March 29, 2021 |
Patrick A. Trueman: The “Public Health Crisis” Starts Here |
Editorâs Note: This post is the sixth in a series by YNOTâs LynseyG that gives an overview of the history of anti-porn sentiment in America. Part one provided an overview, part two covered anti-porn crusader Charles Keating, part three examined the role of feminist author Andrea Dworkin in the American anti-porn movement, part four looked at former Attorney General Edwin Meese and part five addressed Judith Reisman, the pseudo-scientist behind the notion of “erototoxins.” Patrick A. Trueman is both a true believer in the crusade against porn and a powerful force in government, private practice, and non-profit activism. His credentials are impressive, but his dogged focus on the evils of adult entertainment made by and for consenting adults isâ¦odd, to say the least. From 1988 to 1993, during George H.W. Bushâs administration, Patrick A. Trueman was the chief of the Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section (CEOS), Criminal Division, at the Department of Justice. Those five years seem to have been blissful for Trueman, who oversaw the aggressive pursuit of obscenity cases against pornographers. According to a 2008 article in the ABA Journal, CEOS âput seven of the nationâs largest pornography distributors out of businessâ under Truemanâs leadership. During that time, Trueman has also claimed that his division: obtained 50 convictions for sending âobscene advertisementsâ through the mail; undertook a âLos Angeles projectâ that convicted 20 producers and suppliers of obscene materials; and collected over $24 million in fines and forfeitures. The forfeitures were shared with local jurisdictions that helped them with their casesââThere are ways to motivate people,â he proudly told the ABA Journal. âIt was understood that this was a priority and it came from the top,â Trueman said of his glory days at the DOJ. But when Janet Reno became attorney general, he was disappointed that the DOJ decided to focus instead on child pornographyâa focus which remains in place today. Most people would consider that a good thing. Especially people who make legal, adult pornâthose people donât want to see children exploited any more than anybody else. But Patrick A. Trueman felt differently. He was deeply disappointed by this turn of events. âWhen I hear law enforcement authorities pit child pornography against obscenity, I see it as an excuse for doing nothing on obscenity crimes,â he told the ABA Journal. Ever since, he has split his time between practicing law and flitting between high-level positions at influential non-profit NGOs. He was the executive director of Americans United for Lifeâan anti-abortion group. A legal counsel for the Family Research Councilâa regressive group focused on a very narrow view of what counts as âfamily values.â He also served as the director of government affairs for the American Family Association, a Christian fundamentalist organization that vehemently opposes LGBTQ rights, abortion, and pornography. And now, heâs the president of the National Center on Sexual Exploitation (NCOSE)âa group formerly known as Morality in Media. Yep, that’s the group founded by none other than Father Morton. A. Hillâa member of the Presidentâs Commission on Obscenity and Pornography back in the sixties. The folks who tried to ban Fanny Hill, who made a stink over George Carlinâs comedy, who tried to sue over Caligula, and who raised an outcry over Monty Pythonâs Life of Brian, for God’s sake. That Morality in Media. In 2015, the organization renamed itself as part of an effort to âexpand its focus to the social science and data on the intersectionality of sexual exploitation,â according to Wikipedia. The newly dubbed National Center on Sexual Exploitation, with Trueman at its helm, has declared legal pornography made by and for consenting adults and protected under the First Amendment to be a âpublic health crisis.â Sound familiar? Thatâs because, under Trueman, the NCOSE has established a Law Center whose express purpose is, per Truemanâs bio, âto influence the law and our courts to ensure the values of human dignity are represented.â And now, as those interested in freedom of speech are aware, there are 16 states in the union who have declared pornographyâthe legal kindâa public health crisis. Most of the resolutions that have been passed to that effect over the past decade were drafted, at least in part, by the NCOSE. But Truemanâs efforts donât end with legislation. As noted by Wikipedia, âOne of NCOSE’s lawyers was mentioned by Nicholas Kristof in his article ‘The Children of Pornhub’ for The New York Times in December 2020âa piece which may have been influential in Visa and Mastercard’s decisions to stop working with Pornhub.â NCOSE was also instrumental in a 2020 campaign pressuring payment processing companies to cut off porn websites. And, in February of 2021, NCOSE was behind a federal class action lawsuit against MindGeek for not verifying the age or consent of underage people in videos hosted on its site. In other words, Trueman, via the NCOSE, is one of the prime movers behind the recent debacle at Pornhubâan event whose effects are still rippling out to nearly everyone in the adult entertainment industry. So, why is Trueman so devoted to branding legal pornography the be-all, end-all of public enemies? He seems to believe that adult pornâwhat he called âan inherently violent, degrading, insidious industryâ in an article on the NCOSE websiteâis a gateway drug for crime and exploitation. In 2011, Trueman wrote an article for the Public Discourse journal entitled âEnd Child Pornography: Enforce Adult Pornography Laws.â In it, he declared: âEnding child pornography is as much a matter of vigorously prosecuting those who distribute adult pornography as it is a matter of prosecuting child pornographers.â In the article, he claimed, âThe link between adult and child porn is observed globally,â and that âthe one effectiveâand constitutionalâway to protect children from harm would be the vigorous prosecution of illegal, hardcore adult pornography.â He went on to say that âhard-core adult pornographyâ is âcalled âobscenityâ in lawââan egregious conflation for a lifelong attorneyâand to assert that âthe predatory pornography industry targets children.â The above, as anyone with a basic understanding of the adult entertainment industry in America will attest, is patently untrue. It is absolutely illegal to target adult material at children, and those who are making adult material for adults donât want to go to jail. The idea that adult pornographers would try to target children is ludicrous. In fact, when Trueman calls them âporn criminals,â he is flirting with libel. Itâs strange that Patrick A. Trueman, who in his work at the Department of Justice likely saw some of the worst crimes humanity has to offer, has decided to fixate so heavily on consensually made and legally distributed pornography. But here we are, and with him at the helm of an influential, legislation-drafting NGO aimed squarely at decimating the legal porn industry, weâd better keep our eyes open. Multicolor middle finger salute photo by Soulful Pizza from Pexels |