Intermediate Scrutiny Of Adult Bookstore Regulations Requires Evidence Of The Public Benefit Of The Particular Restrictions

ANNEX BOOKS, INC. v. CITY OF INDIANAPOLIS (September 3, 2009)

The City of Indianapolis regulates “adult entertainment businesses”. The regulations include a license requirement, store lighting requirements, Sunday closings and restricted weekday hours. Prior to 2003, any retail establishment that received 50% of its revenue or devoted 50% of its space to adult materials was considered such a business. In 2003, Indianapolis reduced the 50% threshold to 25%. Four businesses that fell within that new definition brought suit, challenging both the licensing procedures and the definition. The district court rejected the challenges to both. The businesses appeal.

In their opinion, Chief Judge Easterbrook and Judges Flaum and Rovner affirmed in part and reversed in part. The Court adopted the district court's opinion with respect to the licensing challenge. It went on to address the challenge to the definition. The Court noted that Indianapolis conceded that the law is subject to "intermediate" scrutiny in that the plaintiffs are booksellers. Indianapolis relies on the reduction of crime and other negative effects of adult businesses. The Court identified a problem, however. Indianapolis relied on studies accepted by the Supreme Court and on a study it conducted years earlier that associated higher crime with adult businesses. But the studies all dealt with the effect of regulations dispersing adult businesses. The Indianapolis ordinance does not deal with dispersal -- it deals with store hours and store conditions. The studies also dealt with businesses that offered live entertainment, unlike three of the four plaintiffs in the case. The Court concluded that an evidentiary hearing was required. At the hearing, the City must present relevant evidence supporting its restrictions on adult businesses that satisfies the intermediate standard of the Supreme Court's decision in Alameda Books. The Court referred to Justice Kennedy's opinion, reflecting the holding of Alameda Books, as instructive. In order to meet the constitutional challenge, said Justice Kennedy, an ordinance must suppress the secondary effects of the regulated business yet leave the availability and amount of speech "substantially intact."

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