Over the weekend, Virginia Beach police
confiscated two
posters from a local Abercrombie & Fitch outlet and
charged the store's manager with violating a city obscenity
ordinance by displaying them in a location open to minors. The
ordinance, violation of which can be punished by a fine of up to
$2,500 and up to a year in jail, makes it a crime to "display for
commercial purposes in a manner whereby juveniles may examine or
peruse" a picture "which depicts nudity, sexual conduct or
sadomasochistic abuse and which is harmful to juveniles." On
Monday, a local TV station
reports, police and City Attorney Les Lillie decided to drop
the obscenity charges because "the displays were not technically
obscene." You can judge for yourself whether the posters 1) depict
nudity and 2) harm juveniles. Lillie decided police had probable
cause to think so, although there was not enough evidence to
prosecute. An Abercrombie & Fitch spokesman had this to
say:
The marketing images in question show less skin than you see any
summer day at the beach. And certainly less than the plumber
working on your kitchen sink. This is an incredible over reaction
by city officials that would be comical except for its potentially
serious legal implications. 
It's still at least little comical, I think, especially
since Abercrombie & Fitch thrives on this sort of attention. In
this case, though, the chain may not have gone far enough: The
posters have been hanging in hundreds of stores across the country
since mid-January, but the Virginia Beach outlet is the only one
where the manager has been asked to take them down. In addition to
citing complaints from customers, a police spokesman "said the ads
made it difficult for police to enforce city dress codes,
specifically noting teens who wore droopy jeans."
[via Celebstoner]
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