Sex Toy Ban: You Can Own Them But You Can’t Sell Them

December 31, 2007 by Michael Law · 1 Comment
Filed under: Constitutional Law 

From Craig Williams

Here’s the follow-up to a February 14, 2007 ruling from the Alabama Supreme Court:  stores who lost their attempts to overturn the Alabama legislature’s ban on selling sex toys have taken their appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Alabamans need not worry, however.  The sex toy stores are not likely to get a favorable reception - the U.S. Supreme Court turned down their request back in 2005, and they’ve lost at least three times in the Alabama Supreme Court.

The Alabama legislature got the whole ban started.  You can possess sex toys in Alabama, you just can’t sell them there.  According to the Alabama Supreme Court, it’s a legitimate attempt to legislate morality, but frankly the dichotomy is lost on me.

After all, if you’re going to enact a ban on sales, why not also ban purchases and possession?  Perhaps the Court doesn’t want to face the news coverage when they start collecting sex toys in an amnesty program for state residents.

“A person should have the right to make their own decision to explore their sexual boundaries outside what some government official says is moral,” adult store owner Sherri Williams said outside the Supreme Court before filing the appeal.

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