Tennesse isn't the only one.
[FONT size=6]State's sex toy ban back in court again
[!--end update of headline--][!-- update or delete byline--][!-- end update or delete byline--][!--story text goes here--][/FONT][FONT face="times new roman,serif"]HUNTSVILLE (AP) — The law that bans the sale of sex toys, but not their possession, in the state of Alabama is again being challenged. [/FONT][FONT face="times new roman,serif"]Michael Fees, a Huntsville attorney, represents a group of 10 people, all of whom have been fighting the state's ban on selling sex toys since the law was enacted in 1998. [/FONT][FONT face="times new roman,serif"]In a motion filed with a U.S. District Judge Lynwood Smith on Tuesday, Fees argued that a U.S. Supreme Court decision banning the criminalization of gay sex based on privacy issues also protects his clients' right to buy and sell sex toys. [/FONT][FONT face="times new roman,serif"]He argued that the state law is an unwelcome intrusion into his clients' bedrooms. [/FONT][FONT face="times new roman,serif"]If Smith decides to overturn the law, it will mark the third time he has done so. [/FONT][FONT face="times new roman,serif"]In 1999, Smith ruled against the law only to have it reversed by the 11th Circuit Court after the state attorney general's office appealed his decision. In 2002, Smith again ruled against the law, but a three-judge panel of the 11th Circuit overturned him[/FONT]. [!--end update of story text--][!--AP DISCLAIMERS:--][!-- use the first AP disclaimed with Staff/AP stories --][!--[font face="arial, helvetica" size=1]Copyright 2005 THE DECATUR DAILY. All rights reserved.
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