Alabama House Passes Bill That Could Be Used to Criminalize Librarians

The Alabama House of Representatives voted 72-28 on Thursday in favor of a bill that would apply the state’s criminal obscenity laws to public libraries, public school libraries, and the people who work there.

Critics, including the Alabama Library Association, have warned that the bill could see librarians jailed and argued that it violates the First Amendment.

“This is a pig,” Rep. Chris England (D-70), said during the debate, as AL.com reported. “It is a bad bill, and when you attempt to take what is normally non-criminal conduct and make it criminal, you bend yourself into ways that potentially not only violate the Constitution but potentially subject somebody to an illegal arrest with no due process.”

House Bill 385 would allow anyone to write a letter to a school district superintendent or head librarian claiming a book is obscene. The Montgomery Advertiser explained further:

The library would be required to remove the materials within seven days of receiving the required written notice. Failure to remove said materials would result in a Class C misdemeanor upon the first offense, a Class B........

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