attempt
to access information that the staff summarily decides is in violation
of the rules.
- The Policy is a harsh and censorial solution in search of
a problem. Although the Board had information that less than two-tenths
of one percent of the information available over the Internet
is even arguably "pornographic," and even though its
investigations revealed that not a single one of the more than
fifteen Virginia libraries it surveyed had experienced a serious
problem with Internet access or had opted for blocking software,
the Board adopted a policy that has been described by "experts
[as] among the most restrictive in the nation." David Nakamura
& Jacqueline L. Salmon, Internet Curbed in Loudoun: Library
Board to Block Explicit Material, WASHINGTON POST, Oct. 22,
1997, at A1. The author of the policy, who was assisted by various
pro-censorship organizations, announced his intention to make
it a "template" for libraries across the United States.
- The Policy is inadequate to serve, and in fact undermines,
the very purposes for which it purportedly was adopted. Although
it claims to restrict informational materials that constitute
"sexual harassment" or that are "harmful to juveniles,"
the means chosen for blocking such information are ill-suited
for this purpose, and cannot implement a legal test for restricting
speech. Moreover, because the Board's Policy is designed with
censorship as its primary priority, and requires placement of
Internet terminals in the "full view" of library staff
to facilitate enforcement, it guarantees that patrons and staff
will be exposed to whatever images may appear on the computer
screens, including information that they may consider discriminatory
or offensive. Thus, the Policy actually undermines the Board's
stated interest in preventing such "harassment" of staff
or patrons.
- The Policy censors much valuable information that has absolutely
nothing to do with pornography. No blocking software designed
to restrict access to information on the Internet can apply the
community standards of Loudoun County, much less make the other
legal determinations necessary to pass constitutional muster.
The Board was well aware of this fact and implemented a content
blocking service that, even in its own limited tests, was found
to censor dozens of non-pornographic sites, including the home
page of the Society of Friends, the Web site for the Yale University
biology department graduate program, the Web site for the American
Association of University Women, and the AIDS quilt Web site,
among many others. Belated attempts to unblock a few of these
sites were, and are woefully inadequate. Additionally, the blocking
software selected by the Board restricts patrons in their use
of "search engines" as a tool to conduct legitimate
research on the Internet.
- The Policy greatly restricts the value of the Internet as
an informational resource for Loudoun County library patrons even
without the censorial effect of blocking software. Patrons will
be deterred from seeking access to information of a sensitive
or personal nature where, as here, placement of computer terminals
forces users to "share" the information with all passersby.
Such information may include Web sites relating to personal finance,
divorce, mental health, safe sex practices, medical questions
and a wide range of other data. At the same time, Defendants have
ignored or rejected much less drastic alternatives to achieve
their purported objectives.
- Reviewing the Policy, one member of the Loudoun County Board
of Supervisors who is also an ex-officio member of the Library
Board, alerted his colleagues that "at least some of those
who are advocating blocking software for our libraries eventually
wish to impose censorship on a broad spectrum of ideas and information
with which they disagree, regardless of whether or not those ideas
and information are protected by the First Amendment." He
added that "pornography has been merely used as an excuse
to establish the structure by which this censorship can be imposed."
As detailed below, the Policy clearly injures Plaintiffs in violation
of the First Amendment.
Jurisdiction and Venue
- This case arises under the Constitution and laws of the United
States and presents a federal question within this Court's jurisdiction
under Article III of the Constitution and 28 U.S.C. § 1331
and 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
- This Court has authority to grant declaratory relief pursuant
to the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201.
- Venue is proper in this judicial district under 28 U.S.C.
§ 1391(b).
Parties
- Plaintiff Mainstream Loudoun is a non-profit, grassroots membership
organization based in Loudoun County, Virginia that is dedicated
to ensuring a free and open society that preserves religious and
personal freedom as established by the U.S. Constitution. The
mission of Mainstream Loudoun includes working to ensure that
the public libraries continue to provide information and resources
to serve the diverse needs of the entire community of Loudoun
County residents in their quest for knowledge, inspiration, enjoyment,
and excellence. Mainstream Loudoun sues on its own behalf and
on behalf of its members, who include teachers, authors, artists,
community leaders, volunteers, parents and grandparents of minors,
and other individuals who use the Loudoun County public libraries.
- Many Mainstream Loudoun members regularly depend on and use
the free and wide range of information and resources at the public
libraries. Many members already have attempted to use, or intend
to use the Internet and its vast resources at the public library
for these purposes. Mainstream Loudoun and its members have been
harmed and continue to be harmed by Defendants' Policy that blocks
their access to valuable information that would otherwise be available
to them, and that imposes privacy, stigma and other burdens on
their ability to access desired information Mainstream Loudoun's
members' individual interests in obtaining such information over
the Internet, and in not being subjected to unnecessary burdens
on their use of the library, are germane to the organizational
purpose of Mainstream Loudoun. Neither the claims asserted nor
the relief requested herein requires the participation of Mainstream
Loudoun's members in order to vindicate their individual rights.
- Plaintiffs Judy Coughlin, Henry Taylor, Ann M. Curley, Judith
Randal Hines, Loren Kropat, Mary C. DuChateau, Kathryn Kern-Levine,
Michael M. Clay, John S. White, Jerry Smith and Mary Adams (collectively,
"the individual Plaintiffs") are citizens of the United
States and the Commonwealth of Virginia, and, except for Ms. DuChateau,
residents of Loudoun County, Virginia. All of the individual Plaintiffs
use the public libraries and are harmed by Defendants' Policy
for several reasons, including but not limited to the following:
- they have been and will be denied access to a substantial amount
of otherwise available, constitutionally protected information
and have been relegated to viewing even less information than
what is suitable for children;
- they are deprived of the ability
to choose for themselves and their families what constitutionally
protected information they can read in the public libraries; and
- they have been burdened and inhibited significantly in their
use of the Internet because, among other reasons, the Policy intentionally
deprives library Internet users of privacy, requires library staff
to monitor Internet use, and imposes potential criminal sanctions
on users whom library staff believe have violated the Policy.
- Plaintiff Judy Coughlin has been a Loudoun County resident
for 26 years and is a member of the Rust Library Advisory Board.
Ms. Coughlin is employed as a technical writer at Sprint Corporation
and also does freelance writing and editing in her own time. Ms.
Coughlin has two children who have graduated from Loudoun County
schools and was active in the Parent Teachers Association while
her children were in school. Ms. Coughlin was diagnosed with breast
cancer in 1996 and has used and intends to continue to use the
Internet at the public library for up-to-date research on breast
cancer and breast reconstruction information and treatments. Defendants'
Policy harms Ms. Coughlin by denying her full access to valuable
information that she would like to obtain and by the lack of privacy
of having the terminals placed out in the open without privacy
screens which inhibits her ability to view sensitive medical and
other information.
- Plaintiff Henry Taylor is a native of Loudoun County who attended
county public schools through the ninth grade and has resided
in the county for the last 18 years. Mr. Taylor is a writer, poet,
and professor of literature and writing, who has published several
books and received a Pulitzer Prize in 1986 for one of his books
of poetry, The Flying Change. Professor Taylor regularly
uses the Purcellville and Rust libraries for research, teaching,
and personal learning, and has already been harmed in his use
of the Internet at the public libraries for these purposes by
the blocking of constitutionally protected information as a result
of Defendants' Policy.
- Plaintiff Ann M. Curley has lived with her husband in Loudoun
County for over 13 years, has three children and three grandchildren.
Ms. Curley has had a long career in public service including working
over 5 years in the Loudoun County's Sheriff's office, serving
as President of local League of Women Voters chapters in two communities,
and working over 15 years for the federal government in areas
that include equal opportunity, sexual harassment and women's
programs. Ms. Curley and her husband go to the Loudoun County
public library often for research and educational purposes, and
have used and plan to use the Internet for these purposes. While
they own a computer, Ms. Curley and her husband do not have Internet
access at home and thus can only access the Internet and its resources
at the public libraries. Ms. Curley is harmed by Defendants' Policy
because it prevents her and her family from choosing to have unfiltered
access to the Internet consistent with their family values.
- Plaintiff Judith Randal Hines has lived in Loudoun County
with her husband for over ten years. Ms. Hines, who currently
is a freelance science journalist, has worked for several newspapers
as a science reporter and served as past president of the National
Association of Science Writers and a board member of the Council
for the Advancement of Science Writing. In addition, Ms. Hines
has been active in the community as a graduate of the Leadership
Loudoun program and serving as a member of the Board of the Preservation
Society of Loudoun County for more than ten years. Ms. Hines uses
the Loudoun County public libraries frequently for both professional
and personal educational purposes and has used the Internet for
work purposes and plans to do so in the future. Many government
and other documents of interest to Ms. Hines for her work are
now available only through the Internet. Defendants' Policy injures
her ability to receive information and to do so in a timely fashion
via the Internet.
- Plaintiff Loren Kropat has resided in Loudoun County for 18
years and is a member of the Purcellville Town Council. Mr. Kropat
and his wife have two children, a son who is thirteen years old
and a daughter who is nine. Mr. Kropat is a regular and frequent
user of the Purcellville Library, visiting over 50 times a year.
Mr. Kropat and his children use the Internet for research and
educational purposes. Mr. Kropat and his daughter already have
used and they and his son also plan to use the Internet at the
public library. Mr. Kropat is harmed by not having access to constitutionally
protected and valuable information for his research and educational
purposes and by the lack of privacy caused by Defendant's policy
of locating the computer terminals in the open and having librarians
monitor their use, thus inhibiting his research into business
matters, medical information affecting his family, and other personal
matters. Mr. Kropat has already been harmed by not being able
to access a number of desired research sites that contain constitutionally
protected information when using the Internet at the public library.
Mr. Kropat also has been harmed by not being permitted to decide
as a parent what information his children can read over the Internet
in the public libraries.
- Plaintiff Mary C. DuChateau has worked in the Loudoun County
public school system for over 20 years, first as a substitute
teacher and then two years as a history and government teacher
and then over 20 years as a School Library Media Specialist. As
a professional librarian with a Masters Degree in Library Sciences,
Ms. DuChateau is particularly concerned about how Defendants'
Internet Policy will harm teachers in researching and formulating
lesson plans and assignments and how it will harm students who
are learning how to use the Internet to research and complete
school assignments. Ms. DuChateau also is especially worried about
the competitive disadvantage that Loudoun students will be put
in academically and professionally as compared to their peers
in other localities, most all of which permit open access to the
Internet's resources. Ms. DuChateau has used the Internet at the
Sterling Branch public library. While trying to research controversial
topics that have been assigned in the past by teachers at Park
View High School, Ms. DuChateau found that much useful non-pornographic
information for students was blocked by the X-Stop software.
- Plaintiff Kathryn A. Kern-Levine and her husband have lived
in Loudoun County since late 1993. Ms. Kern-Levine has served
as Secretary of the Parents Teacher Association and a regular
volunteer at her son's public school in Leesburg. Ms. Kern-Levine
worked as a Child Development Program Assistant for the United
States Navy in California and ran a licensed child care business
in Loudoun County from 1995 to 1997. In addition, Ms. Kern-Levin
has served on the Loudoun County Public Schools Textbook Selection
Committee, has been active in her local temple, and has volunteered
many hours at the Loudoun County Abused Women's Shelter. Ms. Kern-Levine
is harmed by defendants' policy both in the limitations on her
own use of the Internet and because the policy deprives her as
a parent from choosing to permit her son to use unfiltered Internet
access at the public libraries where he works on school reports
and assignments.
- Plaintiff Michael M. Clay and his wife have resided in Loudoun
County for ten years and his ancestors date back to Loudoun County
for over 200 years. Mr. Clay and his wife have two sons, ages
nine and five, who attend Loudoun County public schools. Mr. Clay
is a sculptor currently employed at a bronze foundry located in
Leesburg, Virginia. Mr. Clay frequently uses the Internet in connection
with his work to obtain information on art history, art processes,
and gallery opportunities. Mr. Clay, his wife who is a teacher,
and his eldest son use the Internet for research, school and personal
interests such as their son's interests in sports, aviation, and
automobiles. Mr. Clay is harmed by Defendants' Policy because
it deprives him of valuable information for work and personal
learning, and because it deprives him as a parent of the ability
to decide what information his sons can read over the Internet
in the public libraries.
- Plaintiff John S. White has resided in Loudoun County for
over 20 years. He and his wife have an 18 year old daughter who
just entered college. Mr. White is a professional firefighter
and currently serves as a battalion Chief in a large, northern
Virginia municipal fire department where he has worked for over
25 years. Mr. White also is a Vietnam Veteran. Mr. White does
not have a computer or Internet access at his home and has used
and plans to use the Internet at Loudoun County public libraries.
Defendants' Policy has already harmed Mr. White when he was blocked
from obtaining information over the Internet at the Loudoun County
public library, including a book dealing with the issue of sexual
content and the law of cyberspace, for educational and personal
purposes.
- Plaintiff Jerome J. Smith has resided with his wife in Loudoun
County for over 20 years. Mr. Smith and his wife have a daughter
who is 15 years old who attends a Loudoun County public high school
and uses the public libraries for school and personal educational
purposes. Mr. and Mrs. Smith are both teachers in Loudoun County
public high schools. Mr. Smith teaches physical education, CPR,
and other courses at Broad Run High School and coaches the school's
football team. Mr. Smith uses the public library for professional
and educational purposes and he and his daughter intend to use
the Internet at the public library for these same purposes. Mr.
Smith is injured by Defendants' Policy because it prevents him
from having full access to the Internet at the library and from
deciding with his family what information his daughter may or
may not read on the Internet at the public library.
- Plaintiff Mary Adams has resided in Loudoun County for ten
years. Ms. Adams has four children, three of whom live in Loudoun
County, and nine grandchildren, of whom four live in the county.
Two of her grandsons, ages ten and eight, live with Ms. Adams
and attend Loudoun County public schools. Ms. Adams has no computer
or Internet access at home. Ms. Adams' grandsons use the public
libraries for school assignments and other educational purposes
and will use the Internet at the public libraries for these same
purposes. Ms. Adams is injured by Defendants' Policy because it
prevents her and her family from being able to choose unfiltered
access to the Internet's resources for her grandchildren consistent
with their family values.
- Defendant Board of Trustees of The Loudoun County Public Library
("the Board") is a governmental entity responsible for
oversight of the Loudoun County Public Library ("the Library")
and which adopted the Policy at issue in this case. Defendants
John J. Nicholas, Jr., Spencer D. Ault, Richard H. Black, Chris
Howlett and Mary Ellen VanNederynen are members of the Board who
voted to adopt the Policy. Defendant Nicholas is the Board's Chairman.
Defendant Douglas Henderson is the Director of Library Services
and is responsible for the operation of the Library and implementation
of the Policy. The individual Board members are sued here in their
official and personal capacities. Defendant Henderson is sued
here in his official capacity.
Facts
The Nature of the Internet
- As the United States Supreme Court explained earlier this
year, the Internet is a unique and wholly new medium of worldwide
human communication. Any person with access to the Internet may
take advantage of a wide variety of communication and information
retrieval methods. This unique medium, known to its users as cyberspace,
is located in no particular geographical location, but is available
to anyone, anywhere in the world with access. It is no exaggeration
to conclude that the content of the Internet is as diverse as
human thought. Reno v. ACLU, 117 S. Ct. 2329, 2334-35 (1997).
- The Internet is a "network of networks" that links
millions of host computers around the world. Each host computer
on the Internet may be linked to smaller local networks, such
as office networks, that typically link several computers, or
to individual computers that connect over conventional phone lines.
Although the Internet originated with research funding provided
by the Department of Defense, the private sector took over control
of maintaining the Internet in April 1995. It has been estimated
that more than 50 million people use the Internet today and that
by the year 2000, up to 200 million people will use the Internet.
- Despite the growth of the Internet, many people do not own
or cannot afford a personal computer. The only access available
for many people will be in a public institution, such as a library.
Some surveys have found that, after individual households, public
libraries represent the location where most people gain access
to the Internet. Many communities and local libraries provide
free access to the Internet.
- The best known category of communications over the Internet
is the World Wide Web, which allows users to search for and retrieve
information stored in remote computers. The Web consists of a
vast number of documents stored in different computers all over
the world. It has been estimated that there are at least 300 million
Web pages available to Internet users, and the number is growing
rapidly. Further estimates suggest that several thousand pages
are added to the World Wide Web every day.
- As the District Court in ACLU v. Reno concluded, the
Web "was created to serve as the platform for a global, online
store of knowledge, containing information from a diversity of
sources and accessible to Internet users around the world. Though
information on the Web is contained in individual computers, the
fact that each of these computers is connected to the Internet
through [World Wide Web] protocols allows all of the information
to become part of a single body of knowledge." ACLU v.
Reno, 929 F. Supp. 824, 836 (E.D. Pa. 1996) (finding of fact
#34), aff'd, 117 S. Ct. 2329 (1997).
- Web pages are accessed on a computer by a software application
called a "browser." To access the Web over a browser,
the user types in the address for a particular Web page, called
the Uniform Resource Locator ("URL"). When a Web page
appears on the browser, the user may access other information
at that site, or may access other Web sites by clicking on highlighted
text, known as hypertext links. Links on a Web page are used to
lead from overview documents to more detailed documents, from
tables of contents to particular pages, and also as cross-references,
footnotes and new forms of information structure.
- Many organizations now have "home pages" on the
Web. These are documents which provide a set of links designed
to represent the organization, and through links from the home
page, guide the user directly or indirectly to information about,
or relevant to, that organization. Entities that publish information
on the Internet include government agencies, educational institutions,
commercial entities, advocacy groups and individuals. Web publishing
is simple enough that thousands of individual users and small
community organizations publish their own Web pages. Mainstream
Loudoun publishes a Web page located at www.loudoun.net/mainstream/.
- A variety of systems allow users of the Web to search for
particular information among all of the public sites that are
part of the Web. Services such as Yahoo, Magellan, Alta Vista,
Webcrawler, Lycos and Info Seek provide services called "search
engines" that allow users to search for Web sites that contain
certain categories of information. Through the use of key words,
the search engine will display a list of Web sites that potentially
contain the desired information. The user can then follow the
individual links, browsing through the information at each site
until the desired material is found.
- Although the Internet has no centralized control point, from
the user's perspective it appears to be a "single, integrated
system." Unlike most computer database systems, the computers
on the World Wide Web are "linked together into a single
whole." ACLU v. Reno, 929 F. Supp. at 838 (findings
of fact #46-47). "Links from one computer to another from
one document to another across the Internet, are what unify the
Web into a single body of knowledge, and what makes the Web unique."
Id. at 836-837.
- The Supreme Court found that the Web is comparable, from the
reader's viewpoint, to a vast library including millions of readily
available and indexed publications. Reno v. ACLU, 117 S.
Ct. at 2335.
- Access to most Web pages is freely available, but some pages
limit access only to those who have purchased the right from a
commercial provider.
- There is a trend for certain documents to be produced only
in electronic form and not in print. A growing number of government
documents are no longer available in paper form but are accessible
on the Internet. For such documents, accessibility by the public
requires Internet access.
- Sexually oriented material is available on the Internet, ranging
from the modestly titillating to very explicit material. Measured
in terms of total content on the Internet, such sexually explicit
material represents far less than one percent. The percentage
of sexually explicit material represents a declining proportion
of total material available on the Internet.
- Such sexually explicit material includes far more than what
might be characterized colloquially as "pornography."
The Supreme Court identified various examples of this, including
nude photographs by Edward Weston and Robert Mapplethorpe posted
by the UCR/California Museum of Photography, and safer sex instructions
that the Critical Path posts to its Web site, written in street
language so that teenagers can understand them. Reno v. ACLU,
117 S. Ct. at 2336.
- Although the Supreme Court found that sexually explicit material
is widely available, it also concluded that users seldom encounter
such material accidentally. Almost all sexually explicit images
are preceded by warnings as to the content. Accordingly, the Court
found that odds are slim that a user would enter a sexually explicit
site by accident.
- The Internet provides information on topics that might be
considered offensive or harmful by some that has nothing to do
with pornography. Such information might include graphic anti-abortion
imagery, sites depicting surgical procedures, sites opposing vivi-section,
anti-war displays and other such sites.
- The Internet provides information on topics that include sensitive
or personal information that a user would not want to share with
all other library patrons or staff in the vicinity of the computer
terminal. Such information might include information on mental
health, medical conditions, divorce, adoption, drug dependency,
alcoholism, religion, sexual practices, AIDS and other sexually-transmitted
diseases, personal finances and many other topics.
- The Internet is a medium of speech entitled to full First
Amendment protection. In Reno v. ACLU, 117 S. Ct. 2329
(1997), the Supreme Court held that two provisions of the Communications
Decency Act ("CDA") that restricted speech upon the
Internet violated the First Amendment. In so doing, the Court
determined that there is no basis for qualifying the level of
First Amendment scrutiny that should be applied to the Internet
and, in fact, the Court applied its most stringent form of First
Amendment review to the CDA.
- The Supreme Court found that lack of precision in the regulation
of Internet content was a matter of special concern. The Court
found that an imprecise standard would cover large amounts of
non-pornographic material that has serious educational or other
value, that such regulation would fail to take into account local
community standards, and that it would lead to censorship of such
subject matter as "any of the seven 'dirty words' used in
the [FCC v.] Pacifica [Foundation] monologue, . . . discussions
about prison rape or safe sexual practices, artistic images that
include nude subjects, and arguably the card catalogue of the
Carnegie Library." Reno v. ACLU, 117 S. Ct. at 2344,
2348. The Court was also concerned that an uncertain standard
would affect discussion of subjects such as birth control practices
and homosexuality.
Content Blocking Software
- Software filters are computer programs that block access to
Internet sites.
- Although there are several types of content filters, one popular
type is known as a stand-alone proprietary filtering system. Such
a system employs computer software that works in conjunction with
a Web browser to block specified types of information. Stand-alone
filters block sites based on criteria provided by the filtering
software vendor.
- All Web content rating systems depend on the exercise of subjective
human judgment to decide what content is acceptable and what is
unacceptable.
- Stand-alone proprietary blocking software prevents access
to content on the Internet in one of two ways. One method is to
block lists of unacceptable sites. The second method blocks sites
based on specified key words. Software filters, whether based
on site-blocking or key word blocking, are designed solely to
block access to information and specific content or viewpoints.
- Site-based blocking software operates by blocking specified
categories of Internet content established by the software vendor.
Some Internet filtering software products block as few as six
categories of information, while others block up to 29 or more
categories. Blocked categories may include hate speech, criminal
activity, sexually explicit information, "adult" information,
information on violence, or information on alternative lifestyles,
such as homosexuality. Lists of unacceptable sites are compiled
and maintained by the filtering software vendor.
- Some software filtering vendors employ individuals to decide
which sites should be blocked. Other blocking software vendors
use automated tools to identify which sites to block. These methods
may be used in combination.
- Filtering software vendors that employ site-based blocking
generally treat their blocking criteria as a trade secret. Accordingly,
most vendors do not reveal their list of blocked sites. Filtering
software that employs site-based blocking must be updated constantly
to keep up with changes in content available on the Internet.
- Key word-based content filtering uses text searches to classify
objectionable sites. If a site contains an unacceptable word or
phrase, it is blocked by the filter. Content blocking software
also may function to limit the ability of a search engine to retrieve
a listing of Web sites in response to a search request.
- Filtering software that uses key words cannot evaluate the
context in which those words are used. For example, some software
filters that use key words have blocked access to the White House
Web site because it used the word "couples." Such software
has also blocked information relating to breast cancer because
of the word "breast."
- Filtering software blocks access to Internet content in advance
of any judicial test of the legal status of the blocked information
and without any assessment by a court or jury as to local community
standards.
The Loudoun County Public Library
- The Loudoun County public library system serves the population
of Loudoun County, Virginia through six branches as well as outreach
services. Library branches are located in Leesburg, Cascades,
Purcellville, Sterling, Lovettsville and Middleburg. In 1997,
approximately 966,000 citizens visited Loudoun County libraries
and checked out more than 1.7 million books, magazines, videos,
audiocassettes and CDs. In November 1997, the library began to
offer Internet access through nine public terminals located at
the six branches.
- As the library's governing body, the Board has adopted policies
with respect to the development of library resources and use thereof
by patrons. A policy entitled "Freedom for Ideas -- Freedom
From Censorship" was adopted by the Board on May 15, 1995
and reaffirmed on January 27, 1997. The policy quotes the First
Amendment to the United States Constitution, and states that "[t]his
guarantees to the American people that all ideas can be promulgated
and are available to all who seek them." The policy contains
a number of specific propositions, including, in relevant part:
(1) "It is in the public interest to maintain a library collection
in various media, offering the widest possible diversity of views
and expressions. The selection and development of the Library
collection is not to be diminished because minors might have access
to materials with controversial content;" (2) "Materials
shall not be excluded from the collection because of the nature
of the information or views presented therein, nor the political
orientation of their content. Furthermore, materials shall not
be excluded because of the moral, religious or political beliefs
of their writer, publisher or film maker, nor does their inclusion
in the collection imply endorsement of all the ideas presented
therein;" (3) "[T]he rights and responsibilities of
parents or legal guardians will neither be abridged nor assumed
by the library system;" and (4) "Censorship of ideas
will be rejected and opposed by the library system."
- A "Policy on Collection Development" was revised
on January 23, 1995 and reaffirmed on January 27, 1997. According
to that policy, it is "[t]he goal of Loudoun Public Libraries
. . . to provide the citizens of Loudoun County with a range of
materials in a variety of print and non-print formats to meet
their informational, cultural, educational, and recreational needs
and interests." The collection policy expressly endorses
the "Freedom For Ideas -- Freedom From Censorship" policy,
and adds that "[i]ndividual use of library materials is a
private and personal matter. All citizens are free to reject for
themselves materials of which they may disapprove; no citizen
may restrict the freedom of use and access for others." The
policy adds that "[r]esponsibility for the reading, listening,
and viewing of library materials by children rests with their
parents or legal guardians and not with the library staff. Selection
of library materials is not inhibited by the possibility that
materials may come into the possession of children."
- A "Policy on Confidentiality" was revised by the
Board on February 26, 1996 and reaffirmed on January 27, 1997.
The policy provides that "[c]onfidentiality of all patrons'
library use will be maintained. In the case of children under
17, parents and/or legal guardians shall have complete access
to their minor child's records in order that unnecessary obstacles
will not be placed between parent and child by the library."
Development of Library's Internet Policy
- At some time in spring, 1997, Defendant Henderson began making
arrangements for the initiation of public Internet access in the
Loudoun County Library system.
- At the Board's May 19, 1997 meeting, Defendant Henderson reported
to the Board on developments relating to Internet access and presented
to the Board a proposed Internet policy that would have provided
unrestricted access to the Internet at the Library. The draft
policy stated that "[i]n providing access to the Internet,
the Loudoun County Public Library subscribes to and fully supports
the FREEDOM FOR IDEAS -- FREEDOM FROM CENSORSHIP
policy adopted by the Loudoun County Public Library's Board of
Trustees." (emphasis in original). At its May 19, 1997 meeting,
the Board formed an Internet Policy Committee to consider issues
relating to Internet access in Loudoun County public libraries.
- Defendant Black handed out a formal statement opposing the
proposed Internet use policy at the May 19, 1997 Board meeting
which demonstrated that he had reached his final conclusions regarding
the policy prior to any committee deliberations. Among other things,
Defendant Black wrote, "I'm certain the Board does not wish
to use tax dollars to subsidize 'child pornography, bestiality,
violence, and Nazi images,' such as those for which one Compuserve
official now faces probable indictment by German authorities."
- The proposed Internet policy was made available for public
comment. The Internet Policy Committee received public comments
on the proposed policy in meetings on June 11 and 12, 1997. The
Board discussed the proposed Internet policy and public comments
regarding the proposal at its June 16, 1997 meeting, but did not
formally vote on the policy.
- In the course of evaluating the proposed policy, representatives
of the Internet Policy Committee contacted at least fifteen other
libraries in the State of Virginia. None of the library systems
contacted had adopted an Internet policy that required the use
of blocking software.
- None of the libraries contacted by Loudoun County had experienced
a significant problem with patrons seeking to access "pornography."
Only one library reported a single incident of a patron taking
offense. That library solved the problem by installing "privacy
screens" on Internet access terminals to prevent patrons
other than the one using the computer from viewing information
on the screen.
- In a July 17, 1997 letter to the Board, Plaintiff Mainstream
Loudoun strongly supported the proposed Internet policy drafted
by Defendant Henderson. The letter said that "[i]f the Library
Board decides to install filtering software, it should be offered
as an optional tool for patrons to request." The letter added
that "[i]ndividual library patrons have the right to decide
what they and their children access on the Internet, not the government
and not private industry." Plaintiff Mainstream Loudoun also
wrote to the board in support of a proposed Internet policy that
would have required minors to obtain written parental permission
before being allowed to use library computers for Internet access
without filtering software. Mainstream Loudoun's proposed policy
further provided that adults would be granted Internet access
without software filters, unless an individual patron requested
such filtering be activated.
- On July 21, 1997, the Board adopted an "Internet Use
Policy" (hereinafter, "the initial policy"). The
initial policy provided that the Library's computers would be
equipped with screening software designed to prevent access to
material that is indecent, creates a hostile environment, or "exposes
those of tender age to violent or sexually explicit text and imagery."
Under the initial policy, adults would have been able to obtain
unfiltered access to the Internet for a specific session upon
request to the library staff. The initial policy stated that minors
could obtain unfiltered Internet access only if a parent or legal
guardian gave permission and was physically present with the minor
for the duration of that specific session.
- The Board adopted the initial policy over the objection of
the Director of Library Services.
- On September 3, 1997, Mainstream Loudoun sent a letter to
Chairman Nicholas and all the members of the Library Board detailing
the various constitutional and policy problems with the newly
adopted Internet Use Policy and urging the Board to reconsider
and rescind the policy. In the letter, Mainstream Loudoun reiterated
its less restrictive proposal that would permit adults and parents
to decide for themselves and their children whether to choose
filtered or unfiltered access to the Internet in the public libraries
consistent with individual choice and family values.
- At a public meeting held on September 15, 1997, the Board
voted to reconsider the initial policy. At the same meeting, the
Board considered, but did not vote upon, another proposal under
which Library computers would be "equipped with screening
software that attempts to avoid obscene or unlawful materials."
As with the July 21, 1997 policy, this proposal called for placing
Internet computer terminals "in full public view of library
staff to discourage inappropriate use."
- On or about October 16, 1997, Defendant Black circulated to
certain Board members a draft policy entitled "Policy on
Internet Sexual Harassment." The draft policy was proposed
for consideration at the October 20, 1997 Board meeting. Defendant
Black has stated that he was assisted in drafting the Policy by
the National Law Center for Children and Families.
- On October 19, 1997 James Burton, a member of the Loudoun
County Board of Supervisors, and ex-officio member of the Library
Board, sent a memorandum to Library Board members regarding the
proposed Internet policy. The memorandum reminded Board members
that as public officials they must comply with constitutional
requirements and stated that "the draft policy proposed by
Mr. Black does precisely what the Supreme Court says cannot legally
be done. If I read Mr. Black's proposal correctly, he would employ
filtering software, with no option to turn it off, that restricts
protected as well as unprotected speech with the net effect of
reducing the material that is available to adults to the level
of what is appropriate for children." In his October 19,
1997 memorandum to the members of the Library Board, Supervisor
Burton stated that "despite claims to the contrary, no software
exists that would block all unprotected speech and only unprotected
speech. In other words, material that should be blocked will get
through, and material that legally should not be blocked, will
be blocked."
- In his October 19, 1997 memo to the Board, Supervisor Burton
suggested that "it would be prudent to seek formal legal
counsel with respect to any policy you choose before it becomes
official." He added "I strongly recommend that you ask
the County Attorney and/or an outside expert to review whatever
policy you develop."
- At its October 20, 1997 public meeting, the Board voted to
adopt the current "Policy on Internet Sexual Harassment"
("the Policy"), drafted by Defendant Black. The Policy
was adopted by a vote of 5 to 4. Defendants Nicholas, Black, Ault,
and VanNederynen voted to adopt the policy. A copy of the Policy
is attached hereto.
- Various Board members stated at the October 20, 1997 meeting
that there had been inadequate time to consider the Policy adopted
at that meeting.
- The Policy provides that Internet filtering software designed
to block access to specific sites on the Internet "will be
installed on all computers."
- The Policy states that the filtering software will "to
the extent technically feasible" block "child pornography
and obscene material (hard core pornography)" and "material
deemed Harmful to Juveniles under applicable Virginia statutes
and legal precedents (soft core pornography)."
- The Policy does not define the terms "child pornography,"
"obscene material," "hard core pornography,"
"material Harmful to Juveniles," or "soft core
pornography."
- The Policy states that the Library's computers will be placed
"in close proximity to, and in full view of, library staff"
so that staff can monitor use of the Internet by Library patrons.
- The Policy asserts that allowing Library patrons unrestricted
access to the Internet could create a sexually hostile environment
in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
- The Policy does not allow an adult to access the Internet
without blocking software under any circumstances. Even with the
blocking software, library users under age 18 must obtain written
permission before using the library Internet terminals.
- Library patrons who seek to access prohibited information
under the Policy will be told by library staff that they are in
violation, and if they continue, will be told to leave the library.
If such patrons do not leave, the Policy states that they will
be considered in trespass and police will be called to remove
them from the premises.
- Defendants Black and Nicholas both stated at the October 20,
1997 Board meeting that filtering software is "not perfect."
Defendant Nicholas acknowledged that some "pornographic"
material would evade the filter and that some constitutionally
protected material would be blocked.
- On October 22, 1997, after the Board adopted the Internet
policy, Supervisor Burton sent a memo to other members of the
Loudoun County Board of Supervisors regarding the Internet Policy.
In the memorandum, Supervisor Burton stated: "Our County
Attorney attended the Trustee's Meeting Monday evening to give
advice if asked. Mr. Roberts [the County Attorney] was asked no
questions, either at the meeting or prior to it at any time, about
the legality or wisdom of Trustee Black's proposed policy which
had been introduced for the first time that evening." Supervisor
Burton added that "[n]o attempt was made to seek outside
legal advice even though I had requested Trustees to do so."
- Defendants either refused to consider or rejected less restrictive
alternatives for achieving its purported objectives. For example,
the Board refused to consider the proposal made on several occasions
by Mainstream Loudoun, including during public session at Board
meetings and in the September 3, 1997 letter referenced above,
that would require written parental permission for minors to have
unfiltered Internet access and would permit adults and parents
to decide for themselves and for their children whether to choose
filtered or unfiltered access to the Internet in the public libraries.
In addition, with respect to the current policy's stated concerns
about sexual harassment, even if the mere presence of something
on a computer screen that was offensive to an employee could somehow
be considered harassment, defendants failed to consider any alternatives
such as placing the computer terminals in a private location or
utilizing "privacy screens" that would prevent employees
and patrons not using the Internet from viewing a user's computer
screen. To the contrary, defendants' Policy directly undermines
the purported objectives relating to "sexual harassment"
by requiring that the Internet computer terminals be placed "in
close proximity to, and in full view of" library staff and
by requiring that library staff monitor use of the Internet to
identify, stop, and, if necessary, eject violators by calling
the police to remove them for criminal trespass.
- Supervisor Burton's October 22, 1997 memorandum to the County
Board of Supervisors noted that the Library Board's rejection
of alternatives to software filters "suggest very strongly
that something other than removing pornography from accessibility
is the issue driving this policy."
Implementation of the Policy
- In late November 1997, the Library Director selected a vendor
for content blocking software and installed the blocking software
on library computers before making Internet access available to
the public in the Loudoun County library system.
- The library administration selected blocking software called
X-Stop. X-Stop is a product created and sold by Log-On Data Corporation
("Log-On"), whose principal place of business is located
at 4175 East La Palma Avenue, Suite 130, Anaheim, CA 92807. Promotional
material for Log-On Data Corporation states that all management
personnel of the company are graduate engineers, scientists, or
researchers.
- The version of X-Stop installed on library computers is designated
"X-Stop 95/NT v.3.0."
- Various groups that support Internet censorship have advocated
the use of X-Stop in public libraries on a nationwide basis. Enough
is Enough has endorsed the use of content blocking software in
general, and X-Stop specifically. The American Family Association
announced that it formed an alliance with Log-On Data Corporation
to promote X-Stop as an Internet content blocking tool.
- One method that X-Stop uses to block access to information
on the Internet is through a list of specific Web sites that are
blocked. Log-On adds Websites to its blocking list for X-Stop
by use of a computerized searching program it calls MudCrawler.
Log-On describes MudCrawler as a "propriety automation system"
that is "a combination of virtual entities that Log-On Data
Corp. has perfected to search the Internet for hard-core pornography
and other offensive addresses." The company claims that X-Stop
has the largest available hard-core pornography and other offensive
site blocking library. Promotional material for Log-On states
that X-Stop "is not a filter but a combination of 16 technological
devices which effectively and reliably screen out hard-core pornography
and other offensive sites on the Internet."
- The rating system used by Log-On to implement X-STOP blocking
software is proprietary and is a trade secret of Log-On. Web sites
identified by MudCrawler are assessed by employees of Log-On who
determine if the site is "pornographic." Log-On claims
to access thousands of new Web sites each week to add sites to
its blocked list.
- Promotional material for Log-On claims to have created a library
of blocked sites that includes "over 50,000 in the categories
included in the librarian version of X-Stop." Promotional
material for Log-On asserts that the librarian edition of X-Stop
"is equipped only with the 'felony load' of blocked addresses,
so that only sites qualifying under the Miller [v. California]
standard are blocked." Promotional material for Log-On claims
that the librarian edition of X-Stop only blocks Web sites that
show sexual acts, bestiality, and child pornography. It claims
that "[l]egimate art or education sites are not blocked by
the library edition, nor are so-called "soft porn" or
"R"-rated sites."
- Promotional material for Log-On states that the foremost way
in which almost all users of the Internet retrieve information
is through the use of search engines. It adds that "[w]ithout
the use of Internet search engines, meaningful retrieval of relevant
information is almost an impossibility," and that "most
Internet filtering systems have not found a way in which to block
use of Internet search engines without completely eliminating
their use. Without the use of these search tools, effective, positive,
productive use of the Internet can quickly become an impossibility.
It is absolutely essential to have these tools available."
- A second way that X-Stop blocks access to Internet information
relates to the use of Internet search engines. Promotional information
for Log-On states that X-Stop also includes a search engine monitor.
It describes the monitor as "an intuitive proximity logic
device." Log-On states that: "X-Stop knows when the
user is entering an Internet search engine. Normally, 'OK' words
are not always 'OK' in key word searches. The X-Stop device monitors
most, if not all, of the world's Internet search engines. Any
attempt to use words that have been found to lead to danger, indecent
or offensive material is blocked. X-Stop in effect allows only
wholesome searches."
- On or about October 6, 1997, an article by Jonathan Wallace
appeared on the Web site "The Ethical Spectacle" (www.spectacle.org)
entitled "The X-Stop Files." The article listed a number
of Web sites blocked by the "felony load" X-Stop librarian
edition including sites hosted by the Society of Friends, the
Banned Books page at Carnegie Mellon University, the American
Association of University Women, the AIDS Quilt Site, the Heritage
Foundation Web site, the University of Chicago's Fileroom Project,
which tracks acts of censorship around the world, and numerous
others.
- On November 20, 1997, Supervisor James Burton sent a memo
to the county board of supervisors entitled "Censorship on
Library Internet Computers." In the memorandum Supervisor
Burton stated that "[d]uring the library staff evaluation,
the X-STOP software blocked 57 sites that had nothing to do with
pornography; sites that contain speech protected by the First
Amendment. One of those blocked sites was the Quaker Home Page
at www.quaker.org. As an experiment, I went to that site on the
net and found the attached piece written by Jonathan Wallace."
- The article by Jonathan Wallace to which Supervisor Burton
referred in his November 20, 1997 memorandum was the article described
in paragraph 96 above which listed non-pornographic Web sites
blocked by X-STOP.
- In his November 20, 1997 memorandum to the County Board of
Supervisors, Supervisor Burton stated that "[i]t has been
and continues to be my fear that at least some of those who are
advocating blocking software for our libraries eventually wish
to impose censorship on a broad spectrum of ideas and information
with which they disagree, regardless of whether or not those ideas
and information are protected by the First Amendment. I believe
pornography has been merely used as an excuse to establish the
structure by which this censorship can be imposed, with that structure
being software controlled by unnamed individuals with unknown
political, social, cultural and moral beliefs in a company in
California."
- Local press accounts revealed that the blocking software in
the Loudoun County library system blocked non-pornographic Web
sites, including the home page for the Society of Friends.
- In the wake of press reports about the use of X-Stop in the
Loudoun County libraries, Mike Bradshaw, Chief Executive Officer
of Log-On was contacted about the blocking of harmless Web sites.
- Mr. Bradshaw stated that the inappropriate blocking of non-pornographic
Web sites was caused by "human error." Mr. Bradshaw
stated that X-Stop was designed to block access only to hard-core
pornographic sites, and not sites that are considered "soft-core"
material.
- In response to the press reports concerning inappropriate
blocking in the Loudoun County library system, Mr. Bradshaw contacted
a regional sales manager for Log-On who was attending a White
House Summit on Internet filtering in Washington, D.C. on December
2 and 3, 1997.
- The representative of Log-On visited the Loudoun County library
system as a result of this communication, and he unblocked a number
of Web sites on the Loudoun County system.
- Even after a number of Web sites were removed from the blocked
site list, Plaintiffs found that the X-Stop filter at Loudoun
County libraries continued to block a number of Web sites that
have nothing to do with pornography. Examples include the Yale
University biology graduate school Web site, the Zero Population
Growth Web site, a Web site for a Massachusetts Institute of Technology
course entitled "Ethics and Law on the Electronic Frontier,"
the Safer Sex education Web site and a Mormon Church Web site
on the prevention of masturbation. Although the Web site for the
American Association of University Women was removed from the
blocked list, the Web site for the American Association of University
Women -- Maryland continued to be censored.
Experience Under the Content Blocking Policy
- Loudoun County library patrons who wish to access the Internet
are required to sign a lengthy policy statement concerning the
Internet policy and sexual harassment. A special sticker is placed
on the library cards of patrons who sign the form.
- The Internet Policy and consent form that library patrons
must sign to gain Internet access repeats the term "pornography"
nine times. Because of the overriding emphasis of the consent
form and library policy on "pornography," the Loudoun
County procedures create the inference that anyone who receives
a violation message on an Internet terminal was attempting to
access illegal materials. Any attempt to gain access to a Web
site, or to conduct a search using a term banned by X-Stop causes
a "Violation" message to appear on the computer screen.
The message is clearly visible to other library patrons.
- Library patrons who wish to access the Internet are required
to present both a library card and a second piece of identification,
such as a driver's license.
- Library patrons who wish to access the Internet are required
to surrender their library cards to the staff while using the
computer terminals.
- Anyone under the age of 18 can use the library Internet terminals
only if a parent signs a consent form.
- The names of library patrons who use Internet access terminals
are recorded on a log by library staff. The log is kept at the
library reference desk and patrons' names may be freely observed
by others in the library.
- Library patrons who access the Internet are further required
to review the Internet policy on sexual harassment once on-line
and electronically agree to it before continuing with Internet
access.
- The computer terminals in the Loudoun County library system
are placed so that library staff, and other patrons, can easily
look at the computer screen over the user's shoulder and view
any information being accessed by the user.
- Printers attached to computer terminals also are placed so
that others may view any material that is printed by a library
patron accessing the Internet.
- The library staff actively monitors the usage of Internet
access terminals.
- Because library Internet access terminals are fully visible
to all onlookers, users are inhibited in their ability to access
information that involves personal or sensitive information. This
includes such matters as mastectomy reconstruction surgery, mental
health information, other medical information, matters of personal
finance, divorce, safe sex information, and other materials that
users may reasonably want to avoid sharing with all library patrons.
- Library patrons who seek to access a Website that is blocked
by X-Stop receive a message that reads "Violation!! Violation!!
Violation!! Access to this site has been blocked. Please click
on your bookmark to go to some other Website, Contact your Internet
or Network Coordinator if you believe this site should not be
blocked. X-Stop 95/NT - the Filter. X-Stop, division of Log-On
Data Corp."
- When the X-Stop message designating a blocked Web site appears
on a computer screen, it is freely visible to other library patrons
and to library staff.
- The X-Stop content blocking program in the Loudoun County
libraries has prevented access by Plaintiffs and other library
users to a large number of Web sites that would otherwise be available
and that are not even arguably pornographic, much less illegal.
Plaintiffs found that X-Stop blocked a significant number of non-pornographic
information such as the Web site for Atomic Books, the Web site
for the National Journal on Sexual Orientation Law, the Quaker
home page, and many others. Library patrons found that Websites
were blocked by X-Stop both when a URL was entered directly and
when they sought to access the site through a link from another
page.
- Plaintiffs and other users of the Loudoun County library system
also have had the use of search engines blocked by X-Stop. The
X-Stop program checks the words that are used in a search. If
the search terms violate the X-Stop "foul word" filter,
the program returns a message that reads "you have attempted
to use a search key word that has been blocked by X-Stop."
X-Stop replaces the word typed in by the user with asterisks and
causes the search engine to return zero hits in response to the
search.
- When the X-Stop message restricting the use of a search engine
appears on a computer screen, it is freely visible to other library
patrons and to library staff.
- Library patrons have found that the X-Stop foul word blocking
program monitors and checks each key stroke as a search term is
being typed. The program displays the "violation" message
immediately after a user types a space after a banned word. The
"foul word" filter also prevents searching for a URL
that includes a banned word.
- The "foul word" blocking function severely limits
access by Plaintiffs and other library users to information that
has nothing to do with pornography. For example, library patrons
have found that the X-Stop "foul word" blocking function
prevents a search that incorporates the word "pussy."
Consequently, the blocking function prevents searches for such
subjects as "pussy willows" and the "Owl and the
Pussy Cat."
- Library patrons similarly have found that the X-Stop "foul
word" blocking function prevents a search that incorporates
the word "bastard." Consequently, the blocking function
prevents searches for such books as 1992 National Book Award finalist,
"Bastard Out of Carolina," by Dorothy Allison, or the
American bicentennial novel, "The Bastard," by John
Jakes. The X-Stop blocking scheme censors material that is not
blocked in the non-Internet context. Both of these books are available
in the Loudoun County library system without any restrictions,
and may be accessed via the library's on-line card catalogue.
- The "foul word" blocking function disables search
engines that are generally available on the Web, as well as those
associated with on-line book stores, such as Amazon Books (www.amazon.com).
- There is no corresponding banned word feature on the Loudoun
County library's on-line card catalog. A user may search the card
catalog for any of the terms that X-Stop prohibits for an Internet
search. For example, the on-line card catalog permits searches
and provides hits for "pussy willow" and "The Owl
and the Pussy Cat."
- Defendants' blocking system does not in fact achieve its purported
goal of blocking all "pornographic" material. For example,
the X-Stop foul word filter does not block searches for such terms
as "69," "prick," "pecker," "dick,"
"blow job," "porn," or "nipple."
In addition, library patrons who used the Internet access terminals
in the Loudoun County library system found that certain sites
that arguably contain "pornography" were not blocked.
- The library staff makes available a "Request to Review
Blocked Site" form for library patrons who think that an
Internet site has been improperly blocked. Patrons are advised
that they may fill out the form and submit it to a reference librarian.
The form calls for the name, library bar-code and phone number
of the library patron and requires that the patron specify the
URL of the blocked Web site and to list specific reasons for objecting
to the block.
- Library patrons have been told that the library's policy does
not permit immediate removal of a block on a site that has been
inappropriately censored. Patrons have been informed that they
must fill out the "Request to Review Blocked Site" form
and submit it to the library staff. The form is reviewed by a
library committee to determine if its agree whether blocking of
the Web site is appropriate. If they agree with the library patron,
a request is sent to Log-On Data Corporation, which may or may
not remove the Web site blocking.
- Even the inadequate "Request to Review Blocked Site"
procedure deals only with Internet sites that users specifically
learn are being blocked. There is no method by which Plaintiffs
and other library patrons may find out about or even attempt to
deal with all of the other information and Web sites that are
automatically blocked by X-Stop.
Constitutional and Legal Violations
- Plaintiffs incorporate by reference paragraphs 1 through 130
above.
- The Policy is a content-based restriction upon speech subject
to strict scrutiny under the First Amendment.
- The Policy places a significant burden upon the right of library
users to receive otherwise available speech and information via
the Internet.
- The Policy blocks a substantial amount of speech that is not
obscene or otherwise constitutionally proscribable and that adults
have a right to receive. The effect of the Policy is to reduce
adults accessing the Internet at the Library to even less than
material suitable for children.
- The Policy is enforceable by criminal sanction and has a real
and substantial deterrent effect on protected expression.
- The policy fails to advance a compelling or substantial governmental
interest, including Defendants' purported interest with respect
to sexual harassment. Allowing users of a public library to access
the Internet without filtering software does not create a sexually
hostile environment or otherwise violate Title VII of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964, and a public library cannot be held liable
under Title VII for allowing its patrons to access material on
the Internet entitled to First Amendment protection.
- There are viable alternatives to the Policy that are substantially
less restrictive of the right to free speech.
- The Policy provides for suppression of speech without any
judicial determination that the speech is obscene or otherwise
unprotected by law.
- The Policy provides for suppression of speech on the basis
of determinations made by private, nongovernmental actors, and
on the basis of automated computer software.
- The Policy chills the willingness of persons to access the
Internet by providing for Library computers to be located in close
proximity to, and in full view of, Library staff and for Library
staff to monitor use of the computers.
- The Policy vests Library staff with unfettered and unreviewable
discretion to instruct persons accessing the Internet to refrain
from viewing certain material on the basis of the content of the
material and authority to eject such persons from the Library
if they refuse.
- The Policy is unconstitutionally vague.
- The Policy violates the Library Board's own adopted policies,
as referenced in paragraphs 57-59 above.
- The Policy violates the First and Fourteenth Amendments to
the United States Constitution.
- Because the Defendants, acting under color of state law, have
caused Plaintiffs to be deprived of their constitutional rights
pursuant to an official policy or custom and thereby proximately
caused injury to plaintiffs, the Defendants are liable under 42
U.S.C. § 1983.
Requested Relief
WHEREFORE, plaintiffs respectfully pray that this Court:
A. Declare that the Policy is unconstitutional;
B. Permanently enjoin Defendants from enforcing the Policy's requirements;
C. Award Plaintiffs such costs and fees as are allowed by law
pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988; and
D. Grant Plaintiffs such other and further relief as the Court
deems just and proper.
Respectfully submitted,
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