Before: ROTH, {*1} Circuit Judge, FARNAN {*2} and SIMANDLE, {*3} District Judges.
ROTH, Circuit Judge:
The plaintiffs in this action, Playboy Entertainment Group, Inc. ("Playboy") and Graff
Pay-Per-View ("Graff"), challenge the constitutionality of section 505 of the Communications
Decency Act of 1996 ("the CDA" of "the Act"), which is Title V of the Telecommunications
Act of 1996, Pub.L.No. 104- 104, 110 Sat. 56. Congress enacted section 505 in an effort to
eliminate signal bleed, i.e., the partial reception of sexually cxplicit, adult cable television
programming in the homes of non-subscribers to that programming.
Most cable television systems in the United States offer one or more optional premium
channels dedicated to sexually oriented programming. However, of the 62 million households
that subscribe to cable television, only about 3 million will purchase or subscribe to adult
programming during the course of a year. Cable system operators attempt to block
non-subscribers from receiving this programming by various scrambling techniques which we
will explain in greater detail in our Findings of Fact. Signal bleed occurs when the scrambling
process is not fully successful.
The stated purpose of section 505 is to protect children from signal bleed. Section
505(a) requires a cable television operator to completely scramble or block the video and audio
portions of any cable channel that is primarily dedicated to sexually explicit programming. If
a cable operator is unable to comply in full with section 505(a), then section 505(b) requires
"time channeling", i.e., that sexually explicit adult programming be transmitted only during
those hours when children are not likely to view it. The Federal Communications Commission
has determined these "safe harbor" hours to be from 10:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m.
The principal issue facing us is whether government regulation of signal bleed from
sexually explicit programming offends the free speech and equal protection rights of
adult-programming networks and of their subscriber audience. Our analysis is narrowed by
the fact that plaintiffs do not contend that signal bleed itself is protected speech. Moreover.
plaintiffs concede that their programming is essentially 100% sexually oriented, in contrast to
other entertainment channels that display only occasional or sporadic sexually explicit scenes
or programs. Nevertheless, because the regulatory scheme of section 505 impacts on the
transmission of adult programming, which is entitled to First Amendment protection, {*4} we
will examine whether section 505 is a content-based restriction of speech, and, if so, whether
it survives scrutiny by addressing a compelling interest and by being narrowly tailored for that
end. We will also consider whether Congress has unconstitutionally singled out networks that
are exclusively dedicated to sexually oriented programming, while not regulating signal bleed
from other premium networks that at times will transmit sexually oriented programs or scenes.
Finally, we will examine plaintiffs' claim that the language of section 505 is unconstitutionally
vague.
President Clinton signed the CDA into law on February 8, 1996. On February 26,
Playboy filed this action in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware,
seeking a declaratory judgment that 505 violates the First Amendment and the Equal
Protection Clause of the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. In addition, Playboy
sought injunctive relief that would prohibit enforcement of 505 by the Government. {*5}
Graff subsequently filed an action seeking identical relief against the same defendants. On
March 4, 1996, Judge Farnan granted Graff's motion to consolidate these actions pursuant to
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 42(a). That same day, Chief Judge Dolores K. Sloviter of the
United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit granted the parties' request to appoint a
three- judge district court pursuant to 561(a) of the CDA. She named Judge Joseph P.
Farnan of the U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware, Judge Jerome B. Simandle of
the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey, and Judge Jane R. Roth of the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. {*6}
Because the CDA was to go into effect on March 9, 1996, {*7} Playboy requested a
temporary restraining order ("TRO") to enjoin implementation and enforcement of 505 of
the Act. On March 6, 1996, Judge Farnan heard oral argument on Playboy's TRO motion.
{*8} He granted Playboy's motion on March 7, 1996, temporarily enjoining enforcement of
505 until the matter could be heard by the three judge panel appointed by Chief Judge Sloviter.
Playboy Entertainment Group, Inc. v. United States, 918 F.Supp. 813 (D.Del.1996).
In preparation for our consideration of the plaintiffs' Application for a Preliminary
Injunction, the parties negotiated a mutually acceptable discovery and briefing schedule.
Much of the factual and technical evidence was presented by affidavits and briefs submitted
prior to the preliminary injunction hearing. We heard testimony on May 20 and May 21,
1996, and closing arguments were presented on May 22. We concluded that we should delay
our decision until after the Supreme Court's decision in Alliance for Community Media v.
F.C.C., 56 F.3d 105 (D.C.Cir.1995). The Supreme Court published its decision on June 28,
1996, sub nom., Denver Area Education Telecommunications Consortium v. F.C.C., 116
S.Ct. 2374 (1996). The parties then submitted supplemental memoranda, as we had
instructed, on the impact and applicability of the Supreme Court's decision.
In order to understand fully the arguments made by the parties in this case, it is
necessary to understand the technological workings of cable signals and transmission. During
the preliminary injunction hearing, the court heard extensive and complex testimony regarding
cable technology and the mechanisms available to comply with 505. Pursuant to Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a), we make the following findings of fact:
1. Playboy and Graff challenge 505 of the CDA, entitled "Scrambling of Sexually
Explicit Adult Video Service Programming." This section requires a multisystem operator
("MSO") {*9} to scramble "sexually explicit adult programming or other programming that is
indecent" which is transmitted on a channel "primarily dedicated to sexually oriented
programming." Section 505 requires that any such adult channel or network be fully
scrambled. The purpose of this scrambling is to eliminate "signal bleed." "Signal bleed" is
the partial reception of video images and/or audio sounds on a scrambled channel. If an MSO
does not or cannot comply with 505's blocking requirement, the MSO is prohibited from
transmitting the adult programming during hours of the day when minors are most likely to
view it. {*10}
2. MSOs, such as Telecommunication, Inc. ("TCI") and Time Warner Cable, provide
cable subscribers with various packages of cable channels for which subscribers pay a monthly
fee. Some subscribers receive a "basic" package or "tier" of channels. A basic cable tier
often includes local broadcast networks (like ABC, CBS, and NBC), leased and public access
channels, as well as networks devoted entirely to news, education, fine arts, music videos,
sports, or shopping. MSOs also provide "premium" tiers, which offer, in addition to the basic
tier channels, channels showing recently released movies (like HBO, Cinemax, and Showtime)
and channels dedicated solely to adult entertainment. MSOs charge a monthly fee for a basic
cable package and additional monthly fees for premium cable channels.
3. Premium programming is also offered by MSOs on a "pay-per-view" basis. A
pay-per-view consumer places an order with a cable operator, requesting access to a particular
movie or sporting event. A consumer may also purchase programming on a premium channel
for a specified period of time. When a consumer places a pay-per-view order, the MSO at the
beginning of the requested program unscrambles the signal by remote accessing of a
converter/descrambler box in the subscriber's home. The MSO rescrambles the signal at the
conclusion of the program. The fee charged for receiving a program on a pay-per-view basis
is always in addition to monthly fees paid for a cable package.
4. Playboy and Graff provide MSOs with adult, sexually oriented video programming.
The MSOs then transmit the plaintiffs' programming to premium subscribers and pay-per-view
purchasers who request access to such programming. Playboy owns two adult-programming
networks: Playboy Television and AdulTVision. Graff also owns two adult networks: Adam
& Eve and Spice. The programming on the Playboy and Graff networks is virtually 100%
sexually explicit adult programming. In marketing its programming, Playboy relies on both
premium subscription and pay-per-view sales, while Graff relies almost entirely on
pay-per-view. On a yearly basis, 3 million households subscribe to and/or receive
pay-per-view sexually explicit adult programming.
5. Other non-adult premium networks have obtained licenses to exhibit particular
Playboy films. In addition, non-adult premium and basic cable channels will, among other
programs, transmit sexually explicit programs or programs which contain some sexually
explicit scenes. We received evidence of the frequency of sexually explicit programming on
non-adult channels. It was demonstrated for example that the number of sexually explicit
programs available on non-adult channels on the evening of Friday, May 17, 1996, in Denver,
Colorado, was one sixteenth that shown on the plaintiffs' adult channels. Moreover, unlike
the adult channels, the sexually explicit programs on non-adult channels were mainly "R" rated
movies which contained some sexually explicit scenes but were not continuously sexually
explicit as was plaintiffs' programming.
6. MSOs receive signals from many sources, such as master antennas, satellites, and
local television stations. The signals are received at the system transmitter or "headend";
where they are amplified and retransmitted by coaxial cable. Cable subscribers receive the
channels directly by cable, if they own a cable-ready television, or by attaching the cable to a
converter box if they own a non-cable-ready television. {*11}
7. Because the cost of premium and pay-per-view programming is in addition to the
cost of basic programming, MSOs seek to secure premium network signals for subscribers
only. To prevent a signal from reaching the home of a non- subscriber, MSOs "scramble" the
signal by blocking a portion of it. Currently, most MSOs scramble premium channel signals
using either "RF" or "baseband" technology. Generally, this scrambling affects only the video
portion of the transmission. {*12}
8. When a consumer decides to subscribe to a premium or pay-per-view channel, the
MSO must descramble the channel for the new subscriber. This can be done either by
installing a positive or negative trap in the coaxial cable leading to the new subscriber's home
or by providing the new subscriber with an addressable converter. The trap or the addressable
converter descrambles the signal so that the integrity of the image and/or the sound is restored
in the set or sets attached to the descrambled line. The MSO can remotely "address" an
addressable converter by sending out an electrical impulse. Addressable converters make
pay-per-view requests possible by enabling an MSO by remote direction to descramble and
then rescramble the cable signals entering the subscriber's home. {*13}
9. As mentioned above, one of the technologies used by MSOs to secure premium
channels is "positive trapping." For positive trapping, the MSO installs at its transmitter
headend an electronic box which jams the signal of the channel to be secured.
Non-subscribers to that channel will receive only "snow" for video and a high-pitched beep for
audio. Subscribers to the jammed channel receive a metal cylinder, the positive trap, which is
attached to the cable- ready TV or to the-set top converter box in order to filter out the
jamming signal.
10. A premium channel's signal can also be secured by "negative trapping." Using this
technology, the signal will be transmitted in the clear. A negative trap is installed at the
homes of non-subscribers, jamming the signal there.
11. An MSO's choice between using positive or negative trapping will depend on
whether the majority of subscribers to the overall cable service also wish to subscribe to a
particular premium service. It is cost effective to use negative traps only when a large
majority of the customers of a cable system subscribe to a particular premium channel.
12. The problem which 505 was enacted to remedy is known as "signal bleed."
Audio or video "bleed" occurs when a signal is not effectively scrambled by the MSO's RF or
baseband equipment. Bleeding does not occur in TV sets with converter boxes that have a
feature known as channel mapping. {*14} Cable- ready television sets, however, do not
include this mapping feature. When a consumer with a cable-ready TV tunes to a scrambled
premium channel to which the consumer does not subscribe, the consumer receives the
jammed signal which under some circumstances includes a video picture or portions of a
picture because of a phenomenon called random lockup. The non-subscribing consumer will
also receive a clear audio signal unless the MSO's scrambling system is one which scrambles
the audio. {*15} The severity of this signal bleeding problem varies from time to time and
from place to place. The reason for these inconsistencies may be weather extremes, faulty or
old equipment, or human error in installing, operating, and/or maintaining systems.
Moreover, according to plaintiffs' expert, Dr. Walter Ciciora, the cable-ready TV's that
pervade the market today have improved electronic circuitry which will make a discernible
picture out of a partly-scrambled signal. This technology, developed over the past two
decades, permits the child of a cable subscriber to tune the cable-ready TV to a premium or
pay-per-view channel offered on the cable system and to receive discernible images even
though the parent is a non- subscriber to that channel.
13. With this incidence of improved electronic technology and/or partially scrambled
signals, a non-subscriber may see and hear portions of a channel or program to which he or
she does not subscribe. This result is of particular concern when the programming is sexually
explicit, intended for an adult-only audience. Families, who do not subscribe to adult
entertainment channels, have found that sounds and images from these channels are at least
partially discernible. The government presented anecdotal evidence of parents discovering that
their children have been exposed to sights and sounds from sexually explicit programming only
after the exposure had occurred. This evidence included affidavits from several parents
testifying about the danger in their homes of signal bleed from adult programming networks.
Other parents complained that, even though their own sets were attached to lockboxes that
fully blocked indecent programs, their children were exposed to signal bleed from adult
programming when they visited friends. Anecdotal evidence of signal bleed was also
presented in letters which had been sent to various members of Congress and were made part
of the record before this court. In addition, video tapes of sexually explicit signal bleed were
admitted into evidence. For instance, Defendant's Exhibit No.4 was taped from the Playboy
Channel in Orange, California. Exhibit No. 4 shows partially scrambled images of a nude
woman caressing herself and then of two nude women in the water and in a boat, caressing
each other. Defendant's Exhibit No. 5 is an audio tape of the Spice Channel, made by a
non-Spice subscriber from the audio bleed. It carries the sounds of what appear to be repeated
sexual encounters accompanied by assorted orgiastic moans and groans.
14. There are approximately 62 million households in the United States which receive
cable television. Of these, 20 to 25 million have converter boxes to receive basic and/or
premium cable service. These converter boxes will map out the scrambled channels and as a
consequence these households will not receive "signal bleed." The other 40 million cable
subscribers have the potential for a "bleed" problem. It is not clear how many of these 40
million cable homes with the potential for "signal bleed" will not in fact receive signal bleed
either because the local MSO employs effective baseband or digital scrambling or because the
household is already a subscriber to the adult channels. {*16} No evidence was presented of
any consumer desire to receive "signal bleed." Moreover, plaintiffs make no claim that
"signal bleed" itself is constitutionally protected.
15. On June 12, 1995, after hearings and substantial debate had been held regarding the
legislation that was to become the 1996 Telecommunications Act, Senator Diane Feinstein of
California and Senator Trent Lott of Mississippi offered Amendment 1269 which ultimately
became Section 505 of the Act. Their amendment proposed that MSOs, offering adult
programming, should be required to completely scramble the audio and video signals to
prevent partial reception of those channels in the homes of nonsubscribers.
16. Senator Feinstein told members of the Senate that "[p]arents ... come home after
work only to find their children sitting in front of the television watching or listening to the
adult's-only channel, a channel that many parents did not even know existed." Cong. Rec.
S8167; see Playboy Ex. 20. SHe noted that guidelines which put the burden on the subscriber
to request complete scrambling of adult channels were inadequate because often nonsubscribers
are unaware that indecent audio and/or video signals can be received. Id. The object ofthe
amendment, she said, was to "protect[ ] children by prohibiting sexually explicit programming
to those individuals who have not specifically requested such programming."
17, Senators Feinstein and Lott each spoke briefly about their proposed amendment.
141 Cong. Rec. S8166-S8169. Accompanying the transcript of their statements before the
Senate was a memorandum from the American Law Division ("ALD") of the Congressional
Research Service. The memorandum analyzed the Feinstein-Lott amendment in light of First
Amendment case law and concluded that some language contained in the provision might be
unconstitutional and over broad. Id. at S8168. Except for the statements of Senators Feinstein
and Lott, there was no debate on the amendment and no hearings were held on it. The
amendment passed easily in the Senate (91 votes in favor; none opposed) and became 505 of
the bill that emerged from the conference which ironed out the differences between the House
and Senate versions. On February 8, 1996, President Clinton signed the bill into law.
18. Section 505 does not eliminate adult programming. Instead, it offers MSOs either
the option of fully scrambling the video and audio signals of adult programming or, if
complete scrambling is not possible or is not the choice of the MSO, the option of transmitting
adult programs only during the "safe harbor" hours, Specifically, pursuant to 505(a), MSOs
are required to "fully block the video and audio portion of [an adult entertainment] channel so
that one not a subscriber to such channel or programming does not receive it." If an operator
cannot fully block its adult channels, it must then, pursuant to 505(b), discontinue
programming "during the hours of the day ... when a significant number of children are likely
to view it." The FCC regulation implementing this alternative would limit adult programming
to the eight hour period between 10:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. We will refer to the requirement
found in subsection (a) as "complete scrambling," and the alternative offered by subsection
(b), as "time channeling."
19. There are MSOs that already meet the requirements of 505. For example, Steven
Saril, Senior Vice President of Sales and Marketing for Graff, testified that roughly half of the
systems carrying Graff programming are in compliance with 505. {*17} For the MSOs that
are not in compliance, several technologies may become available in the future that would
allow an MSO to meet the requirements of 505. Television manufacturers may soon be
required by law to insert the so-called "v-chip," in all new televisions. Pub.L. No. 104- 104,
551, 110 Stat. at 139-41. The v-chip will allow parents to block types of programming
which they find inappropriate for their children. The v-chip is currently being tested in
Canadian markets. It is not clear, however, how long it will be before television with v-chip
become widely available in the United States.
20. Digital cable technology is another future option that will permit MSOs to
completely scramble signals to nonsubscribers as 505 requires. Approximately 2 million
American consumers presently receive digital television service. Digital signals will prevent all
audio and video bleeding, but digital service will require conversion of the MSOs' headend
equipment from analog to digital technology. As MSOs adopt digital service, they will
probably use it first for premium channels, including adult programming.
21. Because the currently used "RF" and "baseband" technologies are not capable of
fully scrambling both the audio and video signal at all times, many MSOs would be required,
if 505(a) was enforced today, to resort to other and/or additional scrambling techniques. If
an MSO was not able or willing to initiate additional scrambling techniques, it would be
required to time channel adult programming.
22. One device which has been available for several years and which succeeds in fully
scrambling unwanted cable signals is the lockbox. Since the early 1980s, MSOs have been
required by law to provide a lockbox to any customer upon request. Section 544(d) of the
1984 Cable Act requires that cable operators either sell or lease a blocking device to any
subscriber who requests that a channel be completely blocked. See 47 U.S.C. 544(d)(2)(A).
However, few households have obtained the lockboxes made available by this provision.
23. Section 504 of the CDA also requires MSOs to completely block upon request any
programming that a cable customer finds personally offensive. This blocking requirement is
not limited to the "sexually explicit adult video service programming" which is the target of
505. Pub.L. No. 104-104, 504, 110 Stat. 56, 136 (1996). Moreover, under 504, the
MSO, rather than the subscriber, is responsible for bearing the cost of providing the blocking
mechanism. {*18} Despite this economic burden, plaintiffs suggest that 504 presents a
constitutional, "less restrictive alternative" because it would require an MSO to provide
complete blocking only upon request. Plaintiffs also assert that cable subscribers can be
alerted through public relations efforts that blocking devices will be made available to them,
free of charge, upon request. Methods of disseminating this information could include inserts
in program guides and bills, informative screens shown on "barker channels", advertisements
run on other channels, and special mailings. We have not, however, received evidence that
MSOs are advising cable customers of the availability of the free channel blocks under 504.
Nor is there evidence that customers are responding to such notices, if given. Thus, we cannot
effectively assess plaintiffs' claim that 504 is likely to become a viable remedy for
eliminating signal bleed. If the 504 blocking option is not being promoted, it cannot become
a meaningful alternative to the provisions of 505. At the time of the permanent injunction
hearing, further evidence of the actual and predicted impact and efficacy of 504 would be
helpful to us.
24. MSOs that adopted the lockbox remedy, in order to comply with 505, would be
required to provide all nonsubscribers with a lockbox programmed to block the audio and
video signals of adult entertainment networks. A mapping converter with a lockbox feature
allows parents to control when adult programming will be received and when it will be
blocked. Most lockboxes currently available are capable of blocking only signals entering the
television set to which the box is attached. In order to fully block access to sexually oriented
programming at all times, each cable-connected TV set in the home would have to be
connected to a lockbox. A single converter/lockbox costs approximately $115. If MSOs that
offer adult programming were to distribute one converter/lockbox to every nonsubscribing
household currently without one, the total cost would be prohibitive, probably in excess of one
billino dollars.
25. In the alternative, MSOs could provide "negative traps" to nonsubscribers. A
"negative trap" is installed on the cable wiring of non- subscribing households and scrambles a
clear signal. Subscribers to adult channels receive the clear signal without the negative trap.
Negative trapping costs between $12 and $15 per household. It is an economically feasible
solution only in areas, such as military bases, where a large majority of cable subscribers want
to receive the adult channel.
26. Double scrambling with "positive trap" technology provides the most workable
alternative for non-complying MSOs. To achieve double scrambling, RF or baseband
scrambling is combined with a jamming signal at the headend. The headend jamming
completely blocks video and audio so that no signal bleed occurs in the homes of
non-subscribers. In order for a subscriber to view programming that has been double
scrambled, the subscriber needs both a positive trap and an addressable converter. The
positive trap filters out the interference from the jamming signal, and the addressable converter
descrambles the RF or baseband scrambling. The addressable converter can be used to start up
and end periods of premium service and also to permit pay-per-view reception. Positive trap
technology would be economically advantageous in areas where nonsubscribers outnumber
subscribers. If the positive trapping alternative were adopted by an MSO, positive traps would
be delivered to or installed at all households subscribing to adult programming. The average
cost of a positive trap is $7. A positive trap is easily installed by the subscriber or it can be
installed by the MSO at a cost of approximately $35. The cost of the additional equipment
necessary for jamming at the MSO's headend Is estimated to be $750 to $1,000.
27. Positive trapping technology poses an additional problem for pay-per-view
purchases. Customers either have to pick up a positive trap or order it in advance of viewing
the desired program. This interferes with the spontaneous nature of what plaintiffs consider to
be the impulse purchasing of sexually explicit adult programming.
28. Professional installation of traps also raises privacy concerns. A subscriber, who
enjoys adult entertainment at home, might be dissuaded from requesting a positive trap upon
realizing that the MSO will learn his or her identity. The new subscriber will be identified as
a consumer of sexually explicit material--although with sexually explicit premium and
pay-per-view programming, the subscriber will also be identifiable through billing for the
programming.
29. A few MSOs have already adopted "double scrambling" to resolve community
opposition to sexually explicit programming and to the audio and/or video bleeding of signals
from such programming. Plaintiffs contend that in these double-scrambling communities
revenues from adult channels has fallen by fifty per cent. Plaintiffs are of the opinion that a
significant factor causing this drop in revenue is the impulse nature of the purchase of adult
programming.
30. Finally, an MSO has the option of complying with 505 by "time channeling" as
provided in subsection (b) It an MSO cannot or chooses not to completely scramble audio
and/or video signals as required by 505(a), it must restrict adult program to certain "safe
harbor" hours. In preparation for implementing 505, the FCC established a regulation that
defines the safe harbor hours as the eight hour period between 10:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m, In re
Implementation of Section 505 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, CS Dkt. No. 96-40,
FCC 96-84, Order & Notice of Proposed Rulemaking amending 47 C.F.R. 76 P 6 (released
March 5, 1996; intended to become effective March 9, 1996). If time channeling were
adopted by an MSO, adult cable programming would not be available in the MSO's service
area except during the safe harbor hours. Plaintiffs estimate that their revenues would fall
approximately thirty per cent if time channeling were adopted. {*19}
31. The MSOs that have taken a position on the method by which they would comply
with 505 have all announced that they would adopt time channeling.
Playboy and Graff have asked this court to exercise extraordinary judicial authority by
striking down a law drafted and adopted by a co-equal branch of government. The plaintiff
request raises one of the judiciary's most "awesome responsibilit[ies] calling for the utmost
circumspection in its exercise." Heart of Atlanta Motel, Inc. v. United States, 85 S.Ct. 1, 2
(1964). After thorough examination and discussion, we conclude that, at this preliminary
injunction stage, we will not strike down 505. As the case has presently been developed
before us, the plaintiffs have not met the requirements for the issuing of a preliminary
injunction. We will, therefore, deny their petition for preliminary relief.
The standard used to determine whether plaintiffs are entitled to a preliminary
injunction is well established. In order to succeed, plaintiffs must demonstrate that they are
likely to prevail on the merits and that they will suffer irreparable harm if they are not granted
injunctive relief. We must also consider whether the potential harm to the defendant that will
result from the issuing of a preliminary injunction outweighs the harm that may fall upon the
plaintiffs it such relief is denied, and whether granting the requested injunctive relief is in the
public interest. American Civil Liberties Union v. Reno, 929 F.Supp. 824, 851
(E.D.Pa.1996) (citing Campbell Soup Co. v. ConAgra, Inc., 977 F.2d 86, 90-91 (3d
Cir.1992) and Bradley v. Pittsburgh Bd. of Educ., 910 F.2d 1172, 1175 (3d Cir.1990)); see
also Clean Ocean Action v. York, 57 F.3d 328, 331 (3d Cir.1995).
In a case such as this one, in which the alleged injury is a threat to First Amendment
interests, the finding of irreparable injury is often tied to the likelihood of success on the
merits. American Civil Liberties Union, 929 F.Supp at 851 (citing Elrod v. Burns, 427 U.S.
347) (1976)). The loss of First Amendment freedoms is unquestionably irreparable injury.
Elrod, 427 U.S. at 373 (citing New York Times Co. v. United States, 403 U.S. 713 (1971).
Conversely, however, if the only irreparable injury alleged is the loss of first amendment
freedoms, the likelihood that plaintiffs will not succeed on the merits creates an equal
likelihood that they will not suffer First Amendment injury. {*20} Constitutional injury
cannot occur if there is not a constitutional violation. We will, for this reason, turn our
inquiry first to the issue of the plaintiffs' likelihood of success on the merits.
Plaintiffs challenge 505 on grounds that it (1) infringes the free speech protections
provided by the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, (2) violates the Equal ..o. .... o,
clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, and (3) contains
unconstitutionally vague terminology. With regard to all three of these claims, we conclude
that Playboy and Graff have failed to meet the preliminary injunction test. They have not
persuaded us that they are likely to prevail on the merits if any of these three claims are
ultimately litigated. Moreover, they have not demonstrated that the public interest is served by
permitting signal bleed to invade nonsubscribers' homes, particularly in view of our interest in
protecting children from a pervasive medium which transmits sexually explicit sounds and
images and in view of the continuing availability under 505 of sexually explicit adult
programming during the safe harbor hours. {*21}
Playboy and Graft claim that 505 burdens their rights guaranteed under the First
Amendment by inhibiting their freedom of speech. The First Amendment provides:
"Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech." U.S. Const. amend. I.
The Supreme Court has been exacting in its protection of this First Amendment right.
Moreover, as circumstances and technologles have, changed. the Court has adapted free
speech protection to meet these changes.
We postponed our decision here until the Supreme Court reached its decision in a case
dealing with a similar field of developing technology--that of leased and public access cable
channels. See Denver Area Educational Telecommunications Consortium, Inc. v. F.C.C., 116
S.Ct. 2374 (1996) [hereinafter Denver Consortium.] In Denver Consortium, the plaintiffs
challenged three sections of the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of
1992, which placed restrictions upon indecent programming aired on leased and public access
cable channels. {*22} Pub.L. No. 102-385, 106 Stat. 1460, 1486, 10(a), 10(b), and 10
Copr. (codified at 47 U.S.C. 532(h), 532(j), and note following 531) ("the 1992 Cable
Act"). A majority of the Supreme Court agreed that 10(b) of the 1992 Cable Act was
unconstitutional, but the Court was unable to form a majority regarding the constitutionality of
the remainder of the Act. {*23}
Justice Breyer wrote for the Court regarding 10(b), but thereafter he wrote for a
plurality, which upheld 10(a) and struck down 10(c). One of the seemingly unresolved
aspects of Denver Consortium is the standard of scrutiny we should apply in our analysis here.
The plurality suggested that it was "unwise and unnecessary" to decide whether a lower
standard of scrutiny, such as that applied in F.C.C. v. Pacifica Foundation, 438 U.S. 726
(1978), should apply in the cable context. Denver Consortium, 116 S.Ct. at 2385. It was
unnecessary to specify a specific standard because 10(b) could not pass constitutional muster
either under strict scrutiny or under a less rigorous standard. And, it was unwise to declare a
"rigid single standard" for fear of dampening the rapid rate of development in the field of
communications technologies.
The other five members of the Court suggested that strict scrutiny remained the
applicable standard where a law restricted speech on the basis of its content. Thus, these
members of the Court would have required that the law be "narrowly tailored" to achieve a
"compelling" government interest in order to survive constitutional review. Justice Thomas,
joined by Chief Justice Rehnquist and Justice Scalia believed that all three challenged
provisions of the 1992 Cable Act were constitutional and that even 10(b) would survive strict
scrutiny. See id. at 2422, 2428-29 & 2432 (Thomas, J., concurring in part and dissenting in
part). Justice Kennedy, joined by Justice Ginsburg, would have held to the contrary that strict
scrutiny was fatal to the challenged provisions and all three should be struck down. See id. at
2405- 07, 2416-17, & 2419 (Kennedy, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). In the
aftermath of the Denver Consortium decision, it is clear only that we should apply either strict
scrutiny or something very close to, strict Scrutiny when a content-based law, applicable in the
cable television context, is challenged on grounds that it violates the First Amendment. {*24}
However, whatever the standard of scrutiny, as Justice Breyer stated for the Court in
Denver Consortium: "The essence of that protection is that Congress may not regulate speech
except in cases of extraordinary need and with the exercise of a degree of care that we have
not elsewhere required." Id. at 2384.
The first step that the majority took in Denver Consortium was to scrutinize the statute
to assure that it properly addressed "an extremely important problem, without imposing, in
light of the relevant interests, an unnecessarily great regstriction on speech." Id. at 2385. The
Court defined the problem as the protection of children from exposure to patently offensive
depictions of sex. Id. It was to address this same problem that Congress enacted 505.
Section 505 differs, however, from the statute at issue in Denver Consortium and from
most statutes that are directed at speech or at the regulation of speech in that the target of
505 is not the speech itself, i.e., sexually explicit adult programming. The target is signal
bleed, a secondary effect of the transmission of that speech. Moreover, 505 is directed at
this secondary effect because signal bleed is intruding into the homes of television viewers who
have chosen not to receive the underlying sexually explicit programming.
This focus of 505 on a secondary effect of speech leads us to our next inquiry,
whether 505 is "content-based" or "content-neutral." See City of Renton v. Playtime
Theatres, Inc., 475 U.S. 41, 47 (1986), As we have noted, in Denver Consortium five justices
agreed that a content-based strict scrutiny standard should apply. We conclude here, but not
without considerable deliberation, that 505 should be treated as a content-based restriction on
speech. Even though 505 is aimed at the content-neutral objective of preventing signal
bleed, the section applies only when signal bleed occurs during the transmission of "sexually
explicit adult programming or other programming that is indecent." It does not apply when
signal bleed occurs on other premium channel networks, like HBO or the Disney Channel.
Thus, Congress targeted signal bleed based on its sexually explicit content, rendering 505 a
"content-based" restriction. We will therefore apply content-based analysis.
We must, however, also consider content in context. We cannot ignore the fact that
the households that receive signal bleed have not subscribed to the adult channel which
transmits the unwanted images and sounds. Nor can we ignore the fact that cable television is
a means of communication which is pervasive and to which children are easily exposed. The
Supreme Court has recognized that cable television is as accessible to children as over-the-air
broadcasting, if not more so. See Denver Consortium, 116 S.Ct. at 2386.
Moreover, the Supreme Court in its consideration of freedom of speech under the First
Amendment has recognized the need to protect children from sexually explicit material,
particularly in the context of a pervasive medium. See Denver Consortium, 116 S.Ct. at 2386
("[T]he provision before us comes accompanied with an extremely important justification, one
that this Court has often found compelling--the need to protect children from exposure to
patently offensive sex-relatead material."); Sable Communications of Cal., Inc. v. F.C.C.,
492 U.S. 115, 126 (1989) ("We have recognized that there is a compelling interest in
protecting the physical and psychological well-being of minors. This interest extends to
shielding minors from the influence of literature that is not obscene by adult standards.");
New York v. Ferber, 458 U.S. 747, 756-57 (1982) ("It is evident beyond the need for
elaboration that a State's interest in -safeguarding the physical and psychological well- being of
a minor' is 'compelling.' " (citation omitted)); Fabulous Assocs. Inc. v. Pa. Pub. Util.
Comm'n, 896 F.2d 780, 787 (3d Cir.1990) ("There is little question that the interest of the
state in shielding its youth from exposure to indecent materials is a compelling state interest.").
Nor are the courts alone in finding that children should be protected from exposure to
sexually explicit materials. In 1986, the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography
issued a final report that reached similar conclusions regarding the effects of "non-violent and
non-degrading," sexually explicit materials on children. The Commission explained: Perhaps
the most significant potential harm in this category exists with respect to children. We all
agree that at least much, probably most, and maybe even all material in this category,
regardless of whether it is harmful when used by adults only, is harmful when it falls into the
hands of children. ... We have no hesitancy in concluding that learning about sexuality from
most of the material in this category is not the best way for children to learn about the subject.
There are harms both to the children themselves and to notions of family control over a child's
introduction to sexuality if children learn about sex from the kinds of sexually explicit
materials that constitute the bulk of this category of materials. We have little doubt that much
of this material does find its way into the hands of children, and to the extent that it does we
all agree that it is harmful. We may disagree about the extent to which people should, as
adults, be tolerated in engaging in sexual practices that differ from the norm, but we agree
about the question of the desirability of exposing children to most of this material, and on that
our unanimous agreement is that it is undesirable. U.S. Dept. of Justice, Attorney General's
Commission on Pornography, July 1986, at 343-44 (Def.'s Ex. 80). {*25}
As a result, we conclude that 505 clearly addresses a recognized "compelling
interest," and it remains only for us to determine whether the provision is carefully tailored to
serve that end. For the reasons that we now develop, and particularly on the basis of the
Supreme Court's ruling in F.C.C. v. Pacifica Foundation, 438 U.S. 726 (1978), we hold that
Congress has adopted, at least In respect to 505(b), a carefully tailored, and constitutional,
solution. {*26}
In Denver Consortium, a plurality of the Supreme Court acknowledged that case's
similarity to Pacifica Foundation, noting that, like the broadcast system at issue in Pacifica
Foundation, "[c]able television systems 'have established a uniquely pervasive presence in the
lives of all Americans.' " Denver Consortium, 116 S.Ct. at 2386 (quoting Pacifica
Foundation, 438 U.S. at 748). It was largely the pervasive nature of broadcast media that
motivated the Court in Pacifica Foundation to uphold governmental restrictions placed on radio
broadcasts of indecent material.
We wholeheartedly agree with the plurality's finding in Denver Consortium that cable
television is now "uniquely pervasive." Id. The plurality also noted that "[c]able tclevision
broadcasting ... is as 'accessible to children' as over-the-air broadcasting if not more so." Id.
Justice Souter further explained: [W]hile we have found cable television different from
broadcast with respect to the factors justifying intrusive access requirements under the rule in
Red Lion [Broadcasting Co. v. F.C.C., 395 U.S. 367 (1969) ], see Turner Broadcasting
System, Inc. v. F.C.C., [114 S.Ct. 2445, 2456-57 (1994) ] (finding that Red Lion's spectrum
scarcity rationale had no application to cable), today's plurality opinion rightly observes that
the characteristics of broadcast radio that rendered indecency particularly threatening in
Pacifica, that is, its intrusion into the house and accessibility to children, are also present in
the case of cable television. Id. at 2401-02 (Souter, J., concurring) (citation omitted).
There is no question that a commanding majority of households in this nation subscribe
to cable programming. As a result of imperfect signal scrambling, millions of children then
have potential access not only to indecent sounds, similar to those raising concern in Pacifica
Foundation, but also to sexually explicit visual images. In the homes of families who do not
subscribe to sex-dedicated networks, these images enter as an offensive pollutant. They invade
the household and "confront[ ] the citizen ... in the privacy of the home, where the
individual's right to be left alone plainly outweighs the First Amendment rights of a intruder."
Pacifica Foundation, 438 U.S. at 748; see also Denver Consortium, 116 S.Ct. at 2386
(plurality opinion).
In Pacifica Foundation, the Supreme Court found it undisputed that George Carlin's
"Filthy Words" monologue was "vulgar," "offensive," and "shocking." 438 U.S. at 747. The
Court noted that, in the right context, the speech deserved First Amendment protections,
providing adult listeners with a right to find Carlin's observances funny and provocative,
instead of vulgar and offensive. The Court therefore examined the context of the monologue,
broadcast at 2 o'clock in the afternoon. It emphasized the ubiquitous nature of broadcast radio
and recognized that airing Carlin's performance at the time "could have enlarged a child's
vocabulary in an instant." Id. at 749.
Similarly, when cable signal bleed occurs, children may be exposed to the sights and
sounds of sexually explicit films and other adult programming. Such programming has the
potential to affect not only a child's vocabulary, but also his or her capacity for inappropriate
conduct that is sexual in nature. We believe that the danger of prematurely exposing children
to video and audio transmissions of graphic adult sexual behavior is even more troublesome
than the exposure to offensive language that was at issue in Pacifica Foundation.
Indeed, the parties do not dispute that the government has a well-established compelling
interest in protecting children from unsuperviscd exposure to sexually explicit material.
We then turn to the solution which Congress crafted in 505. Congress provided
MSOs with two alternative methods of compliance with the section: (1) complete scrambling,
or (2) time-channeling the programming into safe-harbor hours. Playboy and Graff argue that
very few MSOs will be financially able to comply with 505 by distributing expensive
equipment that will fully scramble the signals of sex-dedicated networks as required by
subsection (a). Plaintiffs fear that MSOs will drop adult programming entirely, rather than
invest in technologies which will be made obsolete by the v-chip or that MSOs will transmit
plaintiffs' networks for an unprofitably short eight-hour period. Not only do the plaintiffs
foresee lost profits, they present the possibility of bankruptcy caused by implementation of
505.
There is undoubtedly a substantial expense involved in complying with subsection (a).
However, while an economic burden may warrant consideration when weighing the relative
harms imposed by a law, economics alone cannot dictate the result where constitutional rights
are at issue. See Young v. American Mini Theatres, Inc., 427 U.S. 50, 78 (1976) (Powell
concurring); Mitchell v. Comm'n on Adult Entertainment Establishments, 10 F.3d 123, 144
(3d Cir.1993). {*27} Moreover, 505 does not require that MSOs shoulder potentially fatal
economic burdens. If the economic hardship imposed by subsection (a) is too severe, an MSO
is free to choose to comply with 505 by time-channeling in accordance with subsection (b).
By including the time-channeling compliance option in 505, Congress provided
MSOs with decision-making flexibility and an economically less restrictive alternative. We
thus find that the economic burden placed on MSOs by subsection (a) is not determinative of
the result in light of the substantially less expensive option provided by time-channeling in
subsection (b). It follows therefore that if the time-channeling alternative provides a
constitutional means of compliance with 505, then 505 is constitutional.
Time-channeling was explicitly approved by the Supreme Court as a constitutional
restriction on pervasive indecent speech in Pacifica Foundation. There, the Supreme Court
found that one of the most troubling aspects of the Carlin broadcast was the early afternoon
hour at which it was aired. Shown at that time, the broadcast was " 'like a pig in a parlor
instead of the barnyard. I" Pacifica Foundation, 438 U.S. at 750 (quoting Village of Euclid v.
Ambler Realty Co., 272 U.S. 365, 388 (1926)). The F.C.C. opinion challenged by the
Pacifica Foundation did not intend to ban future indecent broadcasts entirely but merely sought
to channel them into a safe-harbor period during which significant numbers of children would
not be listening. Id. at 732 (citing 59 F.C.C.2d 892 (1976)). The Supreme Court held that
time-channeling was an appropriate response to the problem presented. It therefore approved
the F.C.C. attempt to prevent the airing of offensive programming on a pervasive form of
communication at a time of day when children were likely to be listening.
Because the Supreme Court endorsed a time-channeling solution in very similar
circumstances in Pacifica Foundation, we believe that time-channeling also survives
constitutional scrutiny here. It is important to our reasoning that 505 does not seek to ban
sexually explicit programming, nor does it prohibit consenting adults from viewing erotic
material on premium cable networks if they so desire. It is clearly established that a complete
ban on indecent speech will rarely (if ever) be tolerated. See Denver Consortium, 116 S.Ct. at
2387 (plurality opinion) (suggesting that 10(a) passed constitutional muster in part because it
gave a cable operator the flexibility to choose not to ban indecent broadcasts, but rather "to
rearrange broadcast times, better to fit the desires of adult audiences while lessening the risks
of harm to children); id. at 2423 (Thomas, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part)
("Certainly, under our current jurisprudence, Congress could not impose a total ban on the
transmission of indecent programming."); Sable Communications. 492 U.S. at 127 (holding
total ban on indecent telephone communications to be unconstitutional and distinguishing the
time-channeling remedy approved in Pacifica Foundation on grounds that it "did not involve a
total ban on broadcasting indecent material."); Young, 427 U.S. at 70 (finding that the First
Amendment protects communication in the area of sexually oriented materials from total
suppression). The time-channeling alternative in 505 explicitly allows MSOs to continue
transmitting sex- dedicated networks. Section 505 thus leaves the speaker and the listener with
an opportunity to maintain sufficient adult communication, while respecting the privacy
interests of those who might be offended or inappropriately exposed. We believe the law thus
strikes a permissible balance of constitutional interests.
The plaintiffs contend, nevertheless, that 504 is a less restrictive option which is
available to provide protection from signal bleed. They urge, therefore, that we declare 505
invalid. However, the cost to MSOs of creating an adequate shield from a widespread
intrusion of signal bleed by supplying converter/lockboxes to households that don't subscribe
to adult channels, would be close to the expense of providing converter/lockboxes to
non-subscribing households under 505(a). The main difference is that under 504 the
household has to request the box, while under 505 the MSO must provide the box. {*28}
We have no evidence in the present record that local cable operators or producers of sexually
explicit programming are advertising the free availability of the 504 lockbox or other
blocking devices upon demand. Likewise, there is no evidence that parents are otherwise
aware of the 504 means of achieving complete blocking of undesired channels. Upon this
record, the government has demonstrated an expectation that 504 will not be a viable
alternative.
Moreover, in view of the fact that children watch television in the homes of their
friends as well as in their own homes, we do not find Congress to have been unreasonable in
wishing to extend protection from signal bleed beyond a child's own home.
Furthermore, Congress enacted, as one of the regulatory options, time channeling,
which the Supreme Court had in Pacifica Foundation held to be a constitutionally acceptable
way of protecting children from a pervasive, sexually explicit medium. Therefore, even if
505(a) does not pass constitutional analysis, 505(b) does.
Given the content of adult programming and the pervasive nature of cable television,
we find that 505 is an acceptable governmental response intended to prevent exposure o-l:.:
minors to sexually explicit signal bleed. We therefore conclude that plaintiffs have failed to
show that they are likely to succeed in their claim that the provision violates their First
Amendment rights to freedom of speech. {*29}
C. Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection Jurisprudence
Likewise, plaintiffs have not persuaded us that they can succeed on the merits of their
claim that 505 violates their rights guaranteed by the Equal Protection Clause. Playboy and
Graff argue that other premium channel networks carry adult-oriented programming but that
505 will not restrict the speech of these networks. They claim, for example, that HBO and
Showtime present programming that is an equivalent to the sexually oriented programming
shown on the Playboy networks and on Spice, and that this programming is shown at hours
outside of the safe-harbor period. They assert that legislation directed at them, but not at these
other premium networks, denies them equal protection of the laws. See, e.g., News America
Pub., Inc. v. F.C.C., 844 F.2d 800, 813 (D.C.Cir.1988) ("The safeguards of a pluralistic
political system are often absent when the legislature zeroes in on a small class of citizens.")
(citing Railway Express Agency v. New York, 336 U.S. 106 (1949))
There is, however, a significant difference between plaintiffs' networks and the
non-adult premium networks, The plaintiffs admit that all of the programming shown on their
networks--in some cases, twenty-four hours per day--is "adult programming." Transcript of
Preliminary Injunction Hearing 201- 02 (D.Del. May 20, 1996) (testimony of Steven Saril,
Senior Vice President of Sales and Marketing for Graff); see Deposition of Anthony J. Lynn,
President of Playboy Entertainment Group, Inc. at 124-25 (Def. Is Ex. 72) (stating that
sexually explicit programming aired on AdulTVision "is at risk of being defined as sexually
explicit" under 505); Plaintiff Graff Pay-Per-View Inc.'s Answers to Defendants' First Set
of Interrogs. at 6 (Def.'s Ex. 43) (responding that 100% of Graff's programming contains
material that is "sexually oriented"). On the premium channels, however, sexually explicit
shows constitute only a fraction of the programming. For example, only one sixteenth of the
programming on the non-adult cable channels on a Friday evening in Denver was sexually
explicit. Moreover, many of the shows constituting that one-sixteenth were "R" rated movies
with some sexually explicit scenes, rather than being 100% sexually explicit. Thus, it cannot
be said that the non-adult channels, such as HBO and Showtime, are "primarily dedicated" to
sexually explicit programming. Moreover, signal bleed from that one-sixteenth, if signal bleed
occurred, would not continuously present sexually explicit scenes to the channel surfer. {*30}
We find therefore that Congress was Justified in initially addressing the problem of
sexually explicit signal bleed by focusing on sex-dedicated networks. Section 505's
"differential treatment; of plaintiffs, networks is justified by their "special characteristic" of
providing nothing but sexually explicit programming intended for adult audiences. See Turner
Broadcasting, 114 S.Ct. at 2468. It is perfectly logical that Congress would begin its attempt
to prevent minors from gaining access to programming intended solely for adults by focusing
first on the networks that specialize in adult-only programming. "Congress need not deal with
every problem at once and Congress "must have a degree of leeway in tailoring means to
ends." Denver Consortium, 116 S.Ct. at 2393 (majority opinion) (citing cf. Semler v.
Oregon Bd. Of Dental Examiners, 294 U.S. 608, 610 (1935) and Columbia Broadcasting Sys.,
Inc. v. Democratic Nat'l Comm., 412 U.S. 94, 102-03 (1973)); see also Williamson v. Lee
Optical of Okla., 348 U.S. 483, 489 (1955) ("[R]eform may take one step at a time,
addressing itself to the phase of the problem which seems most acute to the legislative mind.");
United States v. Edge Broadcasting Co., 509 U.S. 418, 434 (1993) (The Court does not
"require that the Government make progress on every front before it can make progress on any
front.").
We find that the means chosen by Congress to protect children and aid their parents
was a permitted and measured response to a national problem. The cause of the problem was
primarily traced to sex-dedicated networks and, understandably, Congress began its efforts to
address the problem by focusing on those networks. {*31} Congress thus made a logical
distinction and tailored the law in an acceptable manner. As a result, plaintiffs' claim that
505 will violate their right to equal protection of the laws is likely to fail.
After the Supreme Court's decision in Denver Consortium, it is clear that plaintiffs'
vagueness claim will also fail on the merits. Graff noted in its Memorandum of Law in
support of its Motion for a Preliminary Injunction that "the Supreme Court has before it a
similar vagueness challenge in the cable indecency case," citing Denver Consortium. At that
time, argument had been heard by the Supreme Court in Denver Consortium, but the decision
was pending. When the Supreme Court published its decision in that case, it flatly rejected the
plaintiffs' argument that the provisions challenged were unconstitutionally vague. Denver
Consortium, 116 S. Ct. at 2389-90. The Court concluded that similar terms had ben
previously defined by courts and by the F.C.C. It also found the language of the statute
"similar to language previously used by this Court for roughly similar purposes," referring to
its decision in Miller v. California, 413 U.S. 15, 24 (1973), among others. Id. at 2389.
Thus, the use of accepted terms imbued the statute with meaning.
In recent decisions, other members of the federal judiciary have likewise found that the
term "indecent" has, over time, been sufficiently defined. See American Civil Liberties Union
v, Reno, 929 F.Supp. at 865, 868 (Dalzell, J., concurring); Shea ex rel. American Reporter
v. Reno, 930 F.Supp. 916, 935-36 (S.D.N.Y., 1996). As pointed out recently by a
three-judge panel in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York,
federal courts have approved the F.C.C.'s definition of "indecency" and have rejected
vagueness challenges to that term in the context of broadcast media, commercial telephone
communications, and cable programming. See Shea, 930 F.Supp. at 935-36. The court in
Shea comprehensively reviewed the precedent in this area, and we find their research and their
reasoning persuasive.
Therefore, we conclude that 505 does not suffer from the "vice of vagueness." The
plaintiffs clearly understood that the law applied to them, and in the wake of this litigation, it
is clear that the F.C.C. would apply 505 to MSOs that carry the plaintiffs' networks. Thus,
the meaning and application of 505 should be plain to MSOs as well. Playboy and Graff
have little-to-no chance of succeeding on the merits of a vagueness claim.
Plaintiffs have not satisfied the elements of the preliminary injunction test, We will
therefore remove the temporary restraining order, which was previously granted by this court,
and we will deny plaintiffs request for preliminary injunctive relief.
*1. Judge Jane R. Roth, United States Circuit Court Judge for the Third Circuit.
*2. Judge Joseph J. Farnan, United States District Court Judge for the District of
Delaware.
*3. Judge Jerome B. Simandle, United States District Court Judge for the District of
New Jersey.
*4. We recognize at the outset that the programming on plaintiffs' sexually dedicated
channels is indecent, meaning vulgar or offensively explicit sexual material not generally
available for viewing by children, but that it is not obscene. Indecent speech is subject to
constitutional protection because it is established that "[s]exual expression which is indecent
but not obscene is protected by the First Amendment." Sable Communications of Cal., Inc. v.
F.C.C., 492 U.S. 115, 126 (1989); Fabulous Associates Inc. v. Pennsylvania Public Utility
Comm'n, 896 F.2d 780, 783 (3d Cir.1990); Action for Children's Television v. F.C.C., 58
F.3d 654, 659 (D.C.Cir.1995) (en banc), cert. denied, 116 S.Ct. 701 (1996); accord, ACLU
v. Reno, 929 F.Supp. 824 (E.D.Pa.1996), at 851 (Sloviter, J.), at 858 n. 3 (Buckwalter, J.),
and at 865-6 (Dalzell, J.).
*5. The defendants in this action are the United States; the United States Department
of Justice; Attorney General of the United States, Janet Reno; and the Federal
Communications Commission ("the FCC"). To simplify matters, we will refer to these
defendants jointly as "the Government."
*6. Section 561(a) or the CDA provides that a three judge district court shall be
convened to decide "any civil action challenging the constitutionality, on its face, of this title
or any amendment made by this title ... pursuant to the provisions of section 2284 of title 28,
United States Code." Pub.L. No. 104-104, 561(a), 110 Stat. 56, 142 (1996). Section 2284
requires that at least one of the judges appointed to serve on the three-judge panel be a circuit
judge.
*7. Pursuant to 505(b), section 505 was set to go into effect on March 9, 1996, thirty
days after it was signed into law by the President. Pub.L. No. 104-104, 505(b), 110 Stat.
56, 136 (1996).
*8. Section 2284(b)(3) delineates the preliminary matters that may be decided by a
single judge from those matters that must be decided by three- judge district courts. That
section provides: A single judge may ... grant a temporary restraining order on a specific
finding, based on evidence submitted, that specified irreparable damage will result if the order
is not granted, which order, unless previously revoked by the district judge, shall remain in
force only until the hearing and determination by the district court of three judges of an
application for a preliminary injunction. A single judge shall not ... hear and determine any
application for a preliminary or permanent injunction.... Any action of a single judge may be
reviewed by the full court at any time before final judgment. 28 U.S.C. 2284.
*9. Section 505 applies to "multichannel video programming distributors." These
distributors are more simply known as "multisystem operators" or "MSOs" and we will refer
to them in this manner.
*10. Section 505 provides: (a) REQUIREMENT.--In providing sexually explicit adult
programming or other programming that is indecent on any channel of its service primarily
dedicated to sexually-oriented programming, a multichannel video programming distributor
shall fully scramble or otherwise fully block the video and audio portion of such channel so
that one not a subscriber to such channel or programming does not receive it. (b)
IMPLEMENTATION.--Until a multichannel video programming distributor complies with the
requirement set forth in subsection (a), the distributor shall limit the access of children to the
programming referred to in that subsection by not providing such programming during the
hours of the day (as determined by the Commission) when a significant number of children are
likely to view it. (c) DEFINITION.--As used in this section, the term 'scramble' means to
rearrange the content of the signal of the programming so that the programming cannot be
viewed or heard in an understandable manner. Pub.L. No. 104-104, 505, 110 Stat. 56, 136
(1996) (to be codified at 47 U.S.C. 641).
*11. A converter box sits on top of an older model television set which can receive
only a finite number of VHF or UHF channels. The converter takes the cable signal and
converts it to a channel which can be received by the subscriber's television set. When cable
systems began to offer programming, other than local broadcast stations, on channels that
television sets designed for broadcast reception were not capable of receiving, MSOs began to
distribute these converter boxes to their subscribers. Converter boxes are electronic channel
selectors. They are connected both to the subscriber's TV set and to the MSO's cable line.
When a subscriber chooses a cable channel to view, the box "converts" the selected channel to
a frequency (typically broadcast television channel three or four) that the subscriber's TV set
can receive and display. In about 1980, TV set manufacturers began marketing "cable-ready"
TV sets, units equipped with tuners capable of directly receiving cable programming
transmitted on non-broadcast (cable only) frequencies. If a subscriber has a cable-ready TV
set, and it is capable of tuning all the channels offered by the cable system, the subscriber's
line can be connected directly to the TV set.
*12. Because RF affects only the picture portion of the television transmission, no
audio scrambling occurs. Some baseband systems do include audio encryption so that no
intelligible audio will be presented to the non-subscribing customers.
*13. The previously described converter box and the addressable converter/descrambler
can be combined in one set top box.
*14. When a consumer with a converter box attempts to tune a scrambled channel, the
converter box will not tune that channel but will tune to another channel, providing either a
promotional message or a blue screen.
*15. A subscriber will of course receive the descrambled video and audio.
*16. If at the trial on the permanent injunction more specific evidence of the number of
households with the potential for signal bleed were to be presented, we would be in a better
position to consider whether the standards for a permanent injunction have been met.
*17. Saril also testified that the Spice network might go out of business if the
non-complying channels were required to time channel. The Graff "standard agreement,"
however, requires an MSO to carry Spice only during the hours of 9 p.m. to 3 a.m.--hours
that are very close to the safe harbor time period.
*18. Section 504(a) provides: (a) SUBSCRIBER REQUEST.--Upon request by a cable
service subscriber, a cable operator shall, without charge, fully scramble or otherwise fully
block the audio and video programming of each channel carrying such programming so that
one not a subscriber does not receive it. Pub.L. No. 104-104, 504, 110 Stat. 56, 136 (1996)
(emphasis added).
*19. We are skeptical of plaintiffs' estimate of revenue loss. It appears to be
significantly overstated. Although Graff's Vice President, Steven Saril, stated that 30 percent
of those who purchase his company's programming do so outside the safe harbor hours, many
of these customers may not be affected by time channeling because half of the cable systems,
carrying Graff channels, already comply with 505(a). The customers of these MSOs will
still be able to view Graff's channels outside the safe harbor period. Moreover, Saril admitted
on cross-examination that 21% of the non-safe-harbor purchases occur at 9:00 or 9:30 p.m.,
and that a 10:00 p.m. starting time would cause no loss of revenue. He further admitted that
people may rearrange their viewing schedule or use a VCR to tape adult programming during
the safe harbor hours, again preserving Graff's revenues. Finally, plaintiffs acknowledge
some remaining elasticity in the pricing of sexually explicit programming. Graff would be
able raise its rates a certain extent without losing customers.
*20. Plaintiffs also claim that they will suffer financial loss. Financial loss is not,
however, the type of irreparable injury that warrants the granting of injunctive relief. See,
e.g., In re Arthur Treacher's Franchisee Litigation, 699 F.2d 1137, 1145 (3d Cir.1982). To
the extent that plaintiffs may suffer financial loss for which they will not be reimbursed, that
economic burden is an element which we considered infra in the balancing of harms,
particularly in our discussion of the benefit to the public of time channeling (per F.C.C. v.
Pacifica Foundation, 438 U.S. 726 (1978)) and its availability under 505 as an alternative to
complete scrambling.
*21. In our discussion, we do not separate out the elements to consider with regard to
the issuing of an injunction, i.e., likelihood of success on the merits, irreparable harm,
balancing of harms, and public interest. First, in this context of a claim of unconstitutional
restriction of free speech, the harm and public interest elements are important factors in
determining the likelihood of success on the merits. These factors will therefore be discussed
in conjunction with the merits of the claims. Second, as we note above, our irreparable harm
analysis is subsumed by our finding that plaintiffs are not likely to succeed on the merits.
*22. The plaintiffs in Denver Consortium challenged sections 10(a), 10(b), and 10(c)
of the 1992 Cable Act. These provisions were to be applied to "leased access channels" and
"public, educational; or governmental channels" ("PEG channels"). Section 10(a) "permit[s]
a cable operator to enforce prospectively a written and published policy of prohibiting
programming [on leased access channels] that the operator reasonably believes describes or
depicts sexual or excretory activities or organs in a patently offensive manner as measured by
contemporary community standards." 1992 Cable Act, 10(a)(2). Section 10(b) requires that,
if cable operators choose not to ban sexually explicit programming as permitted under 10(a),
when they broadcast such programming on leased access channels, they must completely
segregate and block the signal carrying the indecent programming. 1992 Cable Act, 10(b).
According to regulations promulgated pursuant to 10(b), lensed access programmers must
inform cable operators if their programming will be indecent, and cable operators must then
place that programming on a single channel. 47 C.F.R. 76.701(d) (1995). The signal of
this single channel must be completely blocked by the cable operator, and unscrambled only
upon the written request of an adult subscriber. Id. at 76.701(b). Upon receiving a
subscriber's request, the operator must provide access to the blocked channel within thirty days
and, if that subscriber later asks that the channel be re-blocked, the operator must
accommodate the subscribers request, again within 30 days. Id. at 76.701(c). Section 10(c)
is similar to 10(a) but applies only to PEG channels. It instructs the F.C.C. to enact
regulations that would permit a cable operator "to prohibit the use, on [a cable system], of any
channel capacity of any public, educational, or governmental access facility for any
programming which contains obscene material, sexually explicit, conduct, or material
soliciting or promoting unlawful conduct." 1992 Cable Act, 10(c).
*23. Unlike leased and public access channels, the Graff and Playboy networks are
commercial premium channels. The segregation of adult programming and the scrambling of
adult channel signals, which concerned the Court in Denver Consortium, is, in the context of
adult channels, a commercial decision which MSOs have made in order to limit access to those
viewers who pay to subscribe to the adult channels.
*24. We recognize that several Supreme Court pluralities have suggested that sexually
explicit material receives less protection under the First Amendment than, for example,
artistically, politically, or scientifically valued forms of speech. For example, in Young v.
American Mini Theatres, Inc., 427 U.S. 50 (1976), a plurality of the Court explained: [E]ven
though we recognize the First Amendment will not tolerate the total suppression of erotic
materials that have some arguably artistic value, it is manifest that society's interest in
protecting this type of expression is of a wholly different, and lesser, magnitude than the
interest in untrammeled political debate that inspired Voltaire's immortal comment ["I
disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it."]. Whether
political oratory or philosophical discussion moves us to applaud or to despise what is said,
every schoolchild can understand why our duty to defend the right to speak remains the same.
But few of us would march our sons and daughters off to war to preserve the citizen's right to
see "Specified Sexual Activities" exhibited in the theatres of our choice. Even though the First
Amendment protects communication in this area from total suppression, we hold that the State
may legitimately use the content of these materials as the basis for placing them in a different
classification. Id. at 70-71. This plurality also noted that "[e]ven within the area of protected
speech, a difference in content may requite a different governmental response." Id. at 66.
The plurality opinion in Pacifica Foundation similarly suggested that a lower standard of
scrutiny may be appropriately applied in certain contexts when the content of the regulated
material is offensive, vulgar, or shocking. See Pacifica Foundation, 438 U.S. at 744-48.
*25. In considering harm to children, we have not relied on the study conducted by
Government's expert witness, Dr. Diana M. Elliott, Ph.D. See Diana M. Elliott, Children's
Exposure to Pornography: Prevalence and Impact (Def. 's Ex. 79). We understand, as she
testified, that it would be unethical to expose children to pornography in order to test their
reactions to sexually explicit material, but, for a number of reasons, we have concerns
regarding the reliability of her methods and conclusions. Her results strike us as anecdotal and
possibly misleading. Because the parties stipulated prior to the preliminary injunction hearing
that all evidence submitted would be admissible, we did not consider the admissibility of her
study under the rules established in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc., 113 S.Ct.
2786 (1993) and In re Paoli R.R. Yard PCB Litigation, 35 F.3d 717 (3d Cir.1994), cert.
denied, 115 S.Ct. 1253 (1995). Instead, the reliability concerns that the court had regarding
Dr. Elliott's research were that her research should not be given weight in coming to our
present decision. If plaintiffs plan to seek a hearing in order to request a permanent injunction
before this panel, it would be helpful if the parties would provide the court with additional
evidence demonstrating the effects of sexually explicit materials on children.
*26. The Supreme Court held in an earlier "secondary effects" decision, regarding the
exposure of the unwilling viewer to nudity, that a city ordinance was invalid which barred the
exhibition in drive-in theaters of motion pictures in which human male or female bare
buttocks, human female bare breasts, or human bare pubic areas were shown if the motion
picture was visible from any public street or public place. Erznoznik v. City of Jacksonville,
422 U.S. 205 (1975). We find the present case distinguishable from Erznoznik in that it is not
an occasional glimpse of a portion of nude anatomy which is visible in the signal bleed from
adult channels, but instead it is an unbroken continuum of sexually explicit sounds and images,
delivered without invitation to one's home rather than to passers-by on a public highway. We
believe it is likely that if the Jacksonville ordinance at issue in Erznoznik had been directed
solely at the display of 100% sexually explicit films which were visible from the public street
and from private homes, the ordinance would have been held to be valid.
*27. While we are aware that Young and Mitchell are zoning cases, we consider that
their holdings on economic impact are relevant in that, as is the statute at issue in this case, the
regulations there were directed at competing concerns of public welfare rather than at the
speech itself.
*28. Plaintiffs also assert that Congress found, in 551(a)(8) & (9) of the Act, that
there is a compelling governmental interest in empowering parents to control the television
viewing by their children, such as by providing parents with technological tools that allow
them to easily block violent, sexual or other programming that they believe harmful to their
children. Section 504 was one such mechanism, and the development of v- chip technology
will be another. Congress recognized, as Senator Feinstein's remarks indicated, supra, that
many parents are unaware of the problem of sexually explicit signal bleed and its accessibility
to children of non-subscribers of sexually-dedicated channels. The parental control option is
viewed as an adjunct of lesser efficacy because its exercise requires knowledge and the taking
of affirmative steps such as requesting the blocking device from the MSO.
*29. We are mindful that the Supreme Court in Denver Consortium referred to the
Telecommunications Act of 1996, including specifically 505, as "significantly less
restrictive" than 10(b) of the 1992 Cable Act which they struck down. See, e.g., 116 S.Ct.
at 2392. However, since 505 was not before the Court in Denver Consortium, this reference
is dictum.
*30. We note also that 505 applies uniformly and without discrimination to all
networks that are "primarily dedicated to sexually-oriented programming." Pub.L. No.
104-104, 505, 106 Stat. at *136 (1996) (emphasis added). The law does not, for instance,
favor Playboy over Graft.
*31. Furthermore, this is not a case involving governmental discrimination against a suspect class, nor is there any evidence of arbitrary or invidious governmental conduct. See, e.g., New York City Transit Authority v. Beazer, 440 U.S. 568, 592-93 (1979). Therefore, we apply rational basis review and ask whether the alleged classification is "rationally related" to a "legitimate" government interest. In our discussion of First Amendment jurisprudence, supra, we applied a much higher standard of scrutiny and concluded that 505 is constitutional. We therefore hold that 505 is not merely rationally related to a legitimate government interest, it is carefully tailored to an interest that is widely regarded as compelling.