Letter from Michael Millen to Thomas Curry, March 31, 1998.

MICHAEL MILLEN, Attorney at Law
12 S. First St., Suite 810 ŸSan Jose, CA 95113
(408) 998-3262
Ÿ (408)971-4580 fax


March 31, 1998

Thomas R. Curry, Esq.
City Attorney
3500 Robertson Park Rd.
Livermore, CA 94550

In Re: Pornography Availability to Children at Livermore Libraries 

Dear Mr. Curry:

I represent K.R., the mother of B.P., a minor. Without his parent's consent, B.P.viewed obscene pornographic pictures on a library terminal owned and maintained by the City of Livermore. Although it is our contention that B.P. may well have suffered damage in viewing the pictures, at this time we are not pursuing a claim for monetary damages against the City.

We are, however, interested in seeing the City immediately cease and desist from allowing minors to use City property in City buildings maintained with City funds in a way which allows minors to view obscene and harmful matter.

There are solutions to the problem. One might be to divide the computers in the library into an "adults' section" and a "children's section". Computers in the adult's section would have unrestricted Internet access. Computers in the children's section would have installed on them commercially recognized blocking software which would prevent minors from viewing obscene and harmful matter. People under the age of 18 years would only be allowed to use terminals in the children's section unless they had written permission from their parent or guardian allowing access to the adult terminals. Another option, preventing minors from using the Internet without parental permission, also solves the problem, albeit with more restrictions than City policy makers may desire. There may well be other options that the library could pursue, and it is the responsibility of the City and the library system to ensure that any proposed solution complies with the law.

Please note that this is not a free speech issue: obscenity has not First Amendment protections for anyone (adults or minors), and minors have no First Amendment right to view sexual matter which is harmful to them. This a child safety issue.

As you can see from enclosed draft complaint (which has neither been signed nor filed), my clients are prepared to go to court to prevent the library from continuing its current Internet pornography policy which allows unrestricted access by minors to harmful and obscene material.

If I do not hear from you within 10 days, I will proceed to file the complaint.

Sincerely,


Michael Millen

Cc: Client