This appeal involves an appeal on convictions for using the mails to sell and distribute a collection of rotten books, alleged to be obscene. We characterize the books as obsessed with sex. If they have any literary merit, it is obscure. At best, they are junk.
But under First Amendment decisions that have piled up there does not seem to have been the leer accompanying them required by Ginzburg v. United States,
The judgments of conviction are reversed. The indictment will be dismissed.
Notes
Some indication of the proscriptions left may be in the following extract from Red-rup, supra, wherein it is said:
“In none of the cases was there a claim that the statute in question reflected a specific and limited state concern for juveniles. See Prince v. Commonwealth of Massachusetts,321 U.S. 158 ,64 S.Ct. 438 ,88 L.Ed. 645 ; cf. Butler v. State of Michigan,352 U.S. 380 ,77 S.Ct. 524 ,1 L.Ed.2d 412 . In none was there any suggestion of an assault upon individual privacy by publication in a manner so obtrusive as to make it impossible for an unwilling individual to avoid exposure to it. Cf. Breard v. City of Alexandria,341 U.S. 622 ,71 S.Ct. 920 ,95 L.Ed. 1233 ,35 A.L.R.2d 335 ; Public Utilities Comm’n of District of Columbia v. Poliak,343 U.S. 451 ,72 S.Ct. 813 ,96 L.Ed. 1068 . And in none was there evidence of the sort of ‘pandering’ which the Court found significant in Ginzburg v. United States,383 U.S. 463 ,86 S.Ct. 942 ,16 L.Ed.2d 31 .”
