- I have been asked
to advise on whether a proposed new criminal offence relating to the
possession of extreme pornographic material is likely to be compatible
with the European Convention on Human Rights ("the Convention").
The proposals are set out in a consultation document produced by the
Home Office "On the possession of extreme pornographic material."
- The proposal is,
in essence, to outlaw the possession of explicit pornography (meaning
material that has been produced solely or primarily for the purpose
of sexual arousal or gratification),1 including all material,
whether via the internet or not,2 containing actual or realistic
depiction of:
- intercourse or oral
sex with an animal;
- sexual interference
with a human corpse;
- serious violence
in a sexual context; and
- serious sexual violence.
- "Serious violence"
in (c) is explained as covering "serious bodily harm in a context
or setting which is sexual". "Serious sexual violence" in (d)
is explained as involving or appearing to involve serious bodily harm
where the violence is sexual.3 The distinction and the necessity
for it are unclear, but I assume that (d) is intended to cover for example
rape, while (c) would cover bondage or beatings. "Serious bodily harm"
is meant to cover "violence in respect of which a prosecution for grievous
bodily harm could be brought in England and Wales or in Scotland, assault
to severe injury.4 In effect, the new provisions would make
it a criminal offence for an individual to possess pornography that
uses images of serious violence in a sexual context, whether acted or
real.
- The consultation
paper explains the use of the word "explicit" as meaning an "activity
which can be clearly seen and is not hidden, disguised or implied."
"Realistic depictions" are intended to "capture those scenes which
appear to be real and are convincing, but which may be acted." 5
- The consultation
paper states in the executive summary that the material in question
would be illegal to publish, sell or import here under the Obscene Publications
Acts 1959 and 1964 ("OPA") and in Scotland under the Civic Government
(Scotland) Act ("CG (S) A"). In the body of the paper, the Government
is not so categorical, stating only that it "believes" such material
would contravene the existing legislation6. That uncertainty
derives from two factors. First, the current legislation proscribes
"obscene" material that is, material that would tend to "deprave
or corrupt" persons who are likely to see or hear it,7
a test which depends on the likely audience as well as current moral
views and the jury's perception of the material; there can be no certainty
that a jury will find the material to be "obscene" or that it was likely
to deprave and corrupt its likely audience. Secondly, uncertainty arises
from the fact that the Government's favoured approach is to adopt a
new definition of prohibited material that would not necessarily coincide
with the definition of "obscene" in the current legislation.
- The Government's
preferred option is to create a new "free-standing" offence for
the possession of the limited categories of material described in paragraph
2 above (see option 3, set out at paragraphs 49-51 of the consultation
paper). This means that material which might not contravene the existing
legislation could be caught by the new measures. That view is reinforced
by the statement at paragraph 49 that anyone publishing or distributing
such material could be prosecuted for the new offence rather than under
the existing legislation. The consultation paper does not suggest that
there will be any "moral" test equivalent to the "deprave and
corrupt" test in respect of the material at issue. The possession
offence would be construed as it is in respect of indecent photographs
of children.8 Thus the offence would depend solely on proof
of possession of an image falling within the proscribed category, without
regard to its effect on that particular individual. It appears that
the test would be:
- Is the material
"pornography", that is: is it produced for the purposes of sexual arousal
or gratification ?
- Does it include
images falling within the definitions set out in paragraph 2 above ?
- If the images fall
within (c) or (d), is the violence (whether or not real) so serious
as to amount to grievous bodily harm ?
- Are the images "explicit"
that is, not hidden, disguised or implied ?
- If so, possession
would constitute a criminal offence.
- The underlying premise
for the new offence is that such material has no place in our society.9
The proposal seeks to tackle its circulation.10 The various
justifications for the proposed new offence found throughout the consultation
paper are as follows:
- a desire to protect
those who participate in the creation of sexual material containing
violence, cruelty or degradation, who may be the victims of crime in
the making of the material, whether or not they notionally or genuinely
consent to taking part;
- a desire to protect
society, particularly children, from exposure to such material, to which
access can no longer be reliably controlled through legislation dealing
with publication and distribution, which may encourage interest in violent
or aberrant sexual activity;11
- a desire to "send
a clear message about this material, [which] will make it easier to
combat it and may reduce demand for it;12
- a means of trying
to break the demand/supply cycle and to discourage interest in the material;13
- a belief that such
material may encourage or reinforce interest in violent and aberrant
sexual activity to the detriment of society as a whole, although there
are no "definite conclusions based on research as to the likely long
term impact of this kind of material on individuals generally, or on
those who may already be predisposed to violent or aberrant sexual behaviour;14
- the belief that
technological advancement, and in particular the availability of the
internet, has made it necessary to regulate possession of this material
since it is no longer possible to "rely on national norms of behaviour
or understanding, or on border controls to limit the kinds of material
consumed within the UK"15
The European Convention
on Human Rights
- The Government states
that it believes the proposed legislation would be compatible with Articles
8 and 10 of the Convention because the material covered is at the extreme
end of the spectrum, would be "abhorrent" to most people and because
the legislation would not restrict political expression or public interest
matters or artistic expression.16
- In my view that
analysis is not sufficient. There can be no doubt that the criminalisation
of the possession of pornographic material raises serious issues under
both Articles 8 and 10 of the Convention. Not only would an actual prosecution
for possession interfere with an individual's private life under Article
8 and right to receive information under Article 10, the threat of such
a prosecution would also be likely to constitute an interference with
those rights: Norris v
Ireland (1988) 13 EHRR
186 (para. 31); Bowman v
United Kingdom (1998) 26 EHRR 1 (para. 33). Accordingly, the very existence of the legislation
would be likely to constitute an interference with Convention rights.
- The relevant parts
of Article 8 of the Convention provide:
"1.
Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his
home and correspondence
2. There
shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of
this right except such as in accordance with the law and is necessary
in a democratic society.for the prevention of disorder or crime, for
the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights
and freedoms of others."
- The relevant parts
of Article 10 of the Convention provide:
"1. Everyone has the
right to freedom of expression. This right shall include freedom to
hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without
interference by a public authority and regardless of frontiers…
2. The exercise of these
freedoms, since it carries with it duties and responsibilities may be
subject to such formalities, conditions, restrictions or penalties as
are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society.. .for
the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or
morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others…"
- Both Articles 8
and 10 permit the state to regulate the receipt of material where that
regulation is "prescribed by law" (or "in accordance with the law"),17
in the pursuit of a legitimate aim and necessary in a democratic society.
"In accordance
with the law"/"prescribed by law"
- The requirement
that a restriction on the freedoms under Articles 8 and 10 be "prescribed
by law" includes two main elements: that the measure is laid down
in law and that the legal measure is sufficiently clear and precise
in its meaning to allow individuals to regulate their conduct and reasonably
foresee the consequences of their acts.
- The latter is obviously
crucial in this context: an individual must be able to know whether
or not his or her viewing of a particular image would or would be very
likely to constitute a criminal offence. Because ignorance of the law
is no defence, so the law must be clear as to what it proscribes.
- In contrast to
the position in respect of children, there is no absolute prohibition
on pornography involving adults. Unless the legislation intends to ban
all images of sex with animals, necrophilia and sexual violence, the
prohibition appears to depend on an understanding of the word "extreme"
or "serious", which is clearly something that is dependent on individual
sensibilities. While a publisher or distributor of such material might
be expected to know or understand or even to seek advice as to where
the legal boundaries lie, the same cannot be said of an individual user
of pornography. How is an individual supposed to know whether or not
he/she would commit a criminal offence if he/she viewed a particular
image ? Something that to one individual would be abhorrent and offensive,
might to another be acceptable and indeed, desirable. 18
- Take for example
a situation where an individual enters a licensed sex-shop and purchases
a magazine, which turns out to include images prohibited under the proposed
legislation, that individual would be guilty of the proposed offence.
How should that individual have known that the images were prohibited ?
At what point does pornography become criminal ? Similarly, if an individual
pays for and enters an internet site that provides pornography, and
views images which have not been removed from the internet by the Internet
Service Provider ("ISP"), how should that individual know when or
which of the images are prohibited ?19 The only safe course
would be for individuals not to view any pornography containing any
images of the acts set out in paragraph 2 above. That might be the preferred
result for the Government, but it is not the stated intention of the
legislation.
- Far from being
obvious, as the Government suggests in the consultation paper, defining
the material covered to a sufficient degree of clarity, would be difficult.
I therefore consider that real concerns arise about whether the proposed
legislation would be sufficiently precise and foreseeable to meet the
"prescribed by law" test in the context of an individual possession
offence.
Legitimate
aim
- I assume that the
legitimate aim sought by the proposed legislation would be the protection
of morals and that this would be accepted by the domestic and Strasbourg
courts.
Necessary in a democratic
society and proportionate
- The requirement
that a measure is necessary in a democratic society means that the measure
must be more than ""reasonable", "useful" or "desirable",
it must meet a "pressing social need": Sunday Times v United Kingdom
2 EHRR 245 (para. 59). That "pressing social
need" must accord with the requirements of a democratic society, the
hallmarks of which are tolerance and broadmindedness: Handyside v United Kingdom
1 EHRR 737 (para. 49). In particular, the measure
must be proportionate to the aim pursued. This requires that the reasons
given to justify the measures of "interference" are "relevant"
and "sufficient" (ibid para. 50). As Lord Steyn said in the leading
domestic law case on the subject, R (Daly) v Secretary of State for the Home Department
[2001] 2 AC 532 (para. 27), proportionality requires the following questions
to be asked:
"whether:
(i) the legislative objective is sufficiently important to justify limiting
a fundamental right; (ii) the measures designed to meet the legislative
objective are rationally connected to it; and (iii) the means used to
impair the right or freedom are no more than is necessary to accomplish
the objective."
- Where the interference
involves an intimate aspect of private life, particularly weighty reasons
are required for its justification: Dudgeon v United Kingdom (1982) 4 EHRR 149.
- In the context
of freedom of expression, the Court has stated that this "constitutes
one of the essential foundations of a democratic society, indeed one
of the basic conditions for its progress and for the self-fulfilment
of the individual. Subject to paragraph 2 (art. 10-21) it is applicable
not only to "information" or "ideas" that are favourably received
or regarded as inoffensive or as a matter of indifference, but also
to those that offend, shock or disturb the State or any section of the
population" Mueller v
Switzerland (1991) 13 EHRR 212 (para. 33, emphasis added). Any
interference with the right to freedom of expression must be "convincingly
established": Barthold v Germany (1985) 7 EHRR 383 (para. 58). Where the measure has the ultimate effect
of reducing the right "in such a way or to such an extent that the
very essence of the right is impaired", the interference will by definition
be disproportionate: Rees v United Kingdom (1987) 9 EHRR 56 (para. 50).
- In my view, serious
concerns arise as to whether the proposed legislation is necessary in
a democratic society for the reasons set out below.
Are the
measures capable of meeting the objective pursued ?
- The Government
states that the proposed new measure is necessary because:
- the growth in the
internet has meant it is no longer possible to regulate supply and that
this offence would break the supply/demand cycle;
- participants in
the making of such material, who may be the victims of criminal offences,
need to be protected;
- children need to
be protected from exposure to such materials.
- Dealing with (a),
it is difficult to see how the proposed offence would break the supply/demand
cycle. As the Government states, very little of this material is produced
in the United Kingdom and almost all of it originates from other countries.20
No other country has or proposes to adopt a possession offence. That
being the case, a measure in the United Kingdom would be very unlikely
to have any effect on supply.
- Further, if the
need for the measure originates from the growth in pornography on the
internet, the measure would be confined solely to that medium. What
is the reason for extending it to all other media, save for broadcast
media, particularly if it really is intended to relate only to material
that is already covered by the OPA and the CG(S)A ? There is no explanation
as to why new measures are needed to regulate, for example, print media.
- As regards (b),
again it is difficult to see how the measure could protect participants
in the making of the relevant material if the material is in fact all
made abroad. Even if it is produced in the UK, the proposed measures
extend to realistic depictions of the relevant acts, including presumably
realistic drawings, paintings and images produced through computer imaging
with no individuals involved, provided the images are "pornographic".
Why is it necessary for the measures to extend to images that are produced
without the involvement of real individuals ?
- As regards (c),
it is again difficult to see how the relevant measures will assist in
preventing children from being exposed to such images. Since the measures
are unlikely to have any significant effect on the supply/demand cycle,
they will still be available on the internet. The existence of a criminal
offence is unlikely to have any impact on a child's chances of being
exposed to such images. The only way the chances of such exposure are
likely to be reduced is through better regulation by ISPs.
Proportionality: a fair
balance between the interference and the general interest ?
- In my view, it
is seriously arguable that the proposed measures go too far to strike
a fair balance between the demands of the general interest of the community
and the requirements of the protection of an individual's fundamental
rights. Put another way, I am not convinced that the reasons provided
by the Government for the measures are sufficient to justify the extent
of the interference in the individual's freedoms.
- First, a prosecution
or the threat of a prosecution, with the potential penalty of three
years imprisonment, for looking at adult pornography in private is a
very serious interference in an individual's right to respect for an
intimate aspect of their private life under Article 8 and their freedom
of expression under Article 10. It requires a powerful justification.
Its justification must be stronger than that required to regulate the
publication and distribution of pornography by commercial operators
because the interference in the rights of the individual are so much
more serious.
- As the Government
admits, there is no proof that the use of such images by individuals
causes or induces violence. The enormous amount of research to which
the Government refers has yielded no clear results.21 It
is difficult therefore to see why there is any need to prosecute individuals
for looking at this material in the privacy of their own homes.
- Secondly, in so
far as the legislation is intended to cover realistic depictions where
no individuals are necessarily involved in the process of production,
it is difficult to see the difference between such images and those
that are produced by the imagination through reading descriptions. There
is no suggestion that the Government intends to ban the possession of
written pornography that involves the same subject matter as this proposed
legislation. Otherwise the Marquis de Sade would certainly have to be
banned, as would Nancy Friday"s "My secret garden" and much other widely
read pornographic literature. Under the proposal however, it appears
that realistic illustrations to such books would be unlawful (and the
possession of the illustrated book would be a criminal offence).
- Thirdly, the possession
offence would apply irrespective of who possessed the image or in what
circumstances and whether or not any harm to anyone was or could have
been caused. In contrast, the European Court was careful to point out
that Article 10 was not contravened by the imposition of a fine on the
exhibitors of a public art exhibition that showed images of sex with
animals because of the circumstances (rather than the nature of the material) namely, that the exhibition
was free and had no age limit and the public had been actively encouraged
to enter: Mueller v Switzerland (1991) 13 EHRR 212 (para. 36). The proposed new legislation is
aimed, however, at entirely private situations, and an offence could
be penalised not by a fine but by up to three years imprisonment.
- Fourthly, the offence
would also presumably catch those who create these images themselves
in their own homes for their own gratification in the context either
of a consensual relationship or by the use of photo-imaging or other
means of depiction. This would be the case even where there was no risk
to anyone of any physical harm. This is in contrast to the position
in the case of Laskey, Jaggard and Brown v United Kingdom (1997) 24 EHRR
39, where the Court accepted that a prosecution
for extreme sado-masochistic acts, even though consensual, did not constitute
a violation of the defendants" private life. It did so on the basis
that in that case the "sado-masochistic activities involved a significant
degree of injury or wounding which could not be characterised as trifling
or transient…" Where no physical ham1 or even risk of harm is involved,
it is difficult to see how an interference in such private activities
could be justified, particularly as such circumstances would not involve
any public distribution of the images.
- Fifthly, other
objectives given by the Government have already been considered at paragraphs
23 to 27 above: there appears to be no rational connection between the
measures and the objectives they seek to achieve.
- Sixthly, as explained
above, it is likely that an individual will find it difficult to assess
under the legislation whether he/she is committing a criminal act by
viewing particular material. The effect of that uncertainty may be that
the individual feels he/she cannot risk looking at any pornography at
all, however mild. In those circumstances, the restriction could impair
the very essence of the rights, so necessarily constituting a disproportionate
interference. In the context of freedom of expression the Convention
law has always been alive to the danger of such a "chilling effect.”
- Finally, in assessing
what is necessary in a democratic society, it is relevant to consider
the position in other member states of the Council of Europe. It is
notable that in not a single western country is the simple possession
of such pornography a criminal offence.22
Conclusion
- In conclusion,
I consider that the legislation as proposed gives rise to real concerns
as to its compatibility with an individual's rights under Articles 8
and 10 of the Convention.
RABINDER SINGH Q.C.
Matrix Chambers Gray's Inn, London WClR 5LN. 18 November 2005
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