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Chapter 8

Chapter 8. Offenses Against Public Morality. Introduction. Many people deal with sexual conduct – fornication and adultery, seduction, incest, bigamy, sodomy, prostitution, indecent exposure – and with obscenity and profanity.

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Chapter 8

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  1. Chapter 8 Offenses Against Public Morality

  2. Introduction Many people deal with sexual conduct – fornication and adultery, seduction, incest, bigamy, sodomy, prostitution, indecent exposure – and with obscenity and profanity. Contemporary criminal law still reflects to a great extent the morality of the Bible and church doctrine. Most criminal laws that proscribe behavior forbidden by the Bible have also been found to serve a recognized secular purpose.

  3. Criminal Prohibitions of Sexual Conduct • Fornication – sexual intercourse between unmarried people. • Adultery – sexual intercourse between a male and female, at least one whom is married to someone else. • Seduction – a male obtains sexual intercourse with a virtuous female on the unfulfilled promise of marriage. • Incest – sexual intercourse within or outside the bonds of marriage between people related within certain prohibited degrees. This can lead to genetically defective offspring.

  4. Criminal Prohibitions of Sexual Conduct continued: • Bigamy – marriage between two people when one is already legally married to another. • Sodomy – oral or anal sex between humans (crimes against nature). • Bestiality –sex between humans and animals. • Prostitution – having sex with another for money.

  5. Indecent Exposure • Indecent exposure – to intentionally expose their private parts in a public place. • Lewd and lascivious conduct – indecent exposure of a person’s private parts in public; indecent touching or fondling of a child.

  6. Criticism • Sex is a private matter • Enforcement is a waste of money • Enforcement is arbitrary • When law enforcement ignores a law it breeds disrespect for all laws • Inconsistency between social norms

  7. Obscenity At common law, vulgar and obscene language and indecent public exhibitions were considered public nuisances, punishable as misdemeanors. • Obscenity – Explicit sexual material that is patently offensive, appeals to a prurient or unnatural interest in sex, and lacks serious scientific, artistic, or literary content.

  8. Development of Obscenity Law • Roth v. United States (1957) • Obscenity is not protected rather the court viewed the test as “whether obscenity is utterance within the area of protected speech and press.” • Whether the average person applying contemporary community standards, the dominant theme of the material taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interests.

  9. Obscenity Continued: Obscenity is not protected by the first amendment. • Profanity – foul language. This is protected by the first amendment as long as there are no “fighting words” involved.

  10. Gambling What Constitutes Gambling? • Consideration • Prize • chance

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