OPINION AND. ORDER
Plaintiffs, three so-called “adult” bookstores 1 engaged in the sale of sexually explicit books, magazines and 8 millimeter films (hereinafter “sexually explicit materials”) 2 to consenting adults, bring this action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to escape the effects of New York City’s recent campaign to “clean up” the Midtown area of New York County (“the Midtown area”). The case is presently before the Court on plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. The injunction is hereby granted in accordance with the Opinion below.
FACTS
On January 17,1976, an agency called the Midtown Enforcement Project (“Project”) was created. 3 The Project is funded by a federal grant from the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration and operates as a coordinating agency under the auspices of the Office of the Mayor of the City of New York. It has as its purpose the investigation, identification and prosecution of illicit activities endemic to the Midtown area. Certain activities of the Project, along with those of the New York City Police Department and the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, form the subject matter of this lawsuit.
On the staff of the Midtown Enforcement Project is a health inspector, a building inspector and a fire inspector. . These three, together with the two Police Officers who supervise and coordinate the inspectors’ work, form the Project’s inspectional task force. It is alleged that Building, Fire and Health Code 4 enforcement has been focused on sexually oriented businesses through routine periodic inspections conducted by the Project. John Russell, the supervising attorney of the Project, testified that such inspections are made in Midtown Manhattan without regard to the type of business occupying the premises. Ninety percent of the Project’s inspections, however, involve buildings housing sexually oriented enterprises. 5
It is also alleged that the inspectional team of the Midtown Enforcement.Project has engaged in the practice of obtaining vacate orders based upon information or allegations known to be false. A few specific instances are presented as evidence of this practice.
On July 7, 1976 the Crossroads Bookstqre was closed pursuant to an ex parte order obtained by the Project. It was soon discovered that the order was based upon erroneous information provided by defendant Jeremiah Walsh, Commissioner of Buildings of the City of New York. After a check of the Building Department’s files, the error was conceded and the complaint *1301 withdrawn. 6 Nonetheless, the premises remained closed for approximately one week.
On March 17, 1977, plaintiff Black Jack was served with a vacate order at its 42nd Street premises. The order was primarily based upon the store’s failure to have a second means of ingress and egress. 7 Uncontested evidence showed that, since at least 1968, there had been a second means of ingress and egress and that one was there the day the vacate order was served and enforced. Indeed, when Justice Oliver Sutton of the New York Supreme Court inspected the premises a few days later he immediately allowed the store to reopen, finding no such violation. Shortly thereafter, the Fire Department dismissed the vacate order. However, the premises had been forced to remain closed for five days.
On March 25, 1977, a sexually oriented enterprise called Show-World was forced to close due to a sprinkler violation in its building. Of the twenty-one buildings with such sprinkler violations in New York County, the Show-World premises was the only one served with a vacate order. Show-World was permitted to reopen when Judge Constance Baker Motley of this Court entered an order temporarily restraining enforcement of the vacate order. Show-World’s motion for a preliminary injunction is presently under advisement.
Although the Midtown Enforcement Project engages in no penal law prosecution of its own, it has liason with the Police Department through the Chief of the Public Morals Division and communicates with the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office. John Russell testified that these channels serve only as conduits for the exchange of information. 8 Plaintiffs, however, maintain that the Project, the Police Department and the District Attorney’s Office are presently engaged in a joint effort to “clamp down” on sexually oriented businesses in Manhattan in general and, specifically, to force plaintiffs out of business.
This latter allegation is supported by the following events. On April 22, 1977, Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau and members of his staff met in his office with representatives of the Police Department’s Public Morals Division to discuss the “obscenity problem.” At the meeting it was decided that enforcement efforts would be concentrated on the plaintiff bookstores believed to be owned and operated by Alfred Scotti. 9 It was also agreed, either at this meeting or just prior thereto, that “desk appearance tickets” would no longer be issued to persons arrested in “adult” bookstores on obscenity charges. 10
The “desk appearance ticket” procedure enables a qualifying defendant (that is, one who can establish his pedigree) to leave the stationhouse after the initial processing merely by accepting a written ticket requiring his appearance in court at some future time. Without the “desk appearance ticket,” the prisoner is forced to remain in custody until he can be arraigned, usually on the day following his arrest. 11
Shortly after the April 22 meeting, almost daily arrests and seizures were effected at plaintiffs’ premises; between May 2 *1302 and May 19 12 there were between twenty and thirty arrests for the promotion and sale of obscene material. 13 During these arrests, patrons were removed and the premises closed, but the proprietors were not prevented from reopening the shops upon completion of the arrests and seizures. Witnesses for plaintiffs testified that the arrests were usually effected during the stores’ busiest periods and that the stores were forced to remain closed for between one and two hours. The materials “deemed obscene” and seized from plaintiffs’ premises are characteristic of material sold in all “adult” bookstores in the Midtown area; yet, during this time period, no other seizures or arrests under the New York obscenity laws were made in the Midtown area.
DISCUSSION
Based on these events plaintiffs argue that defendants are engaged in bad faith enforcement of the obscenity laws, done solely to harass plaintiffs and drive them out of business. Such a campaign, they assert, interferes with the free exercise of First Amendment rights. 14
Before reaching the merits, however, the Court must decide whether plaintiffs having standing to bring this action, whether the lawsuit presents a justiciable case or controversy, and whether the Court has equitable jurisdiction to issue an injunction such as the one sought by plaintiffs. 15
Standing
The First and Fourteenth Amendments do not guarantee freedom of speech to corporations.
Hague v. Committee for Industrial Organization,
Moreover, plaintiffs are entitled to challenge defendants’ conduct because they are among the “vendors and those in like positions [who] have been uniformly permitted to resist efforts at restricting their operations by acting as advocates for the rights of third parties who seek access to their market or function.”
Craig v. Boren,
Live Case or Controversy
The Court finds that there exists an “actual case or controversy” sufficient to render the instant dispute justiciable. Pri- or to the institution of the lawsuit, arrests and seizures were taking place on an almost daily basis. Defendants have instructed both the Court and plaintiffs that they intend to resume such activities once given leave to do so. Thus, the threat of prosecution cannot be characterized as speculative,
Younger v. Harris,
Equitable Jurisdiction
Defendants argue that under the principles of
Younger v. Harris,
However, any notion that such policies prevail where no pending state proceedings are being challenged has recently been laid to rest. In such cases the normal rules regarding preliminary and permanent injunctive relief apply, and
threatened
pros
*1304
ecution may be enjoined without regard to
Younger
principles.
Wooley v. Maynard,
- U.S. -, -,
Preliminary Injunction Standard
The now familiar standard for the issuance of a preliminary injunction is a showing that there exists a threat of irreparable harm plus either probable success on the merits, or sufficiently serious questions going to the merits to make them a fair ground for litigation and a balance of hardships tipping decidedly toward the plaintiff.
Jacobson & Co., Inc. v. Armstrong Cork Co.,
The Merits
Plaintiffs claim that for some time the Midtown Enforcement Project has been engaged in a program of enforcing the Administrative Code in a discriminatory manner that is aimed at interfering with the operations of sexually orieñtéd businesses: They assert that the Police Department and the District Attorney’s Office have now joined in this effort and are presently engaged in a program of enforcement of the obscenity laws that is calculated to drive them out of business. They maintain that the purpose of this enforcement activity is to discourage the sale of sexually explicit publications and films, materials that are protected by the First Amendment.
Where this type of harassment is alleged, injunctive relief against its continuation is appropriate if plaintiffs establish (1) bad faith use of the state’s legal machinery for the purpose of. inhibiting the exercise of First Amendment rights, and (2) a probability of irreparable injury. The latter is established upon a showing of a- significant chilling effect on First Amendment rights that cannot be avoided by state court adjudication.
Cameron v. Johnson,
*1305
In the leading case in the area,
Dombrowski v. Pfister,
In the area of sexually oriented literature and films, state prosecuting authorities may vigorously enforce obscenity laws when the purpose is to punish the promotion or sale of obscene material, or to deter such promotion or sale. However, such law enforcement will run afoul of the Constitution if its purpose is to force a sexually oriented enterprise to cease doing business or to refrain from dealing in presumably protected sexually oriented materials. In those circumstances such activity constitutes an invalid restraint on First Amendment rights.
For this reason, the court in
Krahm v. Graham,
Similarly, in
Miami Health Studios, Inc. v. City of Miami Beach,
Certain aspects of both of these cases are present here. There have been between twenty and thirty arrests, and no prosecutions have proceeded to trial. Arrests and seizures were made despite state and federal court rulings that the procedures used were invalid. Defendants herein are admittedly trying to drive plaintiffs out of business, and plaintiffs’ employees have been *1306 detained in jail overnight without apparent reason.
More specifically, the errors made in enforcement of the Administrative Code plus the high percentage of inspections of premises housing sexually oriented businesses raise the inference that such activities have a secondary motive. 23 This inference is supported by statements attributed to Sidney Baumgarten, Assistant to the Mayor of the City of New York and head of the Midtown Enforcement Project. At a speech delivered on November 13,1975 at the Salvation Army Headquarters on Fifty-Second Street Baumgarten stated that “despite all constitutional limitations we stop at nothing when we put these [sexually oriented enterprises] out of business. We undertake activities knowing that they are illegal.” He has reputedly also stated that the Police Department would be used to accomplish these goals. Moreover, Baumgarten has instructed Cornelius Dennis, Borough Superintendent of the Department of Buildings, not to approve or issue permits for sexually oriented businesses until he has reviewed the Building Department file. This has apparently resulted in no such permits being issued. 24
With respect to the multiple arrests mentioned above, there is strong evidence indicating that they were effected in a manner calculated to maximize the negative impact on plaintiffs’ business. The arrests conformed to the following pattern. A Police Officer purchased a book or film in one of the three bookstores. This article was then taken to a judge, who examined it and, if appropriate, executed a warrant for the seizure of other copies of the article and for the arrest of the individual who sold it. Police officers then returned to the store, closed it temporarily (during peak business hours), effected the arrest of the person described in the warrant and searched for other copies of the article named in the warrant. If other copies were found, they were seized (up to six copies) and the other employees in the store arrested.
On the four occasions that the article named in the warrant was hot found, however, the officers searched for articles that they knew had been named in other warrants (but had not been finally determined to be obscene) and, upon finding such arti-' cles, arrested the remaining employees in the store. This procedure was long ago held invalid under New York law.
227 Book Center, Inc. v. Codd,
Another part of the pattern is the withdrawal of the desk ' appearance privilege from employees of “adult” bookstores arrested on obscenity charges. An admitted purpose of this change is to discourage these individuals from ’ working, in such stores. No other reason for the change in policy was proposed by defendants, and such change does not appear related to ensuring later court appearances.
In fact, the Police Department and the District Attorney’s Office have made no secret of the purpose of the entire operation. In a memo summarizing the plans *1307 made at the April 22 meeting it was stated the enforcement would be concentrated on the plaintiffs “in order to have the greatest impact and perhaps cause a loss of profit, thereby making it prohibitive to remain open.” At the hearing on plaintiffs’ motion, Captain Robert Cantwell of the Public Morals Division of the Police Department testified that one of the objects of the concentrated arrests and the discontinuance of the desk appearance policy was to discourage plaintiffs’ employees from continuing to work in plaintiffs’ stores and, ultimately, to close the stores or force them to abandon the sale of sexually oriented materials. Regardless of the propriety of focusing enforcement of the obscenity laws on plaintiffs’ stores, this cannot be carried out in a manner calculated to discourage them from selling material protected by the First Amendment.
It also should be noted that, although the District Attorney’s Office vowed to vigorously prosecute the obscenity cases, none of the prosecutions arising from arrests of plaintiffs’ employees has proceeded beyond the arrest stage, and none of the seized materials has been finally determined to be obscene. 25
On the present record, the Court might not be able to conclude with the certainty required after a full trial on the merits that the defendants are engaging in a persistent pattern of misconduct aimed at deterring the sale of sexually oriented materials in the Midtown area and, particularly, in plaintiffs’ stores. However, plaintiffs have raised sufficiently serious questions as to the existence of such conduct to warrant the issuance of a preliminary injunction.
The Court emphasizes that it is not the number of prosecutions alone that leads it to reach this conclusion, for multiplicity of prosecutions does not show bad faith or harassment on the part of law enforcement officials.
Grandco Corp. v. Rochford,
The instant case is thus distinguishable from
Gajon Bar & Grill, Inc. v. Kelly,
Irreparable Injury
Assuming that defendants’ efforts are aimed at discouraging plaintiffs’ sale of sexually oriented material in a manner going beyond good faith enforcement of the obscenity laws, then without the protection of an injunction plaintiffs will suffer the type of irreparable injury envisioned in
Dombrowski v. Pfister,
Plaintiffs and their employees are between the proverbial Scylla of abandoning the sale of sexually oriented material, much of which is protected by the First Amendment, and the Charybdis of continuing such
*1308
activity and suffering injury both economic (the constant disruption of business) and personal (interference with the freedom to exercise First Amendment rights without genuine fear of prosecution).
See Dombrowski v. Pfister,
The difficulty of plaintiffs’ choice is exacerbated by the absence of any final judicial determinations of obscenity regarding materials seized at their premises. If such determinations were made, plaintiffs would at least have an idea of the local community standard of obscenity by which to guide their future conduct. 27
Balance of Hardships
That the balance of hardships in this case tips decidedly in favor of plaintiffs is readily apparent to the Court. Aside from the loss of business and possible bankruptcy plaintiffs face, the public’s First Amendment freedoms are threatened. On the other hand, if plaintiffs are granted .the relief they seek, defendants will merely have to alter their enforcement of the obscenity laws so as to limit the consequent incursion on First Amendment rights.
CONCLUSION
In sum, the Court finds that defendants’ own statements, the uncontradicted evidence as to the pattern and timing of the arrests, the illegal practice of making arrests and seizures without warrants when legal arrests cannot be made, and the apparently arbitrary withdrawal of the desk appearance privilege raise sufficiently serious questions regarding the bona fides of defendants’ challenged activities to make this a fair ground for litigation. Moreover, there exists a probability of irreparable injury, both to plaintiffs’ business and in the restriction of First Amendment rights, and the balance of hardships tips decidedly toward the plaintiffs.
Accordingly, the Court, cognizant of the heavy burden on a litigant seeking to enjoin the activities of state law enforcement personnel in the performance of their duties,
Munion v. Gilliam,
As Mr. Justice Brandéis observed in his dissenting opinion in
Olmstead v. United States,
*1309 In a government of laws, existence of the government will be imperilled if it fails to observe the law scrupulously. Our Government is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. For good or for ill, it teaches the whole people by its example. . . If the Government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law; it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy. To declare that in the administration of the criminal law the end justifies the means . . . would bring terrible retribution. Against that pernicious doctrine this Court should resolutely set its face.
Defendant Michael Codd, as Police Commissioner of the City of New York, is hereby enjoined from causing any further harassment of plaintiffs through enforcement of the obscenity laws undertaken in bad faith and for the purpose of injuring plaintiffs’ business, or to cause them to close.
Plaintiffs are directed to submit an order on notice within five days. The order shall provide that, while the Police Department of the City of New York is not prohibited from making obscenity arrests and seizures at plaintiffs’ premises,
see Krahm v. Graham,
The Court shall retain jurisdiction to amend its order on a showing of a change of circumstances.
The foregoing constitute the findings of fact and conclusions of law of the Court pursuant to Rule 52(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Plaintiffs are Black Jack Distributors, Inc. (“Black Jack”), located at 210 West 42nd Street, New York City; Queen Paper Back Corp. (“Queen”), located at 427 West 42nd Street, New York City; and G & M Bookstore, Inc. (“G&M”), located at 136 West 42nd Street, New York City.
. These businesses also have “peep shows” on the premises.
. There is evidence that the project succeeded to the functions of a prior organization formed by defendant Sidney Baumgarten.
. These codes are all part of the Administrative Code of the City of New York.
. Russell testified that this was probably caused by the fact that follow-up inspections were made when violations were found. Therefore, premises that have a history of violations will be inspected more often than other premises. There is no evidence before the Court which corroborates this testimony or indicates that sexually oriented businesses have a history of Code violations. In fact, the only evidence involving Administrative Code violations of sexually oriented business premises presently in the record shows that these determinations were erroneous (except for one, the Show-World violation, which is being challenged as discriminatory in a separate action in this Court).
. - At the hearing on plaintiffs’ motion, Russell testified that the error had been caused by the building owner who had transposed the file numbers on certain documents in the file.
. The other violations listed in the vacate order were quickly rectified.
. One wonders how the Midtown Enforcement Project, itself not engaged in any penal law enforcement, could effectively perform its function of coordinating “the investigation, identification and prosecution of illicit activity endemic to the Midtown area,” as Russell put it, if it merely receives information from the Police Department and District Attorney’s Office, as Russell and Captain Robert Cantwell of the Public Morals Division testified.
. It was thought that these were the largest operations, and the most visible.
. “Desk appearance tickets” are still issued to other individuals arrested on obscenity charges.
. After arraignment, plaintiffs’ employees invariably were either released on their own recognizance or required to post a small bond.
. On May 24, 1977 defendants agreed to cease the arrests and seizures at the subject premises. On June 2, 1977, when defendants withdrew their consent, the Court entered a Temporary Restraining Order granting such relief. At defendant’s request, the TRO was modified on June 7 and, as modified, remains in effect.
. New York Penal Law § 235.05.
. Plaintiffs also argue that, by singling out their employees for prosecution under the obscenity laws, defendants are engaging in the unconstitutional practice of discriminatory law enforcement. See
Yick Wo v. Hopkins,
. Defendants have moved to dismiss for lack of in personam jurisdiction based upon their claim that they have not been personally served with the summons and complaint in the within action. However, in the Order to Show Cause issued in this case, the Court provided that personal service of copies of the Order and the remainder of the motion papers upon defendants or their attorneys would be deemed good and sufficient service. Service of the motion papers on behalf of all defendants was admitted by W. Bernard Richland, Corporation Counsel of the City of New York, on May 24, 1977. There is no claim that Richland does not in fact represent all defendants, and a representative of his office appeared before the Court when plaintiffs presented the Order to Show Cause. Accordingly, the Court finds that under the circumstances of this case it has jurisdiction over the defendants.
.
Samuels v. Mackell,
. Although at first blush 28 U.S.C. § 2283 seems to bar the relief sought herein, the Supreme Court has concluded that the anti-injunction statute does not apply to actions brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983,
Trainor v.
Hernandez,-U.S.-,-, n.8,
. This doctrine has been extended to civil cases.
Trainor v. Hernandez,
- U.S. -, -,
. Although a number of plaintiffs’ employees are subjects of outstanding obscenity charges, the validity of these arrests is conceded for the purposes of this motion. The Court does not take this to mean, however, that the bona fides of the prosecutions are conceded. It should be noted that the resolution of the state prosecutions will not resolve the issues raised by plaintiffs herein, as might be the case were plaintiffs challenging the constitutionality of the statutes involved.
See, e. g., Trainor v. Hernandez,
— U.S.-,-,
. Even pending prosecutions may be enjoined where they are found to have been instituted purely for harassment.
Trainor v. Hernandez,
- U.S. -, -, n.7,
. Because
Dombrowski
involved a statute that was itself found violative of First Amendment rights, the court in
Wallace v. Brewer,
. The court also declared the statute being enforced unconstitutionally vague.
. Although these administrative proceedings are not subject to challenge herein, they may be considered as evidence of a pattern and practice of unlawful conduct.
Lewis v. Kulger,
. This evidence, along with most of what appears in the record, has not been controverted by defendants.
. Although the instant arrests are of relatively recent vintage, one of Black Jack’s employees has been arrested approximately seventy-five times on obscenity charges over the past nineteen years, with no convictions.
. Although the Second Circuit held in
Gajon Bar & Grill, Inc. v. Kelly,
. In the First Amendment area, the Second Circuit has recognized that even the delay of state court proceedings “might itself cause an impermissible chilling of the very constitutional rights which the plaintiff seeks to protect.”
Thoms v. Heffernan,
. The relief granted herein is directed solely against the Police Department through Commissioner Codd. As Police Commissioner, he is responsible for the pattern of arrests challenged herein and is appropriately the subject of injunctive relief.
Slate v. McFetridge,
