NASHVILLE, Tenn. — A panel of appeals judges has ruled that Tennessee can begin enforcing a law that requires pornographic websites to verify their visitors' age as the First Amendment debate rises to the U.S. Supreme Court this week for oral arguments over a similar Texas law.
On Monday, the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel ruled 3-0 that Tennessee's law can take effect while a legal challenge continues. A district court judge had largely temporarily blocked the law from kicking in on Jan. 1, citing free speech protections for adults and saying the law would be ineffective at shielding minors from harmful content.
The Free Speech Coalition, an adult entertainment trade group, sued over Tennessee's law and those in a half-dozen other states, including Texas. Some 19 states have passed similar laws, the coalition says.
The 6th Circuit panel wrote that the district judge didn't show that any potentially unconstitutional aspects of Tennessee's law would outweigh its constitutional uses. It described the law's goals as ''to protect children from the devastating effects of easy access to on-demand pornography.''
Other appeals courts have reversed lower court decisions that had blocked similar laws in Texas and Indiana, the panel wrote. The Supreme Court declined to halt Texas' law in April while a legal challenge by the Free Speech Coalition continues, with oral arguments Wednesday.
''We see no reason to keep Tennessee's law on ice while Texas and Indiana may enforce theirs (against at least one of the same Plaintiffs), especially when the Supreme Court will soon offer guidance on the standard of review we should apply,'' the 6th Circuit ruling says.
After the decision, the website Pornhub began blocking access in Tennessee. The website had already halted access in 16 other states with verification requirements it has called ''ineffective, haphazard, and dangerous'' and not properly enforced, according to its parent company, Aylo. The company advocates for age verification on individual devices.
Tennessee's law would require porn websites to verify visitors are at least 18 years old, threatening felony penalties and possible civil liability for violators running the sites. They could match a photo to someone's ID, or use certain ''public or private transactional data'' to prove someone's age. Website leaders could not retain personally identifying information and would have to keep anonymized data.