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natina
02-08-2015, 01:40 PM
Texas housewife busted for hawking erotic toys
Sales rep for Brisbane firm sold vibrator to undercover agents

Steve Rubenstein, Chronicle Staff Writer Tuesday, December 16, 2003

A Texas housewife is in big trouble with the law for selling a vibrator to a pair of undercover cops, and the Brisbane vibrator company she works for says Texas is an "antiquated place'' with more than its share of "prudes.''

Joanne Webb, a former fifth-grade teacher and mother of three, was in a county court in Cleburne, Texas, on Monday to answer obscenity charges for selling the vibrator to undercover narcotics officers posing as a dysfunctional married couple in search of a sex aid.

Webb, a saleswoman for Passion Parties of Brisbane, faces a year in jail and a $4,000 fine if convicted.

"What I did was not obscene,'' Webb said. ""What's obscene is that the government is taking action about what we do in our bedrooms.''

The arrest of Webb in Cleburne, a small town 50 miles southwest of Dallas, was the first time that any of the company's 3,000 sales consultants have been busted, said Pat Davis, the president of Passion Parties. She said the company was outraged by the charges and stood behind Webb.

"It makes you wonder what they're thinking out there in Texas,'' Davis said. "They sound like prudes, with antiquated laws. They must have all their street crime under control in Texas if they're going to spend tax money arresting us.''

For the past year, Webb has sold the company's line of vibrators, gels, lubricants, strawberry-flavored nipple cream and "edible passion puddings.'' The merchandise is offered for sale in private, Tupperware-style parties to women who may be reluctant to visit an adult novelty store.

Among the company's top items are a $12 jar of passion pudding in chocolate and strawberry flavors ("apply head to toe, wherever you want your lover to linger"), a $9 jar of nipple cream in strawberry, raspberry and watermelon flavors, and battery-powered vibrators that sell for $17 to $140. The company also offers such lubricants as Slippery Stuff ($13), Lickety Lube ($12) and Lucky Stiff ($11.50), and a $22 battery-powered item for men known as Jelly Julie ("with soft jelly silicone lips").

"Our products are not obscene,'' Davis said. "All we're trying to do is help people build loving relationships.''

Webb suspects she got in trouble because she ruffled feathers in town by daring to join the Chamber of Commerce with her sex toy business. She said her arrest had caused her husband of 20 years to suffer a nervous breakdown.

Webb said she was amazed that the town's narcotics squad would be put on the case.

"We have a real problem with drugs in our schools,'' she said, "and they're using our narcotics officers to entrap me for selling a vibrator.''


http://www.organissimo.org/forum/index.php?/topic/6067-texas-woman-busted-for-selling-vibrators/


Quote

Is That a Perfectly Legal, Anatomically Correct Condom Education Model, or Are You Just Happy to See Me?
BY ERICA C. BARNETT


August 11, 2000: Cock rings. Anal plugs. Nipple clamps. Dildos.
One of these things is not like the others. Can you guess which one?

Sure, they're all sex toys, but only one -- the humble dildo -- is legally verboten in the state of Texas. According to the Texas Penal Code, which details what devices good, law-abiding Texans may and may not purchase for their personal pleasure, dildos (and all other items made specifically to stimulate the genitals) can't be collected, bought, or sold in the state.

What's that you say? You think you bought a dildo here in Austin? That's an "anatomically correct condom education model" to you, young lady. Which you would already know if you had read the release form some local businesses have started making their patrons sign.

It's not that businesses are going to personally hold you to that promise, any more than head shops really think you're going to use that "water pipe" to smoke tobacco. It's just that they've been burned before. The law is a harsh, unforgiving mistress, but what it says is fairly simple: "Obscene devices" -- defined as anything, including a dildo, vibrator, or artificial vagina, "designed or marketed as useful primarily for the stimulation of human genital organs" -- can't be sold in the state of Texas (or in Georgia, for those keeping track), except for "a bona fide medical, psychiatric, judicial, legislative, or law enforcement purpose." If you can prove you're using those models to demonstrate how to put on a condom, that's fine. If you're thinking about using them for a more personal sort of education, that's not. (Oddly, the law doesn't prevent people from owning sexual devices; it just makes selling them illegal. But don't let your collection get out of hand: If you're hiding more than six dongs in your closet, that's intent to "promote" -- a class A misdemeanor.)

How much you can get away with depends on how strictly local police choose to enforce the law; nothing requires, for example, that a police department have a vice squad devoted to rooting out victimless sexual crimes in the first place. Austin's 20-officer vice squad was disbanded in 1998, and its responsibilities were devolved to the various street response units, on the assumption that different neighborhoods had different problems, not all of them directly related to so-called vice. According to APD Assistant Chief Rick Coy, who heads the department's organized crime division and oversaw a major reorganization of the department two years ago, the problems vary widely from area to area; in Northwest Austin, Coy says, the biggest problem is burglary; in most of East Austin, it's drugs.

Major long-term investigations involving sexually oriented businesses continue under the department's organized crime division, but an APD spokeswoman says most one-time "stings" on such businesses involve sexual behavior -- e.g., indecent exposure and prostitution -- not trade in sexual devices.

It wasn't always that way. As recently as the late Eighties and early Nineties, at least two high-profile raids were conducted on local shops by two prominent vice squad commanders. Forbidden Fruit was raided by the notorious Bubba Cates in 1989 (for offering dildos, vibrators, and other so-called contraband); and four years later, Planet K got stung by Cates' successor Jack Kelly, for selling a plastic inflatable sheep.

"They came flying through the door, busted in, and ransacked the place, and took everything they could get their hands on," recalls Lynn, the owner of Forbidden Fruit (who spoke to the Chronicle on the condition that her last name not be used). According to a news report in the Austin American-Statesman the day after the raid, the sting "netted about 400 sexual devices and the arrest of the store manager," Carole Vise. After taking a huge loss in the raid, the store got more careful about the packaging and display of its merchandise, most of which is marketed almost exclusively to women.

The irony -- that most sex crimes are committed by men, yet the people targeted by "obscene device" laws are predominantly women -- isn't lost on Lynn, who speculates that the men writing the laws "must have three-inch penises" to be so concerned about regulating female pleasure. Still, no one has talked seriously about rescinding the law since it was passed in 1973.

On the bright side, the dildo law -- or the "obscenity" ordinance, as puritans would have it -- has made adult-oriented businesses more creative about what they sell and how they sell it. Forbidden Fruit, for example, could probably get by, financially speaking, on its piercing and fetishwear businesses alone, not to mention its massive (and perfectly legal) collection of bondage gear. They're even branching out into e-commerce, but unlike such massive mail-order companies as Xandria and Adam and Eve, they won't let any "questionable" merchandise cross state lines. Instead, Lynn says, they'll focus on things you can find only in Texas: custom body harnesses, handmade leather restraints, and other toys the laws of Texas smile upon.
By the way, I stumbled on this article when I did a Google search on "Georgia sex toys illegal", after I read in another thread (on another board) about the Texas illegal vibrator case, that sex toys were (supposedly) illegal in Georgia too. Seems to be the case, at least according to this article (and at least back about 3 years ago). This was the first search-hit I got from Google, and it turned out to be mostly about Texas laws

http://i0.wp.com/www.hangthebankers.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/SWAT-team-raid.jpg?fit=800%2C533https://ganjavibes.files.wordpress.com/2011/12/dild_adp.jpg

nysprod
02-08-2015, 05:01 PM
As John F. Kennedy once famously said of Texas, "we are entering nut country."

Buzz
02-08-2015, 05:12 PM
As John F. Kennedy once famously said of Texas, "we are entering nut country."

Florida Congressman Alcee Hastings also nailed Texas last week.
http://thedailyshow.cc.com/videos/1t79ao/amender-s-game---southern-slam
Skip to 4:25 to get to the good part!

Tapatio
02-08-2015, 06:35 PM
Anyone notice that the article in the original post is 13 years old?

Revisiting your archives, Nat?

natina
02-10-2015, 06:53 AM
court rules that men can urinate while standing

http://www.hungangels.com/vboard/showthread.php?t=91563