Amy
was eight when her uncle began raping her. He took pictures. Last
month the Supreme Court considered what restitution Amy
is entitled to collect—not from her uncle but from a man, Doyle
Paroline, who downloaded two of those pictures. The potential
answers to that question range from zero to $3.4 million. According
to The New York Times, the justices seemed “stumped.”
Jacob Sullum says their confusion reflects a deeper problem with
the justification for criminalizing possession of child
pornography, an offense for which legislators have prescribed
increasingly harsh penalties with little regard to sense or
justice.
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