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Goddess bless TexasGoddess bless Texas

2003-12-16 - 8:54 a.m.
Since there isn't much going on in my life right now, I thought I would share with you this little news snippet I found today:
Woman's arrest brings Texas obscenity law into question Associated Press

CLEBURNE, TX -- Joanne Webb intended to spice up marriages and earn extra cash by selling erotic toys as one of Passion Parties Inc.'s 3,000 national consultants.

Instead, the former fifth-grade teacher and executive board member of the Burleson Chamber of Commerce faces criminal charges and embarrassment after a police sting. Her first court appearance was set for today.

"My mouth did drop open," said Webb, 43, who has been married 20 years and has three children. "It's ludicrous to think that the government can step into our bedrooms."

With the motto "where every day is Valentine's Day," California-based Passion Parties expects to do $20 million in business this year, company president Pat Davis said.

Some describe the gatherings as Tupperware-type parties for suburban housewives who feel more comfortable buying marital aids in a private home than at an adult bookstore or on the Internet.

"We're doing a wonderful service, and we're not doing anything wrong," Davis said.

Of the company's 300 products, about 60 percent of sales are lotions, bath products and edibles, while sex toys make up the remaining items, Davis said.

It's the sex toys that brought trouble for Webb, a consultant since June and the first Passion Parties' consultant charged with obscenity in the company's 10-year history, Davis said.

Last month, acting on a tip, two undercover officers went to the office of Webb's husband, a homebuilder, where Webb helps out with clerical work. Webb had placed a small sign in the window advertising her parties.

The man and woman asked if they could look at a product catalog. Webb showed them one and the "couple" said they wanted to buy two items. Webb said she tried to talk them into hosting a party, but when they declined, she agreed to sell them the items.

She said she retrieved the items from her home and the couple later came back to her husband's office to pick them up.

A month later, an officer called her and said a warrant had been issued for her arrest on charges that she had sold obscene devices, a violation of state law.

According to the state's obscenity code, an obscene device is a simulated sexual organ or an item designed to stimulate the genitals. Adult stores get around the law by posting signs that say "sold only as novelties."

Webb's charge is a misdemeanor; she faces up to a year in jail and a $4,000 fine. An obscenity charge is a felony if someone sells obscene devices or materials at wholesale.

Webb said she only sold items through private parties and never kept products at her husband's office. The only time she did Passion Parties business at that office, she said, was when the undercover officers approached her.

Webb's attorney BeAnn Sisemore plans to file a motion to dismiss the case, because she says the law violates someone's right to own a sexual device, which is not illegal. Federal obscenity law overrides the state law anyway, Sisemore said.

Obscenity laws often vary from state to state and are often vague, so people don't know what is considered obscene until an arrest, said Lawrence Walters, a partner with the Florida-based law firm of Weston, Garrou & DeWitt, which handles First Amendment cases. Governments should not be able to regulate what consenting adults do in their homes, he said.

Critics also say enforcement of obscenity laws is inconsistent.

For example, last year a consultant for Slumber Parties Inc., a Passion Parties competitor based in Greenwell Springs, La., was stopped in East Texas for driving erratically. She was arrested after officers found 17 sex toys in her car.

Webb believes she was targeted by some conservative residents in Burleson, a community of nearly 26,000 people about 10 miles south of Fort Worth.

She's taken a leave of absence from the chamber of commerce until her obscenity case is settled, but she plans to keep hosting parties -- although she now makes sure she says that they are novelty items.

"One minute I'm thinking: `Is it worth putting my family through it?'" Webb said. "But there are so many products to help couples stay together, so I'm not going to quit."


This makes me so mad I could shit. Who in the name of God's holy trousers decided that it was okay for the government to stick their noses into people's sex lives? Yes, I understand we have to protect the children, but this is not one of those situations. Texas is in the bible belt. So you know that there has to be some bible-thumping, blind-faithed, no-brained, wrapped-up-too-tight, group of assholes that see this as some kind of affront against their particular version of the Invisible Man in the Sky. Christ on a bike, how in the hell is this an affront to God? Would it be okay if she was having a video party, where she sold action movies like Rambo, Braveheart, or The Patriot? Of course it would - violence isn't harming anyone is it? Oh no, but two people giving each other pleasure and enjoyment? Oh my God! Stop the presses! What is the world coming to!?!?!? We can't have people going around pleasuring one another, before you know it, they'll be no wars and then how are we going to fuel the economy?

I am asking, begging, pleading: If there is anyone out there who supports this move by the police to please leave a comment, and give me a clear lucid opinion on why it is ok for the government to do this. I dare you. And no frigging bible versus by way of explanation. Because my standard answer to anyone who does that is Genesis 9:1 - "Go forth, and multiply"

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