AANR Weekly Report 10/23/2009

By admin at 12:59 pm on October 24, 2009 | No comments

*Erich Schuttauf, Executive Director***

*Nudity, AANR, the Law, and Consequences*

Last week we let you know that AANR had assisted a prominent attorney with legal information.

Two weeks ago we discussed a couple’s lawsuit against Wal-Mart and the city of Peoria, Arizona, after their three daughters, aged between one and six, were removed from the family home over nude photos of the girls taken at bath time.  The children remained in state custody for over a *month* while authorities investigated the photos after a Wal-Mart photo clerk alerted authorities.  (A judge later ruled the pictures did not violate criminal laws.)

This week the latest news came from Virginia where accounts first reported that a “man faces jail for making coffee in his own home naked.” Those accounts proffered that the defendant woke up at 5:30 a.m., stumbled to the kitchen in his home, and proceeded to make coffee in the nude.  Hours later, police showed up at his door to cite him for indecent exposure after a mom and her seven-year-old son observed him in the window while taking a “short cut” that crossed his front yard on their way to school.

For those of us for whom nudity is a way of life, at times these reports can seem overwhelming.  If we face jail or steep legal fees for taking innocent snaps of our kids, or enjoying nudity within our own homes and backyards, we’re left wondering “What will be next???”

It prompts me to offer a few observations and make one promise to you.

First, there is little question that sensationalized news accounts have a marked impact on what nudists and non-nudists alike believe is unlawful.  In turn, that can have a demonstrable impact on their willingness to give nude recreation a try or other behavior.  For example, “Mr. Coffee” touched off several messages to our office opining that members feel forced to cover up.  It’s not surprising given that visitors who responded to a survey on our Web site’s Alltogether blog this week voted the “privacy of home” among the top places they enjoy nude recreation.  (See http://blog.aanr.com/2009/10/19/your-opinion-matters/ )

Remember the Arizona photo case? I’ll leave it to you to speculate on whether it had anything to do with a printing company’s recent refusal to publish the newsletter of an AANR club located in the Pacific Southwest.  It contained a cover picture depicting members of all ages in a line onstage during a club talent show. The club was a long-standing customer.

Next, I’ll acknowledge that with most such cases, AANR faces a significant obstacle that must be overcome to respond to the news story properly: like all “merely mortal” readers, viewers, and listeners, we often do not have first-hand knowledge of the facts.  Did the parents of the young girls take photos that came too close to the line?  Did Mr. Coffee simply stumble around the kitchen preparing brew, or did he stand spread eagle in open doorways and a large plate glass picture window at *8:40* in the morning—and were mother and son taking only a small shortcut between two very public sidewalks from which one could have just as easily seen a purposeful display as has also been alleged?

Responding too quickly, without knowing all the facts for certain, brings peril if initial reports and assumptions turn out untrue.  Yet the early innings of a story are usually the stage where our blood is boiling at its hottest.  DAMN IT. If AANR knows about this it should be DOING something.

The media likes to hear us say “damn it.” “Damn it” makes us buy newspapers.  “Damn it” keeps us listening over the commercial break.

I want all our members and clubs to be assured that AANR hears the frustration in your phone calls and e-mail messages.  I cannot promise you that we will be goaded into premature action because doing so can all-too-easily detract from a reputation of providing a credible voice of reason for nude recreation.

But I do promise you that AANR will continue to track events, to take the extra time that it takes to research the facts, or find out what the jury determined so that we can continue providing reliable guidance.  And that we WILL speak out in cases of clear injustice to nudists.

In closing, let me return to Peoria, Arizona, one more time.  This week, our office secured a copy of the written police reports prepared at the outset of the police investigation just hours after the call from Wal-Mart, plus subsequent interviews with the parents and a thorough search of their home.

The reports reveal what the judge ruled: These parents are probably not pornographers. They are (make that *were*) just very matter-of-fact about the nudity of their young kids and a cousin or two, and took a limited number of snapshots and home video of same. But the reports also reveal aspects of the photos that legitimately would have triggered alarm bells for the Wal-Mart clerk and the police.  They are the same aspects discussed in the “Legal Issues in Nude Photography” fact sheet available to clubs and members on www.aanr.com. It is fair to conclude that had the parents known and observed the same guidelines we provide, their case may have not gone as far as it did.

There are *lots* of laws and rules of thumb to keep track of and they constantly change.  Your dues and support make it possible.

*California** Supreme Court Speaks*

We share great disappointment with others in the nude recreation community over a decision by the California Supreme Court yesterday.  The Court refused to act to reverse or de-publish an appeals court’s ruling earlier this year that dispensed with the long-standing Cahill policy on nudity within the state parks system.  Nudity at San Onofre Beach is likely to end in the very near future as a direct consequence.  One of the more accurate news accounts of what occurred may be found here:

http://www.metnews.com/articles/2009/conf102309.htm

Please know that AANR is committed to diligently working to protect nudity on both public and private lands within the state.  We hope that bringing together and joining with all interested parties on this subject will yield long-term results that preserve traditions of nudity in some of the most beautiful settings.

*Sign Me Up!*

The AANR office has sent the new “Sign Me Up” DVDs to all AANR clubs. In the spirit of marketing AANR memberships and welcoming new guests to your clubs and resorts, we would appreciate all feedback on this effort. If you have not received yours, please contact Nanette Wickersham at execasst@aanr.comor call 800/879-6833, ext. 223. If you have received your copy, be sure to watch it with your front office team! Once you view the DVD, please fill out the form that was included with it and return it to the AANR office.

* *

*Terry Justice, Club/Member Liaison*

There is only one directory change for this week.

Sherwood Forest in Maine has a new e-mail address: sherwoodforestclub@yahoo.com. _______________________________________________ eNews mailing list eNews@aanr-nw.org http://aanr-nw.org/mailman/listinfo/enews_aanr-nw.org

The AANR-NW eNews is an opt-in newsletter. You may view current and archived issues at http://www.aanr-nw.org .  See the sidebar for recent posts by date or category.

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