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Memorandum • <br /> March 30 , 1988 <br /> Page 6 <br /> V. COURT HISTORY REGARDING LOCAL ORDINANCES ON OBSCENITY <br /> Even though the attempt to regulate adult programming <br /> would in all probability not survive constitutional First <br /> Amendment scrutiny, some local officials have asked whether <br /> they could enforce their local franchise ordinances in which <br /> the Company has agreed not to cable cast pornographic pro- <br /> gramming . Local ordinances which have been drafted to pre- <br /> vent obscene or indecent cable programming have not survived <br /> scrutiny by the courts. Roy City, Utah, had passed an ordi- <br /> nance which permitted the revocation of cable franchise <br /> permits or the imposing of fines for "knowingly distrib- <br /> uting] any pornographic or indecent material as defined by <br /> law or in violation of the community standards. " In Com- <br /> munity Television of Utah v. Roy City, 555 F. Supp. 1164 (D. <br /> Utah 1984 ) , the court held the Roy City ordinance to be <br /> unconstitutional. The Roy City court distinguished between <br /> broadcast television and cable television. The court stated <br /> that cable signals are "invited" into the home while broad- • <br /> cast signals are not . The court stated that broadcast tele- <br /> vision is pervasive because its medium, the air , is perva- <br /> sive. Transmission by wire is not . " Roy City at 1169. <br /> The United States District Court for the Southern Dis- <br /> trict of Florida enjoined the City of Miami from enforcing <br /> its ordinance which prohibited the distribution of indecent <br /> material over cable television. The City was also enjoined <br /> from implementing procedures established to enforce this <br /> prohibition. In Cruz v. Ferre 571 F. Supp. 125 (S.D. Fla. <br /> 1983) , the court held the city ordinance to be unconstitu- <br /> tional since the provisions of the ordinance which tried to <br /> regulate indecent material exceeded permissible limits for <br /> the regulation of obscenity as set forth by the Supreme <br /> Court in Miller v. California . Again the court relied on <br /> the ability of the consumer to control whether or not they <br /> chose to receive cable television signals. <br /> Therefore, although the member cities could choose to <br /> attempt to enforce their franchise ordinance, a court would <br /> likely conclude that the enforcement of the ordinance in an <br /> attempt to restrict the First Amendment rights of the Com- <br /> pany would be unconstitutional and therefore impermissible. <br /> • <br />