Appellant, Armón Allen Keene, assistant manager of a motion picture theater in Louisville, Kentucky, was convicted by a jury of exhibiting an obscene motion picture in violation of KRS 436.101. The jury fixed his punishment at confinement in the county jail for six months and a $1,000 fine. Keene bases his appeal upon several points of error. We find it necessary to reverse the judgment solely because the instructions given the jury were prejudicially erroneous. Since Keene must be retried, it is necessary that we dispose of his points concerning the admissibility of the film which was seized, the construction of our obscenity statute as it relates to recent pronouncements by the Supreme Court of the United States, and interpretation of the admissibility and relevance of expert testimony by the defense in the obscenity prosecutions in this state.
Keene claims that he was entitled to the suppression of evidence in the form of the film which was seized. The search warrant was issued, the indictment returned, and the trial completed in 1973. The search warrant was styled “Jefferson Circuit Court.” In January 1974, after the circuit court’s judgment was rendered in this case, this court decided Smith v. Commonwealth, Ky.,
In Crecelius v. Commonwealth, Ky.,
The Supreme Court of the United States, however, in Roaden v. Kentucky,
In this case the same procedure was followed as was approved in Heller v. New York,
While conceding the insufficiency of the language describing the issuing authority in the document used by the officer as evidence of his right to seize the film, we find a complete absence of a single element which inheres in the policy considerations that are generally advanced to support the so-called “exclusionary rule” in search and seizure cases. See Trends in Legal Commentary on the Exclusionary Rule, 65 Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology, 373-382 (1974).
Appellant argues that the neutral magistrate who viewed the film “failed to focus searchingly upon the issue of claimed obscenity.” We have viewed the film; we find that this film is hard core pornography and doubtless would have been held so in any forum in this Nation, past or present.
We find that the circumstances under which the prosecution procured the film as evidence establish reasonable conduct on the part of the government authorities. The film was properly admitted as evidence.
The second point of claimed error is that our obscenity statute, KRS 436.101, is vague and overbroad and that it does not specifically define the depiction of sexual conduct as required by the majority opinion in Miller. Appellant also asserts
Appellant complains that the trial judge denied him the right to introduce expert evidence concerning the issue of community standards. We are in no position to adequately dispose of the contention because no avowal was made of the content of the testimony. The trial judge “has wide discretion in [the] determination to admit and exclude evidence, and this is particularly true in the case of expert testimony.” Hamling v. United States,
Appellant asserts that prejudicial error was committed in the instructions given to the jury. We are forced to agree. KRS 436.101 provides in pertinent part: “Any person who, having knowledge of the obscenity thereof . . . exhibits any obscene matter is punishable.” The trial judge failed to instruct on the required element of knowledge, which is an essential part of the statutorily created offense. 23A C.J.S. Criminal Law § 1194. The error was properly preserved for review. The instructions were otherwise acceptable against a claim of prejudicial error. For the omission of an element of the crime from the instructions, the judgment must regrettably be reversed for a new trial. On a new trial the jury will be instructed as our statute plainly requires that they must believe that the defendant “had knowledge of the obscenity of the film.”
The judgment is reversed for a new trial.
Notes
. The film is titled “Sophie Said No.” It consists of actual scenes in repetitive detail of heterosexual masturbation, fellatio, and intercourse with the camera focused on the genitals. It includes repeated scenes of .ejaculation by the male partner upon the face of the female fellator. The “story line” appears to be that a successful commercial venture could consist of the collection and sale of seminal fluid as a cosmetic for women’s facial complexions.
. See Smith v. Commonwealth, Ky.,
