OPINION
Defendants were charged with violations of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1462 and 1465 relating to obscenity, and with conspiracy to violate those sections. They were tried by the court and found guilty. The facts were stipulated, reserving only the question of whether the materials described in the indictment were obscene.
The trial court expressly found that the materials were obscene under the rule of
Miller v. California,
The then Oregon law did forbid the furnishing, sending, or displaying of obscene materials to minors and did forbid the use of nudity or sex in advertising (Oregon Laws ch. 743, §§ 255-262a (1971)), but did not forbid the sale and distribution of obscene materials to adults. Defendants urge that these laws fixed the community standard for Oregon and that the Oregon standard controls.
The trial court concluded that the fact pornographic material was available because of the relaxation of criminal statutes in Oregon did not make that pornography acceptable according to contemporary community standards. The trial court objectively considered standards in the State of Oregon and in the states in which there were recipients of the materials transported and found that the average person, applying contemporary community standards, would find that those matters appealed to the prurient interest.
We deal with a federal law which neither incorporates nor depends upon the laws of the states.
United States v. Hill,
In judging the community standard, the court, dealing as it was with laws regulating the mails and interstate commerce, properly considered the community as embracing more than the State of Oregon. While under
Miller v. California, supra,
taken in conjunction with
United States v. 12 200-Ft. Reels of Super 8 MM. Film,
Appellants Danley and Meidel assert that the $15,000 fines imposed
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against them were excessive under the eighth amendment. The court could have fined Danley $65,000.00 and Meidel $40,000.00. The trial court has a wide discretion in the imposition of sentences
(United States
v.
Kohlberg,
The judgments of conviction are affirmed.
