Supreme Court Kicks the Indecency Can Down the Road

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[Commentary] On a pragmatic level, the Supreme Court's ruling seems to indicate that the appropriate "notice" on fleeting indecencies didn't occur until the Federal Communications Commission announced its decision to begin prosecuting such indecencies in a 2004 case involving NBC and the Golden Globes Awards. As a result, broadcast stations facing indecency complaints (and delayed license renewals) for allegations of fleeting indecency should see those complaints dismissed by the FCC as long as the program at issue aired before the 2004 Golden Globes decision.

Unfortunately, stations facing indecency complaints for programs aired after that 2004 decision may find that the Court ruling is irrelevant to them. In fact, the Court went out of its way to make clear that it was not ruling on any issue but the "vagueness" in the FCC's treatment of fleeting indecencies caused by the lack of notice of its change in enforcement policy. The Court's ruling therefore appears to be little more than a "reset" in which, with the limited exception of parties accused of airing fleeting indecency prior to 2004, broadcast stations find themselves in the exact same position as before this litigation started many years ago: unsure as to what content is or is not permissible, and with no additional guidance from the courts as to where the FCC may permissibly draw that line.


Supreme Court Kicks the Indecency Can Down the Road