For more than two years now, parents, community members, and legislators — awakened to the pornographic nature of some materials that remain in Utah K-12 schools — have borne a surprising amount of ridicule and scorn. Second, they insist that age-appropriate limits for children in K-12 public schools violate the First Amendment. Third, they argue that uniformly enforcing statewide the 2007 criminal standard for indecent and pornographic materials at school offends the notion of “local control.”
Amid a national trend of book banning in some parts of the country, two letters from Alaska Attorney General Treg Taylor regarding the distribution of indecent materials to minors have
While the attorney general did not name any specific libraries or school districts in the letters, he outlined possible legal ramifications for those who violate the law.
A Utica man has been sentenced to a three-year term of probation supervision after attempting to pursue a sexual relationship with who he believed was a teenage boy.